Intex Greywood Premium Pool Review (2026): Wood-Look Rectangular Pool Tested

Last updated: July 2026 • Reviewed by the YardFit Pools team

⭐ Quick Verdict: Intex Greywood Premium Pool
YardFit Setup-Difficulty Score: 4/5 — Two adults, full day. Corner leveling is critical and the most demanding step.
YardFit Liner-Durability Score: 3/5 — Reinforced liner, comparable to Prism Frame Premium at this tier.
Yard-Fit Tag: Deck-adjacent or narrow rectangular spaces. Footprint: 10 x 20 ft (needs ~14 x 24 ft of flat ground).
Best for: Buyers who want a pool that looks good next to a deck or patio and are willing to invest in careful setup.
Who should skip it: Anyone who doesn’t care about aesthetics — a round pool delivers more volume per dollar with easier setup.
Overall rating: ★★★★☆ 3.8/5
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What Is the Intex Greywood Premium Pool?

The Intex Greywood Premium is Intex’s only rectangular above ground pool line and its most design-forward product. The frame panels are finished with a wood-grain texture in a weathered grey tone — designed to look like a real wood-sided pool from a distance. Available in 10 x 20 ft as the standard configuration, it’s positioned at buyers who want a pool that integrates aesthetically with a deck or patio rather than standing out as clearly a plastic-and-vinyl structure.

It is not for everyone. The rectangular format adds setup complexity, the wood-panel aesthetic costs a price premium over a round pool of similar volume, and the 10 x 20 ft footprint requires 14 x 24 ft of flat ground — a specific space requirement that only some yards meet. For buyers to whom the aesthetic matters, it’s a genuinely appealing pool. For buyers who just want water in the backyard, a 15ft round pool at half the price is the better choice.

Full Specifications

Spec10 x 20 ft Rectangle
Depth48 inches
Water capacity~5,765 gallons
Total footprint10 x 20 ft
Min. flat ground needed~14 x 24 ft (2 ft clearance all sides)
Frame panelsSteel frame with PVC wood-grain texture panels
Liner constructionReinforced PVC liner
Included pump (GPH)1,000–1,500 GPH (model year dependent)
Ladder includedYes
Ground cloth includedYes
Warranty1 year
Saltwater compatibleNo — standard steel frame underneath panels
Typical price (2026)$550–850

The Wood-Panel Aesthetic: What It Is and What It Isn’t

The Greywood’s wood-look panels are PVC panel covers fitted over a standard steel frame structure. The panels clip onto the frame uprights and create the visual effect of a plank-sided pool from outside. From a normal viewing distance, the effect is convincing — the grey weathered-wood texture reads as natural material in photographs and from across a backyard.

Close up, the PVC material is clearly plastic. The panels are not structural — they’re a cosmetic cover over the steel frame. This matters for two reasons:

  • The frame underneath is standard steel and subject to the same rust risk as any Intex steel frame pool. The panels protect the frame from direct sunlight and reduce UV degradation of the coating, which is a mild benefit, but they do not make the frame waterproof or corrosion-proof.
  • The panels can fade and show surface weathering over time, particularly in climates with intense UV. By season three, the “weathered grey” look can become more genuinely weathered than intended.
Is the wood look worth the price premium?
The Greywood costs $550–850 vs. $280–500 for an 18ft round Intex Prism Frame with significantly more water volume.
You’re paying $200–400 for the rectangular shape and the wood-panel aesthetic.
If those two things matter to you specifically — deck integration and visual appearance — the premium is justified.
If they don’t: an 18ft round pool at the same price delivers 40% more water, easier setup, and lower maintenance cost.

Setup Experience: Hardest Intex Pool to Install

The Greywood earns a 4/5 Setup-Difficulty Score — the highest (hardest) of any Intex pool we review. The rectangular format requires:

  • Four perfectly level corners, not just an overall level base. A round pool that’s level across its diameter is fine; a rectangular pool with one corner 1 inch lower than the other three will show visible lean and put stress on the entire frame.
  • Panel installation before the liner goes in. The wood-look panels need to be clipped onto the frame in sequence before the liner is seated, adding a significant setup step vs. standard frame pools.
  • Two adults minimum throughout — the panel installation is a two-person job and the liner seating at 10 x 20 ft requires coordination across the full rectangular perimeter.

Plan a full day for the setup, not an afternoon. The leveling and panel installation steps are where most first-time Greywood buyers significantly underestimate the time required.

Greywood setup tips: corners are everything
Use a 4-foot level (not a 2-foot level) to check each corner before any frame assembly. The longer the level, the more accurate the corner assessment.
Dig down on high corners rather than filling up on low corners. Fill compresses over time under water weight; excavated ground doesn’t.
Clip the panels onto the frame uprights before fully tightening any frame connectors. You’ll need to flex the frame slightly to seat corner panels — do this before everything is rigid.
The liner at 10 x 20 ft has 90-degree corners that must be seated carefully before filling. Each corner needs to be pulled snug into the frame corner before water weight sets the shape permanently.
Run 2–3 inches of water before checking corner liner seating. The water weight reveals any corner puckering that needs to be smoothed before the pool is full.

Liner Durability: 3/5 — Solid but Not the Selling Point

The Greywood’s liner earns a 3/5 Liner-Durability Score — the same as the Intex Prism Frame Premium and Bestway Power Steel at this price tier. The reinforced liner is adequate for two to three seasons of normal family use.

The rectangular corners are the Greywood’s specific liner vulnerability. The vinyl must conform to a 90-degree corner at each end, and these corners are higher-stress points than the continuous curve of a round pool liner. Corner reinforcement in the Greywood liner is present but is the first area to show stress in years two and three of use.

Replacement liners for the Greywood’s specific rectangular dimensions are available from Intex but less widely stocked than round pool liners at third-party retailers. Source a replacement liner at the end of season one while the current model is clearly in production.

Deck-Adjacent Installation: The Greywood’s Best Use Case

The Greywood’s strongest practical argument is deck integration. A rectangular pool with straight sides sits flush against a deck edge in a way that no round or oval pool can match. The wood-panel aesthetic reinforces this — the pool looks like a planned part of the outdoor space rather than an afterthought.

For this to work well, the deck needs to be at a height that allows the pool ladder to clear the deck structure, and there must be adequate clearance between the pool and the deck for safety and maintenance access (minimum 18 inches; 2 ft is better). See our guide to putting a pool on or adjacent to a deck for specific weight and clearance requirements.

Deck-adjacent installation: what to check first
The Greywood at 10 x 20 ft holds ~5,765 gallons — approximately 48,000 lbs of water when full. This is the pool weight, not counting the pool structure.
If installing adjacent to a wooden deck: the deck must be structurally independent of the pool. The pool’s water weight should not transfer to the deck structure.
Minimum clearance between pool wall and deck edge: 18 inches for safety access. 2 ft is preferable.
Ladder placement: the A-frame ladder must clear the deck structure without the deck blocking the entry/exit path.

Greywood vs. Round Pool: The Honest Comparison

FactorIntex Greywood 10x20ftIntex Prism Frame 18ft Round
Setup-Difficulty Score4/53/5
Liner-Durability Score3/53/5
Water capacity~5,765 gal~7,646 gal
Min. flat ground needed14 x 24 ft22 x 22 ft
Depth48 inches48 inches
AestheticWood-panel, deck-integrates wellStandard blue/grey frame
Pump included1,000–1,500 GPH1,000 GPH
Typical price$550–850$380–520
Best forDeck integration, aesthetic-focused buyersMaximum swimming volume per dollar

The round pool is better value on every metric except aesthetics and deck fit. The Greywood’s case is specifically: you care about how the pool looks, and/or you have a space that fits a 10 x 20 ft rectangle better than an 18ft circle. Outside of those two conditions, the round pool wins.

Pump Assessment

The included 1,000–1,500 GPH pump is marginal for 5,765 gallons. An 8-hour turnover at minimum requires 720 GPH; the included pump clears this comfortably at 1,000 GPH but has limited headroom as filter resistance builds. Upgrading to a 1,500–2,000 GPH pump improves water clarity for a pool of this volume, particularly in warm weather when algae risk is higher.

What’s in the Box

  • Steel frame with PVC wood-grain texture panel covers
  • Reinforced rectangular liner
  • Cartridge filter pump (1,000–1,500 GPH depending on model year)
  • Filter cartridge
  • A-frame ladder
  • Ground cloth
  • Drain connector
  • Repair patch

What to Buy Separately

  • Solar cover (custom rectangular size, $50–100): harder to source than round covers; buy a 10 x 20 ft solar cover at the same time as the pool.
  • Pump upgrade ($80–150): 1,500–2,000 GPH improves filtration at this volume.
  • Pool pad ($25–45): rectangular foam pads are available; supplement the included ground cloth.
  • Chemicals ($40–70): chlorine tablets, pH Down, algaecide for startup.

Who the Intex Greywood Is Right For

Buyers who care about pool aesthetics: The wood-panel look is genuinely attractive and significantly better-looking than a standard blue frame pool in a designed backyard or patio space.

Deck-adjacent install buyers: Straight sides flush against a deck edge — the only above ground pool format that integrates this cleanly with existing deck structures.

Buyers with a rectangular space constraint: If your available flat space is 14 x 24 ft but not 22 x 22 ft, the Greywood fits where an 18ft round pool won’t.

Who Should Skip the Greywood

Buyers who don’t care about aesthetics: A round pool at the same price delivers more water volume, easier setup, and lower cost. The Greywood’s premium buys the look, not better pool performance.

First-time pool installers: The 4/5 setup difficulty and corner leveling requirements make this a poor first-pool choice. Start with the Prism Frame and upgrade if aesthetics become important.

Buyers expecting 3+ seasons: The rectangular corner liner stress shortens liner lifespan vs. round pool equivalents. Budget for a liner replacement at season two and source it early.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Intex Greywood pool worth it?

For buyers who specifically want the wood-panel look and deck integration: yes. For everyone else: a round Intex pool at the same price delivers more water volume, easier setup, and the same liner quality. The Greywood’s value is in the aesthetic, not the pool performance.

How hard is the Intex Greywood to set up?

It earns a 4/5 Setup-Difficulty Score — the hardest Intex pool we review. Corner leveling is the critical challenge: four perfectly level corners, not just an overall level base. Budget a full day with two adults. First-time pool buyers should start with a round Intex pool before attempting the Greywood.

Does the Intex Greywood look like real wood?

From a normal viewing distance (10+ feet) and in photographs, yes — the weathered grey PVC panel texture reads convincingly as wood. Close up, the plastic material is apparent. The aesthetic holds well in years one and two; by year three, UV exposure can cause the panels to look more generically faded than intentionally weathered.

Can I put a solar cover on the Intex Greywood?

Yes, but you need a rectangular solar cover sized to 10 x 20 ft — round covers won’t work. Rectangular solar covers at this size are less widely available than round covers. Source one at the same time as the pool purchase to avoid hunting for a compatible cover mid-season.

How long does the Intex Greywood liner last?

Two to three seasons with normal family use, same as other Intex pools at this liner tier. The rectangular corner areas are the first to show stress. Replacement liners for the Greywood are available from Intex but less widely stocked at third-party retailers than round pool liners — source your replacement early rather than waiting for visible liner failure.