Short definition
A jetted tub is a bathtub with multiple jets that recirculate water (water-jet “whirlpool”) or introduce air bubbles (air-jet “air bath”). The two technologies are often confused but have different maintenance profiles. Both require a GFCI-protected dedicated electrical circuit per NEC 680.
What it is
The two jet technologies:
- Water-jet (whirlpool). A pump recirculates the bath water through internal piping back out the jets, creating directional pressure massage. Strongest massage feel. Downside: water sitting in the pipes between baths can stagnate, and bio-growth (black or brown debris on first run after a few weeks of disuse) is a known problem.
- Air-jet (air bath). An air blower pushes air through fine ports in the tub bottom, creating rising bubbles. Gentler sensation. Cleaner overall — air dries the lines between uses, so bio-growth is much less of an issue.
- Combo. Premium tubs include both.
Electrically, NEC 680 governs:
- Whirlpool pumps typically need a dedicated 20-amp 120V circuit.
- Air-bath blowers typically need a 15-amp 120V circuit.
- Both require GFCI protection (NEC 680.71). UL listing is standard.
WA adopts NEC through WAC 51-50; verify GFCI at final inspection.
Why it matters to a homeowner
Maintenance practice differs sharply between the two:
- Whirlpool tub in active service: monthly system flush with diluted bleach plus a full-power pump cycle keeps the lines clean. Skipping this for months leads to the classic black-debris-on-first-run problem.
- Air-bath tub: essentially maintenance-free between uses; the blower naturally dries the air channels.
For a homeowner buying new, air-bath is the lower-maintenance default. For a homeowner inheriting a whirlpool — common in pre-purchase WA inspections of homes built in the 1990s and 2000s — verify the pump runs without leaking, listen for unusual noise, and budget for the maintenance regimen.
Cost ranges:
- Acrylic jetted tub (whirlpool or air): $700 to $3,500.
- Cast-iron jetted tub: rare; very heavy.
- Pro install (plumbing plus electrical plus framing plus tub): $1,500 to $5,000.
Common failure modes
- Whirlpool: bio-buildup in piping. Black/brown debris on first run after weeks of disuse. Cure: monthly flush with diluted bleach. If the pump seal fails entirely, replace the pump assembly.
- Air-jet: less prone to bio-growth. Air switch pad on the deck fails over years; replace as a serviceable part.
- Pump leak. Usually at the pump-tub connection; replace the gasket.
- Cracked tub from improper support. Mortar bed required for most acrylic jetted tubs.
- Heater fail on in-tub-heater models. Replace the heater module.
Common variants
- Whirlpool (water-jet) vs. air-bath (air-jet). Different mechanism, both colloquially “jetted tubs.”
- Combo whirlpool + air bath. Premium tier.
- Heated jetted tub. Integral heater module to maintain water temperature during long soaks.