Bacteria-resistant shell

Bacteria has nowhere to grip.

Most hot tub shells are acrylic over fiberglass, a porous surface bacteria can settle into and hide from your chemicals. An Eco Spa is one solid piece of non-porous HDPE. There's no surface for bacteria to grow on, so it takes very few chemicals to keep the water clean.

EH
"Bet you 50 bucks you won't drink that hot tub water."

The point in one line: if the water isn't clean enough to drink, why are you soaking in it? An easy bet to win once you've felt how clean an Eco Spa stays, even sitting unused between soaks.

Owner · Eco Spa
Acrylic vs HDPE · side by side

It comes down to the surface.

Same water, same chemicals, the difference is what they're sitting against. Here's what that looks like up close.

Industry default

Acrylic / Fiberglass

  • Build, acrylic layered over fiberglass.
  • Gel coat, can blister and peel.
  • Warranty, shell coverage runs out.
The chemistry ends up fighting the shell, not just the water, so you keep adding more.
Eco Spa

HDPE Unibody

  • Build, one rotationally-molded piece of HDPE.
  • Gel coat, none; solid through.
  • Warranty, shell warranted for life.
Sanitizer stays in the water doing its job, not soaking into the shell.
What keeps it clean

The shell does half the work. We handle the rest two ways.

The shell keeps bacteria from establishing in the first place. On top of that, every Eco Spa runs 100 ft of filtration through two large filters, with the optional Ecozone ozone upgrade to go further, as we put it: "we go overkill."

Ozone + filtration
100 ft

Two large filters and the non-porous shell do most of the cleaning automatically, "overkill," by design. Add Ecozone ozone to go further still.

Chemicals
~1 tbsp

About a tablespoon of chlorine every one to two weeks, depending on how often you use it. That's it.

After the soak
No smell

You don't even need to shower after a soak, no chlorine smell clinging, skin doesn't feel dry.

To be clear: this isn't a zero-chemical hot tub, and we don't pretend it is. You still test and add a little chlorine, just far less than a porous tub needs, because the shell and the filtration are doing most of the work.

Non-porous HDPE · 100 ft filtration · very few chemicals

Water you'd actually drink. Bet on it.