Pool Finishes in Arizona — Pebble Tec vs Plaster vs Quartz
The interior finish is what you see, swim against, and pay to replace every 7–20 years. Here's how the three big options actually compare in Arizona sun and chemistry.

The three real options
Almost every interior finish we install falls into one of three camps: standard white plaster, quartz-aggregate plaster, or pebble. Each one is essentially a cement-based plaster — what changes is what's mixed in and what color you end up swimming against.
Standard plaster — the budget option
Bright white, classic, and the cheapest way to put water in a hole. The downside in Arizona: hard water and aggressive sun chemistry chew through standard plaster faster than anywhere else in the country. Plan on resurfacing in 7–10 years, sometimes sooner if pool chemistry isn't dialed in.
Quartz finishes — the middle ground
Quartz aggregate (often branded as Diamond Brite, Pebble Brite, or similar) gives you better stain resistance, a wider color palette, and a noticeably more durable surface. Lifespan stretches to 10–15 years with reasonable maintenance. A solid sweet spot for homeowners who want something better than basic plaster without going all-in on pebble.
Pebble finishes — Pebble Tec, Pebble Sheen, Pebble Fina
Pebble finishes mix natural pebbles into the surface. The original Pebble Tec has a more textured, natural-bottom feel. Pebble Sheen polishes down to a smoother finish. Pebble Fina is the smoothest of the three — feels closest to plaster underfoot but with pebble durability. Expect 15–20+ years of life with proper chemistry. This is what AE specifies on most new builds.
- Pebble Tec — natural texture, most rugged feel, best for tropical/lagoon designs.
- Pebble Sheen — refined texture, the modern AE default.
- Pebble Fina — smoothest pebble finish, premium feel, premium price.
Color matters more than you think
Darker finishes (blues, grays, blacks) absorb more heat — useful in shoulder seasons, sometimes a problem in July. Lighter finishes (whites, blues with light pebble) show off water clarity and read cleaner with modern architecture. We always set out wet samples in your actual yard before specifying — finish color shifts dramatically once water is added.
What replacement actually costs
Resurfacing isn't optional — every plaster-based finish eventually fails. Budget realistically when you build, and consider stretching for the longer-life finish upfront.
- Standard plaster resurface — $5,500–$9,000 for an average pool.
- Quartz resurface — $7,500–$12,000.
- Pebble resurface — $10,000–$16,000.
- Add tile replacement at the waterline — $2,500–$5,500.


