
The City of Wenatchee’s outdoor swimming pool is a 10-lane, 50-meter L-shaped pool with one three-meter and two one-meter diving boards. The pool offers lap and public swims, water exercise classes, swimming lessons, and private pool rental times.
The pool is located at 220 South Fuller Street. To contact the pool during the season, call (509) 888-3288.
Pool Schedule
The City Pool is now closed for the season. Click here to view the upcoming season's schedule!
Swimming Lessons, Pool Programs and Admission Fees
Information about Swimming Lessons, Water Exercise Classes, Public Swims, Pool Rentals, Fees and more! Click here to download an information sheet.
Pool Rentals
You can rent the pool for birthday celebrations or other special functions. During the season, contact the pool for availability or during the off season, contact the Parks and Recreation Department at (509) 888-3284. Pool rental fees are listed above. You can download a Pool Rental Packet by clicking here, and return your application and payment (cash and check only) to the pool to secure your reservation.
The City of Wenatchee is a proud partner of the USA Swimming Foundation
About Make a Splash
Consistent with the goal of saving lives and providing every child in America with the opportunity to learn how to swim, Make a Splash, a national child-focused water safety initiative, was created by the USA Swimming Foundation in 2007. Make a Splash partners with learn-to-swim providers across the country to provide swimming lessons and educate kids on the importance of learning how to swim. Many partner programs are located in disadvantaged or ethnically diverse communities and provide training programs (including certified instructors, resources and quality programming) to help children become water-safe and share with them a lifelong physical fitness activity. Make a Splash’s awareness campaign is built around the staggering statistics that minority children ages 5-14 are most at risk for drowning, and drowning is the second leading cause of accidental death for children under the age of 14. Make a Splash educates parents through a national awareness campaign; saves lives by joining forces with grassroots learn-to-swim programs and reaches millions of children through its programming, promotions and publicity tours.
Click on this link to go to Make a Splash's website: www.makeasplash.org