Hunter Pool Removals’ figures show concrete pool removal typically costs $8,000-$25,000+ across Newcastle and Lake Macquarie, while fibreglass and vinyl pool removal typically costs $5,500-$18,000+, a gap driven mostly by weight, since a concrete shell can produce 40-80 tonnes of rubble against a fibreglass shell only 8-12 mm thick. Vinyl-liner pools usually land in between, because the liner and frame come out easily but there may be a concrete or block base underneath.
Every figure on this page is an indicative guide only, drawn from the same ranges published on our full pool removal cost guide. Real pricing always depends on a site inspection and a formal written quote, because access, slope and the exact construction of your pool all move the number.
How Much More Does Concrete Cost to Remove Than Fibreglass?
Concrete sits well above fibreglass and vinyl at every stage of the job. A backyard concrete or gunite shell is typically 150-300 mm thick, reinforced with steel mesh, and tied into a bond beam, so it has to be broken apart with excavator-mounted rock breakers before a single truckload can leave the property. A standard family concrete pool can generate 40-80 tonnes of rubble, and every one of those tonnes attracts cartage and tipping (or recycling) fees.
A fibreglass shell, by comparison, is a one-piece moulded unit only 8-12 mm thick. It’s usually cut into panels with saws and lifted out by excavator, or in some cases craned out largely whole where access allows. There’s simply far less material to break, load and transport, which is the main reason fibreglass pool removal costs less across the board than concrete pool removal.
Concrete vs Fibreglass vs Vinyl: Side-by-Side Cost Comparison
These ranges reflect typical residential inground pools across Newcastle, Lake Macquarie and Maitland. They are region-general estimates, not quotes; a formal price always follows a free site inspection.
| Pool type | Partial fill-in (indicative) | Full removal (indicative) |
|---|---|---|
| Fibreglass or vinyl | $5,500-$10,000 | $10,000-$16,000 |
| Concrete | $8,000-$15,000 | $12,000-$25,000+ |
| Pool type | Overall indicative range | What drives the weight |
|---|---|---|
| Concrete / gunite | $8,000-$25,000+ | 150-300 mm reinforced shell; 40-80 tonnes of rubble on a typical job |
| Fibreglass | $5,500-$18,000+ | 8-12 mm moulded shell; a fraction of concrete’s tonnage |
| Vinyl-liner | $5,500-$18,000+ | Light liner and frame, but may sit on a concrete or block base |
Why Does Pool Construction Matter So Much for Price?
Pool construction is the single biggest lever in any quote, ahead of even access and slope, because it decides the method of demolition before anything else is considered:
- Concrete and gunite: mechanically broken with rock breakers, walls, floor, steps and bond beam all have to be fractured, and reinforcing steel has to be cut free and separated for recycling as the concrete comes apart.
- Fibreglass: cut into sections with saws, or occasionally lifted whole by crane where access allows. There’s no steel mesh to fight through and no reinforced beam to break.
- Vinyl-liner: comes apart in stages. The liner itself is drained and cut out easily, then the supporting walls, which might be steel, polymer or timber-framed, are dismantled. Older timber-framed vinyl pools from the 1970s and 80s often have rotted framing, which actually makes the dismantling quicker. The complication is what’s underneath: some vinyl pools sit on a concrete or block base, and that base adds real weight and cost back into the job.
Does the Cost Gap Between Partial and Full Removal Change by Pool Type?
Yes, and the direction is worth knowing before you compare quotes. For a partial fill-in versus a full removal of the same pool, Hunter Pool Removals’ quotes typically show a gap of $4,000-$10,000, but that gap isn’t even across pool types.
On concrete, the gap tends to sit toward the larger end, because leaving the lower shell in place for a fill-in genuinely avoids breaking and carting a large share of the total tonnage. On fibreglass and vinyl, the gap is usually much smaller: there’s so little material in a fibreglass shell to begin with that full removal is often only modestly dearer than a fill-in, which is why full removal is usually the recommended method for these lighter pools rather than a default fill-in.
Which Pool Type Is Cheapest to Remove?
A partial fill-in of a fibreglass or vinyl pool with good machine access is the cheapest job on the board, indicatively from about $5,500. It leaves the lower shell in the ground, so it suits a lawn or garden outcome rather than any future building, and a buried shell should always be disclosed at sale. Full removal of the same fibreglass or vinyl pool typically adds only a few thousand dollars on top, which is why many owners choose full removal even when budget is tight; the pool removal cost guide sets out the full reasoning.
What Else Moves the Price Within Each Pool Type?
Pool construction sets the starting band, but the same factors that move any pool removal quote still apply within each type:
- Access: a 5-tonne excavator through a 3-metre side gap is routine; a 1.7-metre gap between house and fence means a smaller machine, more trips and, on a concrete pool especially, a much bigger effect on price because there’s more tonnage to shuttle through the gap.
- Slope: common around Lake Macquarie, where a sloping block affects machine positioning and whether the pool shell is doubling as a retaining structure.
- Tipping and disposal: concrete rubble is typically recycled into road base, which keeps disposal costs sensible; fibreglass generally can’t be recycled the same way and goes to lawful landfill disposal, a genuine line item regardless of pool type.
- Fill and compaction: every job needs clean fill placed and compacted in layers, priced by the truckload, whether the shell was concrete, fibreglass or vinyl.
- Approvals: whether your job proceeds as exempt development or needs a complying development certificate or development application varies by council and site, so always confirm with City of Newcastle, Lake Macquarie City Council, Maitland City Council or a private certifier.
An Indicative Comparison: Same Backyard, Different Pool Type
This is an indicative composite scenario built from typical ranges, not a real past job or a quote. Picture a similarly sized pool behind a Newcastle-area home with a tight 1.8 m side gap, needing a mini excavator and staged loads either way. A concrete shell in that position would typically land at the top of the concrete range, around $18,000-$25,000+, because of the tonnage of rubble that has to be broken and shuttled out through the narrow gap. A fibreglass or vinyl shell in the same tight-access position would typically land around $14,000-$18,000+, well below the concrete figure, simply because there’s so much less material to move. Access cost the same amount of trouble in both cases; the pool’s construction is what separated the two numbers.
Pool Removal Cost by Pool Type FAQs
Is concrete or fibreglass cheaper to remove?
Fibreglass and vinyl are almost always cheaper. A fibreglass shell weighs a fraction of what a concrete shell does, so there’s less mechanical breaking, less loading and far fewer truck movements. Concrete removal typically runs $8,000-$25,000+, while fibreglass and vinyl removal typically runs $5,500-$18,000+, with the exact figure confirmed only after a site inspection.
Why does concrete pool removal cost so much more per tonne?
It doesn’t cost more per tonne so much as it produces far more tonnes. A standard concrete pool can generate 40-80 tonnes of rubble that must be mechanically broken, loaded and carted, with each tonne attracting cartage and tipping or recycling fees. A fibreglass shell only 8-12 mm thick simply doesn’t generate anywhere near that volume of material.
Is vinyl pool removal cheaper than fibreglass?
They’re usually priced in the same band, because both are light structures compared with concrete. The variable with vinyl pools is what’s underneath the liner and frame: if there’s a concrete or block base beneath an older vinyl pool, that base pushes the job back toward concrete pricing rather than typical fibreglass pricing.
Does pool type change how long the job takes?
Yes. Fibreglass and vinyl removals are often the quickest jobs on the books, commonly one to two days of demolition. Concrete removal usually takes longer because rock breakers work through a reinforced shell progressively, especially on tighter blocks where a smaller machine and staged loads are needed.
Can I get an accurate price before I know what my pool is made of?
A rough steer, yes, especially from photos, but an accurate figure needs pool construction confirmed. Fibreglass, vinyl and concrete are priced on genuinely different bases (size and access for the lighter shells, tonnage and reinforcement for concrete), so a site inspection is what turns a ballpark into a formal quote.
Does pool type affect asbestos risk during removal?
Not directly, but older pool surrounds do. Fibro pump sheds, old fencing sheeting and certain paving underlays around pre-1990 pools, concrete or fibreglass alike, are the materials most likely to need asbestos assessment, and any confirmed asbestos is handled only by a licensed asbestos removalist, quoted separately from the pool removal itself.
Get a Price for Your Actual Pool
Ranges tell you the ballpark; a site inspection tells you the number for your pool, your access and your block. Get a free quote with a few photos and rough dimensions, and you’ll get honest figures for your specific pool type, no pressure attached.