Replacing a pool pump motor — rather than the whole pump — is one of the highest-payoff repairs a homeowner can do. It’s a $300–$600 part and an hour of work, vs. $1,200+ for a whole new pump including labor. This tutorial walks through the motor swap on a typical residential pump.
When to replace the motor (not the whole pump)
- Motor hums but doesn’t spin (likely a failed start capacitor or seized bearings).
- Motor runs hot, smells burnt, or trips the breaker.
- Motor leaks oil from the shaft seal area.
- Motor is loud (worn bearings).
- Wet end is still in good condition (no cracks in the pump body, basket is intact).
If the wet end has cracks or has been leaking for months, replace the whole pump — the motor lasts longer than the wet end at that point.
What you’ll need
- The correct replacement motor (matched to your pump per our replacement guide)
- A new shaft seal kit
- A new pump body o-ring or gasket
- Silicone pool lubricant
- A socket wrench (size depends on pump)
- A strap wrench or oil-filter wrench (for stuck impellers)
- A clean rag
Step-by-step
Verify with a voltage tester at the motor terminal box.
Motors have 2–3 power leads plus a ground and a bonding wire. Photograph exact placement before pulling anything — you’ll need this for reassembly.
Open drain plugs at the bottom of the pump body. Loosen the strainer lid to break vacuum. Let water drain fully.
Remove the bolts (typically 4–8) holding the motor to the strainer pot. Pull the motor assembly straight back. You’ll now see the impeller exposed.
Threads on pool pump impellers are reverse-direction — rotate counter-clockwise to remove. Hold the motor shaft from behind (most motors have a flat or hex on the back). If the impeller is stuck, use a strap wrench around it; never pliers.
Unbolt the seal plate from the motor face. Inspect the old shaft seal — it’s in two halves, one in the impeller hub and one in the seal plate. Both come out.
Torque per the motor manual (typically 8–12 ft-lb on residential motors). Don’t overtighten.
Press the stationary half into the seal plate (polished face out). Press the rotating half onto the impeller hub. Lubricate both rubber boots with silicone lube.
Clockwise to tighten. Hand-tight is enough; the pump self-tightens during operation.
Always replace this o-ring, never reuse. Lubricate with silicone.
Slide the motor + seal plate back into the strainer pot. Tighten the perimeter bolts in two passes (finger-tight first, then to spec).
Restore power, prime per our pump priming tutorial, run 5 minutes and inspect for drips or unusual noise.
Motors and seal kits in stock
Century 1.5 HP, 48Y Replacement Motor
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Pentair Sta-Rite Seal Kit
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Magic Lube II Silicone 1 oz
Shop NowSend PST Pool Supplies a photo of your pump and motor data plate, and we’ll match the right motor + seal kit + o-ring on a single order.