Water Tanks and Pools Waterproofing
What Actually Works and Why Most Fail
Waterproofing a terrace is one thing.
Waterproofing a water tank, sump, or swimming pool is a completely different game.
Why?
Because in most cases, we try to stop water from entering.
Here, the situation is opposite. Water is already inside and continuously trying to come out.
This one difference changes everything.
First Understand This Simple Concept
Positive Side vs Negative Side Waterproofing
Don’t worry about jargon, simple samajh lo:
- Positive side = where water is present
- Negative side = opposite side, where water is trying to come through
Example:
- Tank waterproofing from inside = Positive side
- Basement wall from inside = Negative side
Why this matters:
- Positive side: water pushes coating into surface, better bonding
- Negative side: water tries to push coating off, higher failure risk
Simple rule:
Waterproofing works best when applied on the water side

1. Overhead RCC Water Tanks
Most homes have RCC overhead tanks.
What is required here:
- Water should not leak out
- Water should remain safe for drinking
- Coating should handle continuous water contact
Key things to check:
- Material should be non-toxic
- No smell, no taste
- Surface must be properly cleaned and cured
- Pay attention to joints, corners, and pipe entries
What works best:
Use polymer modified cementitious coating
Example type: MoistureZero, SikaTop, Zentrifix Elastic
Why this works:
- Bonds well with concrete
- Handles water pressure from inside
- Does not peel under constant water load
Application basics:
- Minimum 2 coats
- Apply in cross direction
- Proper curing before filling
Final Test (Very Important)
Don’t just look and assume it’s done.
- Fill tank fully
- Keep for 48 hours
- Check outside walls
No seepage means system is working
2. Underground Sumps and Tanks
This is where most people get confused.
Why it is tricky:
- When tank is full → pressure from inside
- When empty → pressure from outside (groundwater)
So pressure comes from both sides.
What works better here:
Instead of only coating, use integral waterproofing inside concrete
Simple meaning:
Waterproofing is mixed inside concrete itself.
Example: crystalline waterproofing systems ( MC Special DM , Sika Control WDT etc)
Why this is better:
- Works inside concrete
- Blocks water paths permanently
- Cannot peel off
- Can self-seal small cracks
For old leaking tanks:
If you cannot dig from outside:
- Apply crystalline slurry from inside
- Treat joints and cracks separately
This is usually the most practical repair solution in Indian conditions
3. Swimming Pools
Pools are one of the toughest waterproofing areas.
Because they have:
- Continuous water pressure
- Chlorine exposure
- Temperature changes
- Structural movement
Why most pools fail:
- Cracks in structure
- Poor joint treatment
- Wrong waterproofing system
- Wrong grout selection
Important rules:
1. Structure first, coating later
If structure is weak, waterproofing will fail.
2. Joints are critical
Most leakage happens at:
- Floor to wall junction
- Construction joints
3. Chemical resistance matters
Chlorine can damage many coatings
Avoid basic acrylic coatings
Use chemical-resistant systems
Two common systems:
Painted pool
- Epoxy coating
- Seamless finish
Tiled pool
- Waterproofing below tiles
- Use proper pool-grade adhesive and grout ie, Epoxy Grout (Laticrete SP 100 or Vura Epoxy Grout or Buildsmart TGE 100)
Important point:
Sometime Failures are not tiles, but wrong grout selection
4. Rainwater Tanks and Water Features
These are simpler but still need care.
Requirements:
- Non-toxic
- No chemical leaching
- Safe for water storage
What to use:
- Cementitious waterproofing systems
What to avoid:
- Solvent-based coatings unless fully cured
Important rule:
Do not rush filling
- Allow 7 to 14 days curing
The Flood Test
The Only Real Proof
Every waterproofing job must be tested.
How to do:
- Fill structure fully
- Mark water level
- Keep for minimum 48 hours
- Check for drop
One smart trick:
Keep a bucket of water nearby
Compare water loss (to account for evaporation)
Result:
- No drop = success
- Drop = problem needs investigation
Final Understanding
Waterproofing of tanks and pools is not normal waterproofing.
It requires:
- Correct understanding of water pressure
- Right product selection
- Proper joint detailing
- Testing before finishing
Simple Rule to Remember
- Underground tank > integral waterproofing + 1K Acrylic Cement Coating
- Overhead tank > If concrete , Integral + cementitious coating 1k or 2k
- Swimming pool > if concrete integral waterproofing + 2K Acrylic Cement or 2K Crystalline or chemical resistant system
- All cases > testing is compulsory
Final Thought
Don’t select waterproofing based only on brand or price.
Selection should depend on:
- Structure type
- Water pressure condition
- Usage and exposure
One Line Summary
Waterproofing works when you understand water behaviour, not when you just apply a product.