

“Overall, the app experience was seamless and easy to use,” she says. It sounds nice in theory, but what is it actually like to rent a pool through Swimply? On a recent trip to Napa, AFAR’s senior SEO manager, Jessie Beck, tested the platform and rented a private pool for her group of 10.

Swimply review: What it was like to rent a pool Additionally, each pool is inspected by a local pool service company for hygiene and safety before it can be listed on the app. It is also up to the owners to decide whether or not they will be home while you use their pool, so the amount of privacy differs with each rental.Īs for sanitation, Swimply’s COVID safety protocols require hosts to allow 30 minutes between bookings to ensure time to clean and sanitize. Or if you find yourself at your parent’s pool-less house back in Los Angeles over the holidays, you can channel your inner celebrity and invite everyone over to an 1960s-themed pool for $100 an hour. For example, you can rent a spacious, palm-lined pool (complete with playground) for $85 an hour on your next family getaway in Miami. How Swimply worksĮach owner sets an hourly rate based on details such as pool size, timing, and amenities like bathroom, barbecue, and pool toy access-but the average rental is $45 per hour. There are also pools available to rent across Canada and Australia. Homeowners can sign up to list their underused pools to make some extra cash at Swimply (all hosts are provided a $1 million insurance policy), while non–pool owners can browse through the 25,000+ listings on the online platform in all 50 states. Laskin created the app, which launched with a pilot program in summer 2018, to “democratize the pool experience so that everyone can enjoy an instant escape from reality.”

Described as the “first ever online marketplace for pool sharing,” Swimply is the brainchild of Bunim Laskin, an entrepreneur from New Jersey.

Thanks to an Airbnb-like platform for pool sharing called Swimply, you can rent access to someone’s backyard pool by the hour. Who needs crowded beaches or public pools when you can have a private swimming spot all to yourself? During the hottest days of summer, few of us will say no to borrowing someone else’s swimming pool, even if only for a couple hours.
