Summer in El Paso County means splash pads in Colorado Springs, neighborhood pools, day camp swim time, and weekend drives to lakes and reservoirs in the foothills. If your child has been near a positive case at school, or your family is back from a trip and feeling unsure, the worry shows up fast: can a public pool actually spread an infestation? The short answer is no, not in any practical way. Pool water is one of the worst environments for a louse to do anything productive. That said, a pool day is not totally risk free, and the reasons behind the answer matter for the small choices you make before, during, and after the visit. Here is the calm, practical version that families in Colorado Springs, Pueblo, Monument, Manitou Springs, and the smaller mountain towns nearby can act on today.
Can Lice Survive Underwater in a Pool?
Yes, technically, but they are not going anywhere when they do. A louse is built to live on a human scalp. It clamps its claws onto a hair shaft, eats tiny amounts of blood every few hours, and depends on the warmth and humidity right next to the skin. When it gets submerged, it shuts down and holds on tighter. Researchers at universities studying head lice have shown that the bug can stay clamped to a hair for hours of submersion without letting go.
That sounds scary at first, until you think about what it actually means in a pool. The louse is locked onto your child’s own hair. It is not floating loose in the water, it is not riding the current toward another swimmer, and it is not climbing onto a stranger by accident. The dunk-and-survive behavior is a defense mechanism, not a transmission strategy. Compared with the way lice actually spread, which is direct hair-to-hair contact, the underwater path is barely a path at all.
Practical takeaway for parents: if your child already has lice and ends up in a pool by accident, the lice will still be there when they get out. The water is not a treatment and is not a risk to other swimmers in any meaningful way. You should still book professional mobile lice treatment rather than relying on chlorine to do the work for you.
Does Chlorine Kill Head Lice?
This is the question every parent really wants answered, and the answer is no. Standard pool chlorine, at the concentrations used for safe public swimming, does not reliably kill lice. Multiple academic studies have placed live lice in chlorinated pool water for the length of a normal swim and found that the bugs were still alive when the time was up. They had clamped onto the hair, stopped breathing, and waited the situation out.
There are two reasons that matters. First, chlorine cannot be your treatment plan. If your child has an active case and you send them to the pool hoping the chemicals will sort it out, you will come home with the same bugs you left with, plus a tired, hungry kid. Second, chlorine does not loosen the nit cement that glues eggs to the hair. The eggs stay attached and keep on the same hatch schedule whether they are in the pool, in the shower, or on the couch.
What about saltwater pools, lakes, and hot tubs?
Saltwater pools use a different sanitizer process but reach a similar level of dissolved chlorine in the water. The end result for lice is essentially the same. Open water at a Colorado lake or reservoir has no sanitizer at all, but again the issue is not the water, it is the people sharing the dock, the shore, and the towels. Hot tubs add the wrinkle that the warm water and close seating push heads together more, which is the actual transmission risk you want to manage. None of these settings is dangerous because of the water chemistry.
How Do Kids Actually Catch Lice at the Pool?
If pool water is not the problem, then where does the risk live on a pool day? It lives on the pool deck. Lice almost always move from one head to another through direct hair-to-hair contact. The pool itself is fine. The cluster of eight kids sharing a beach towel, all leaning in to look at one phone, is not.
Here are the everyday pool-day moments that actually move lice from one child to another:
- Sharing a towel that someone wraps around their wet hair and head.
- A pile of swim caps, hair ties, or goggles on a shared bench.
- Two friends squeezing into one pool float and tipping their heads together.
- Group photos at the snack bar where six kids press their heads in close.
- Borrowed brushes, combs, or detangling sprays at the locker room mirror.
- A shared sun hat or visor passed back and forth on the deck.
This is also why a swim lesson at a busy aquatics center can feel scarier than it actually is. The water is not where lice live. The cubby room, the bench where five kids stack wet towels on top of each other, and the after-class hangout on shared chairs are where lice can move. The same rule applies at neighborhood pool parties, day camp pool field trips, and Colorado lake outings: the closer kids put their heads together, the more transfer risk you have, and the water has almost nothing to do with it.
It also helps to remember that lice cannot survive long once they are off a person. They dehydrate quickly and stop functioning, which is why how long lice can live off the head is a much shorter window than most parents think. A towel that someone used yesterday and brought back today is almost certainly a non-issue. A towel actively wrapped around a friend’s wet hair right now is the thing to watch.
What Should You Do Before and After Pool Days?
The goal here is not to keep your kids out of the water. It is to make pool days normal again by handling the small habits that actually carry risk. None of this is dramatic. Most of it is what you would do anyway, just with one or two extra checks layered in.
Before pool day
- Pack a labeled towel for each child and tell them not to share. A simple name tape or laundry marker is enough.
- Send long hair in a tight braid or bun. Tied-up hair has less surface for accidental head-to-head contact and is easier to inspect afterward.
- If a classmate or teammate had a recent positive case, do a quick scalp check at home before the pool. Look behind the ears and at the nape of the neck under good light.
- Pack their own goggles, swim cap, brush, and hair ties. Anything that touches their head should be theirs.
- Skip the shared brush at the front of the locker room. Send a small comb in their bag instead.
After pool day
- Do a calm five-minute scalp check that evening. Damp hair under bright light makes lice and nits much easier to see, especially with a fine-tooth comb.
- Toss their personal pool towel in a normal warm wash. There is no need to bag bedding or boil anything. The laundry panic myth around lice on bedding is exactly the loop you want to avoid.
- If you find anything that looks suspicious, do not wait three days for confirmation. Schedule a professional check that week and ask about treatment options if the find is real.
- If your child shared a hat, helmet, or goggles with someone whose status was not known, recheck them seven to ten days later as well. That is the window where a freshly transferred louse would mature enough to be obvious on a scalp check.
For Colorado Springs families heading into a busy summer of city pools, mountain lake trips, and overnight camp, this also dovetails with a few related habits. Outdoor and travel days share many of the same rules, and our notes on lice risk on camping and hiking trips walk through similar shared-gear traps in tents, cabins, and cabins-with-bunks settings. If your child is heading to a sleepaway camp this season, ask whether the camp uses our summer camp screening program, which catches early cases before they spread to the rest of the bunk.
And if you have already found something on a head check and you are not sure how serious it is, do not stage your own bathroom diagnosis with a phone flashlight at midnight. Book a head lice check with a trained mobile technician, and you will know within the same visit whether you are looking at a real case, dandruff flakes, or harmless residue. That clarity alone usually changes the rest of the week.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can my child catch lice from a public pool?
It is extremely unlikely from the water itself. Lice cannot swim, do not jump, and submerged hairs do not transfer them well. The risk at a pool comes from off-water contact like sharing a towel or pressing heads together on a deck chair.
Does chlorine kill lice?
Studies show lice can survive typical pool chlorine for at least the length of a normal swim because they clamp onto the hair shaft and stop breathing. Chlorine is not a treatment. It also does not loosen nits glued to the hair.
Should I cancel swim lessons if a classmate has lice?
No. Swim lessons themselves are low risk. The shared cubbies, towels, and crowded benches before and after the lesson are where transfer happens. Send your child with their own towel and a hair tie, and do a quick scalp check that night.
Can lice spread in lakes, splash pads, or hot tubs?
The same rule applies. The water itself is not the problem. Crowded shared seating, head-to-head photos, and shared sunscreen or towel piles are. Hot tubs add another layer because people tend to sit close and rest their heads back together.
Do swim caps prevent or transfer lice?
A clean personal swim cap is fine and does not invite lice. Borrowing or sharing a swim cap is the real concern, the same way sharing a hat or helmet would be. Label your child’s cap and keep it in their own bag.
How soon after pool time should I check my child’s hair?
Do a calm scalp check at home that evening, especially behind the ears and at the nape of the neck. Lice are easiest to see on damp hair sectioned with a fine-tooth comb. Recheck a week later if anyone in the group later turned up positive.
What if we already had a positive case before pool day?
Treat first, then swim. Do not skip a professional check just because the pool felt clean. If a household member is mid-treatment, finish the comb-out plan and confirm clear before sharing pool gear or pool toys.
The headline most parents want to walk away with is simple: water is not the threat. Heads pressed together are. Keep towels personal, keep brushes and caps personal, do a calm check the night of pool day, and book a real screening if anything looks off. Summer in Colorado Springs should be about pool floats and Pikes Peak views, not three weeks of unnecessary panic about a problem your local mobile team can quietly solve in one appointment.