Honest, dependable, and on the route every week — owner-operator Chad personally inspects every pool and answers every technical question himself.
Wild Coyote Pool Service has been cleaning, balancing, and repairing East Valley pools since 2012. The shop is based in Queen Creek at the foot of the San Tan Mountains, and the weekly route runs through Queen Creek, San Tan Valley, Mesa, Chandler, and Gilbert — the same five cities, the same routes, the same trucks.
Honesty, dependability, and knowledge of our trade.
The business is family-owned and owner-operated. Chad is the one who shows up at most stops, the one who pulls a cartridge or D.E. grid to look at it under the sun, and the one who answers the phone when a homeowner has a question about a pressure vac versus a suction vac. That isn’t a marketing line — it’s how the route runs, week in and week out, year after year.
The service mix is the standard weekly stack — brushing, skimming, basket clearing, filter backwash, chemical analysis, timer adjustment — plus the heavier repair and equipment work most weekly companies hand off to someone else. Filter cleans start at $100 for cartridge and D.E., $300 for sand. Pool drains are $150. Acid wash and chlorine bath start at $150. We also do glass-bead blasting, new pump and motor installs, in-floor cleaning system service, salt-water pool care, green-pool cleanouts, and tile and calcium removal.
Pricing is published on the services page — every job, every starting number. That part is on purpose. Honest, dependable, and knowledgeable means the homeowner knows the cost before the truck pulls into the driveway, and the conversation at the pool deck is about the pool, not the bill.
Most pool service companies quote on the phone — sometimes higher, sometimes lower, depending on the day. We do it the opposite way. The starting price for a cartridge filter clean is $100. A D.E. filter clean is $100. A sand filter clean is $300. A pool drain is $150. Those numbers live on the services page, in writing, and they’re the same numbers every customer gets quoted.
The same standard runs through every interaction. When a homeowner asks Chad which pressure-vac setup makes sense for their pool, he walks them through the pros and cons of each — including the one he wouldn’t sell them. That’s what dependability looks like when the owner is the one on the route.
— Honest, dependable, and on the route since 2012Chad explained the pros and cons of the pressure vac that I had versus a suction vac.
Most calls turn into a quote the same day. Tell us your ZIP, your filter type, and what’s going on with the pool — we’ll give you a straight starting number.