If you’re building or buying a pool in Utah or Idaho, you must have a pool barrier. Here’s exactly what’s required by code in 2026 — and why these rules matter beyond compliance.
Why Pool Fences Matter
Drowning is the #1 cause of accidental death for children 1-4 in the US. Roughly 75% of these drownings happen in a pool the child wasn’t expected to be in. A proper pool barrier is the single most effective intervention.
Utah State Code Requirements
Utah follows the International Swimming Pool and Spa Code (ISPSC) with state amendments. Key requirements:
Minimum 4-foot fence height (48″ measured from outside the fence)
Maximum 4-inch openings in fence (no gaps a child could squeeze through)
Maximum 2-inch gap between bottom of fence and ground
Self-closing, self-latching gates
Latch height 54″+ from ground (out of children’s reach)
Gates open AWAY from pool
No climbable horizontal members on the pool side of fence
Idaho Requirements
Idaho also follows the ISPSC with city-level adoptions. Boise, Meridian, Idaho Falls, and Coeur d’Alene all enforce essentially the same requirements as Utah.
Mesh removable fence — temporary or rental properties
Alarms and Covers (Supplemental, Not Replacement)
Pool alarms and automatic covers can supplement a fence but generally cannot replace it. Some jurisdictions allow auto-cover-only barriers if the cover meets ASTM safety standards (kid + adult weight rated).
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Using the house wall as one side of the barrier without door alarms
Gates that don’t latch properly
Decorative wrought-iron with horizontal cross-bars (kids can climb)
Fences with chain link (4-inch openings can be exceeded)
Using existing perimeter fence that doesn’t meet pool barrier specs
Cost
Vinyl pool fence (200 LF): $4,000 – $8,000
Aluminum: $5,000 – $10,000
Glass: $15,000 – $35,000
Wood: $3,000 – $6,000
Inspection
Pool barrier inspection is required before pool can be filled and used. Peak Pools coordinates fence install + inspection as part of every build.