When you have an unused or unwanted pool, the decision to make it safe is non-negotiable, especially with children, grandchildren, or pets in the picture. The immediate question for most homeowners is a practical one: what will it cost? This sends you down a path of researching the pool safety net cost, the price of a high-end cover, or the expense of installing a permanent fence. You gather quotes, compare numbers, and try to find the most affordable way to secure your backyard.
This approach, while logical, is fundamentally flawed. You are pricing out temporary barriers, not permanent solutions. You are asking, "What is the cheapest way to block access to this danger?" instead of, "What is the best investment to eliminate this danger forever?" The true cost of pool cover safety isn't just the number on an invoice. It's a complex calculation that must include the initial investment, the long-term value, the impact on your property, and the priceless value of absolute, unquestionable peace of mind. When you analyze the numbers through that lens, the most expensive-seeming option can quickly reveal itself to be the most financially sound investment you can make in your home.
Let's break down the typical, real-world costs for the three most common pool safety systems in the Arizona and Nevada markets. These numbers represent the initial cash outlay for a temporary fix.
A pool fence is often the first consideration. Costs can vary widely based on the material (mesh, wrought iron, aluminum) and the length required.
A pool safety net is appealing for its transparent look, but the custom fitting and specialized hardware come at a price.
This is the highest tier of traditional barriers, with a wide price range depending on the type.
At first glance, a fence or net seems like a bargain compared to an automated cover or a full deck conversion. But this is where we must shift from comparing prices to comparing value.
| Feature | Pool Fence | Pool Safety Net | Freedom Decks Conversion | 
|---|---|---|---|
|   Initial Cost Range | 
$2k - $5k | $2.5k - $6k | $12k - $25k+ | 
|  Provides 100% Safety? | 
No | No | Yes | 
|  Adds Usable Living Space? | 
No | No | Yes (Hundreds of sq. ft.) | 
|  Eliminates Pool Costs? | 
No | No | Yes (~$3k-$5k per year) | 
|  Impact on Property Value | 
Neutral | Neutral | Positive (Preserves asset) | 
|  Long-Term ROI | 
None | None | High | 
Note: Financial data is based on industry averages and typical project scopes in the Southwest US. Actual costs will vary based on project size, material choices, and location.
This table reframes the entire conversation. A fence or net is a pure expense—money you spend that provides a single, imperfect function with no financial return. A deck conversion is a capital investment. It is a home improvement project that adds a tangible, valuable asset to your property: a beautiful, low-maintenance patio.
Let's analyze the long-term financial power of a deck conversion.
Fictional case study based on common homeowner experiences: The Chen family in Scottsdale was quoted a pool safety net cost of $4,500. They also continued to spend roughly $4,000 per year on chemicals, electricity, and service for their unused pool. In three years, they would have spent $16,500 ($4,500 net + $12,000 maintenance) and would still have an imperfect safety barrier and a pool they didn't use.
Instead, they opted for a Freedom Deck conversion for an initial investment of around $18,000. Their $4,000 annual pool expense disappeared overnight.
In less than five years, the deck conversion had completely paid for itself in saved maintenance costs alone. During that time, they enjoyed a massive new patio and, most importantly, had zero anxiety about their children's safety. They didn't just spend money; they reallocated it from a recurring, dead-end expense into a value-adding asset that improved their lives. This is the difference between pricing a product and investing in a solution.
Ultimately, this is a decision that transcends spreadsheets. What is the value of being able to let your kids or grandkids play in the backyard without a knot of fear in your stomach? What is the worth of a quiet evening on your patio, free from the hum of a pool pump and the mental burden of a hazardous chore?
Traditional barriers force you into a constant state of vigilance. A deck conversion grants you a state of peace. It is the only solution where the safety is built-in, permanent, and passive. You are not buying a temporary shield; you are investing in a permanently safe environment. That is the true return on investment, and it's a dividend that pays out every single day.
Yes, in almost every case. A permanent pool fill-in can cost just as much as a deck conversion but can actively decrease your property value, as you are destroying a valuable asset. A reversible deck conversion solves your immediate problem while preserving the pool's value for a future buyer, making it a far superior long-term financial strategy.
Yes. Reputable companies like Freedom Decks partner with financing institutions to offer flexible payment options. This allows homeowners to make the smart long-term investment without a prohibitive upfront cash outlay, and the monthly payment is often offset by the immediate savings on pool maintenance costs.
By eliminating an open body of water—which insurance companies refer to as an "attractive nuisance"—a deck conversion can often lead to a reduction in your homeowner's insurance premiums. Be sure to notify your insurance agent after the project is complete.