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Pool Coping
Browse our collection of pool coping in travertine, porcelain, limestone, and natural stone. Pool coping provides the finished edge where your pool meets the deck, delivering a safe grip and a clean transition. Coordinate with our pool tile and pool pavers for a unified design.
Guide to Pool Coping
Pool coping is the capstone installed along the top edge of the pool shell. It serves three critical purposes: it provides a safe, rounded edge for swimmers, it directs splash water away from the pool structure, and it finishes the visual transition between pool and deck.
Pool Coping Materials
Travertine coping is the most popular natural stone choice for pool edges - it stays cool underfoot, provides excellent grip, and ages beautifully. Limestone coping offers a smooth, refined look. Natural stone coping in general provides a premium aesthetic and natural slip resistance. Porcelain coping is a durable, low-maintenance alternative that resists salt, chlorine, and UV fading.
Coping Edge Profiles
Bullnose coping has a rounded front edge that is comfortable for swimmers resting their arms on the pool edge. Drop-face or overhang coping extends slightly beyond the pool wall, directing water back into the pool. Square-edge coping creates a clean, modern look. The right profile depends on your pool design and personal preference.
Coordinating Coping with Deck and Pool Tile
For a cohesive pool area, match or complement your coping with your pool waterline tile and deck material. Travertine coping pairs naturally with travertine pavers. Porcelain coping coordinates seamlessly with outdoor porcelain tile. Mixing materials - such as stone coping with porcelain deck tile - can create attractive contrast when colors are coordinated.
Coping Tile for Other Applications
Coping tile isn't just for pools. Coping tile is also used on wall caps, step edges, fountain edges, and raised planter boxes. The same materials that work at the pool edge perform well anywhere a finished, safe edge is needed outdoors.
What is the best material for pool coping?
Travertine is the most popular pool coping material. It naturally stays cool in direct sunlight, provides slip resistance when wet, and complements most pool designs. Porcelain coping is the best low-maintenance option, and limestone offers an elegant alternative for a refined look.
Does pool coping get hot?
Natural stone like travertine and limestone stays cooler than concrete or dark-colored materials in direct sun. Light-colored porcelain coping also remains comfortable underfoot. Avoid dark-colored coping in full-sun areas, as it absorbs more heat and can become uncomfortable for bare feet.
What is the difference between pool coping and pool tile?
Pool coping is the cap piece installed along the top edge of the pool wall. It has a specific edge profile (bullnose, drop-face, etc.) and sits at deck level. Pool tile is installed on the pool wall below the coping, typically at the waterline. Both are visible elements, but they serve different structural and aesthetic functions.