North Charleston sees a mix of residential pools, community amenities, and short-term rentals. That matters because pool injury cases often turn on who had day-to-day control and how safety was handled across a property that may be managed by an HOA, a rental company, or a maintenance vendor.
Common local patterns we see include:
- Shared amenities at apartment communities or neighborhood recreation areas where maintenance responsibilities are split between property management and contractors.
- Visitor-heavy seasonal use—more guests, more distractions, and more chances for children to access pool areas without proper barriers.
- High-impact accidents around pool decks during humid weather when surfaces stay slick longer, especially if traction treatments were skipped.
In these situations, the key question isn’t only “was there an injury?” It’s whether reasonable pool safety practices were followed for the type of use the property actually experienced.


