Stop Accepting Spa Industry Compromises
Stop Paying for Problems the Industry Created
Every foam cover tells the same expensive story: promising start, rapid decline, costly replacement. It's a cycle the industry profits from and customers endure. until now.
Here’s the thing about traditional hot tubs: they promise you relaxation and luxury, but what they actually deliver is a never-ending cycle of problems. Covers that fall apart. Energy bills that make you wince. And the industry acts like this is just normal. They call it “the price of luxury.” Buying a new hot tub should not be your new part time job that the even a master chemist would have difficulty understanding.
But think about it. Why would you accept that?
The problem isn’t you. The problem is the design. Tradional spas are built with a cover that create bacterias through absorbing moisture and an inside that material that easiky absorbs bacteria. They’re topped with foam covers that are guaranteed to fail. It’s a bad design from the ground up, and you’re the one paying for it over and over again.
We looked at this and said, “This doesn’t make any sense.” So we threw out the old playbook and started from scratch. We didn’t just try to make a better version of a bad idea. We eliminated the problems at the source.
The Problem is the Materials, Not Your Maintenance
It's Like Selling Cardboard Umbrellas
Imagine you're shopping for an umbrella, and someone tries to sell you one made of cardboard. They tell you it's the best cardboard umbrella on the market. They've got special coatings and fancy features. But at the end of the day, it's still cardboard. The first time it rains, you're going to get soaked.
That's exactly what's happening with traditional hot tubs. They're selling you cardboard umbrellas and acting like it's your fault when they fall apart.
Here's what they're not telling you:
Their porous acrylic and fiberglass shells are a breeding ground for bacteria. That's why you're dumping in harsh chemicals every week. The shell itself is the problem.
Their foam covers are designed to fail. They absorb water, get heavy, lose their ability to insulate, and turn into a stinking, bacteria-filled mess. Then you have to buy another one. And another one. It's a cycle that never ends.
Now here's what we did:
We built our spas from a solid, one-piece shell made of HDPE. It's completely non-porous. Bacteria has nowhere to hide. The water stays cleaner naturally, so you need way less chemicals.
We put a solid, insulated hard cover on top. It can't absorb water. It will never get waterlogged. It will never lose its insulating power. It's the last cover you'll ever buy because it's engineered to last a lifetime.
It's not magic. It's just common sense. We're selling plastic umbrellas while everyone else is still pushing cardboard.
What This Actually Means for You
Your Investment vs. Their Expense Cycle
Look, we’re not going to throw a bunch of dollar amounts at you because everyone’s situation is different. But here’s what you need to understand: with a traditional spa, the initial price is just the beginning. You’re signing up for years of ongoing expenses.
You’re going to be buying chemicals constantly. You’re going to be replacing that foam cover every few years. Your energy bills are going to climb as the cover gets waterlogged and stops insulating. And when things start breaking down:and they will:you’re going to be paying for repairs.
With an Eco Spa, your initial investment is higher. We’re not going to pretend otherwise. But here’s the difference: once you own it, the ongoing costs are dramatically lower. You’re not constantly buying chemicals. You’re never buying another cover. Your energy bills stay low because our hard cover and HDPE shell hold the heat.
Think of it this way: you can keep paying for a bad design over and over, or you can invest once in a smart design that eliminates those problems. The choice is pretty obvious when you look at it that way.