Verdict
Ranked #2 of 5Reviewed by Mike Hun·May 23, 2026

Intex Easy Set 15ft x 48in Inflatable Pool Set

Averaged from 1 published rating + 2 derived from review text
The verdict

The Intex Easy Set 15ft is the largest pool in the lineup that still uses the inflatable-top-ring construction rather than a metal frame. That means you get genuine family-of-five swim depth (42 inches, 4,440 gallons) without the two-hour metal-frame assembly. It ships as a complete set: 1,000 GPH cartridge filter pump, ladder, ground cloth, and debris cover are all in the box. Sizing the yard and the filling cost are the real planning constraints — the pool itself goes up in 15 minutes once the ground is flat.

Intex Easy Set 15ft x 48in Inflatable Pool Set

Full review

Setup and Inflation

The 15ft Easy Set uses the same inflatable-top-ring trick as its smaller siblings: inflate one ring, run the hose, and the walls rise into shape as the pool fills. Intex quotes 15 minutes ready-for-water, and Bob Vila's review confirms the same — 'once laid out flat and the top ring inflated, it's ready for water in less than 15 minutes.' Reviewed.com names this the easiest setup of any above-ground pool they tested. The catch is filling: 4,400 gallons through a standard garden hose takes 8 to 12 hours depending on water pressure. Most owners start the hose at bedtime and wake up to a full pool. Ground prep is the part that should not be rushed — a 2-inch slope across 15 feet of diameter results in 250 extra gallons of water leaning on one side of the soft wall.

Real Swim Capacity

Forty-eight inches of pool depth means roughly 42 inches of water depth at the 80 percent fill line. That is chest-deep on a six-foot adult, neck-deep on a ten-year-old, and over the head of a small child — life jackets are not optional. The 15-foot diameter is wide enough for two adults to wade past each other comfortably, and Bob Vila's testing puts the comfortable capacity at six to eight people for casual splashing. It will not let an adult swim freestyle laps — the 15-foot diameter is shorter than a quarter-turn — but it absolutely supports the play, treading, and cool-off use case that most backyard pools actually serve.

What's in the Box vs Hidden Costs

The 'Set' SKU is the one to buy. It includes the 1,000 GPH Krystal Clear cartridge filter pump, one Type A cartridge, a removable coated-steel ladder, a debris cover that snaps to the top ring, and a ground cloth that goes under the pool. Reviewed.com's pro reviewers and Bob Vila both call out the completeness of the bundle as a quiet value lever — nothing else to buy on day one. Ongoing costs are real, though: filter cartridges run roughly $8 each and should be swapped every two weeks of active use, chlorine and shock cost about $80 over a summer, and the initial fill at a typical water rate runs $20 to $60 depending on locale.

Build Quality and Durability

The 3-ply PVC is the same material spec as the smaller Easy Set pools, with extra reinforcement at the wall-floor seam where stress concentrates on the larger pool. The most common failure mode reported by long-term owners is not a wall puncture but a slow leak at the drain plug or hose connections — both fixable with plumber's tape or an o-ring swap. The included repair patch handles small punctures. Across Bob Vila's testing and the buyer reviews collected by Reviewed, the 15ft model lasts three to five summers with reasonable care; pool covers in winter and proper drainage in fall both extend that meaningfully.

Safety Considerations

At 42 inches of water depth, this pool is a real drowning hazard for children. Intex notes the 6+ age recommendation but the practical floor is much higher: no swimmer should be in the pool without an adult, and small children should wear properly sized life jackets even when an adult is present. Important context: on July 21, 2025, Bestway, Intex, and Polygroup issued a recall of approximately 5 million above-ground pools featuring external compression straps that ran over support legs, creating footholds children could climb. Verify the pool you receive is post-recall or includes the remediation kit, and remove or lock the ladder when the pool is not in use.

Where It Falls Short

Three caveats are real. First, this needs an 18-foot clear circle of flat ground — many suburban backyards do not have that. Second, the 1,000 GPH filter pump is sized for the pool but not for heavy use; if four kids swim daily, water clarity slips and a larger pump or saltwater conversion is the long-term answer. Third, the soft PVC walls are less stiff than the steel-frame alternatives at the same diameter (e.g., Intex Ultra XTR), so a leaning kid produces more wall flex than a frame pool would. None of these are dealbreakers for the right buyer, but all three should be considered before purchase.

Who It's Best For

Choose the 15ft Easy Set if you have older kids or teenagers, a backyard with at least 18 feet of flat-and-level ground, and the willingness to commit to weekly pool chemistry. Choose the 10ft model instead if your kids are toddlers or you have a tight yard. Skip the Easy Set entirely if you want a pool that lives in the yard for 10+ years — the steel-frame Intex Ultra XTR or a Bestway Steel Pro Max in the same diameter is the longer-term answer.

How It Compares to the Easy Set 10ft

The mechanism is identical — same inflatable top ring, same wall material, same filter cartridge technology. The differences are diameter (15 vs 10 feet), depth (48 vs 30 inches), water volume (4,440 vs 1,018 gallons), and bundle (the 15ft includes a ladder and cover the 10ft skips). The 15ft costs about three to four times the 10ft. The right question is not which is better but whether your yard, family size, and water budget justify the upgrade. For a household with two kids under eight, the 10ft is plenty. For three-plus kids or teenagers, the 15ft is meaningfully better. The other comparison worth making is against the steel-frame Intex Ultra XTR at the same 15ft diameter: Family Handyman's testing of the Ultra XTR found the steel-frame version takes about two hours to assemble (four people needed), holds 8,400 gallons, and lasts five to ten summers with care. The Easy Set's inflatable wall trades that durability for a 15-minute setup.

Long-Term Storage and Winter Care

End-of-season is more involved on the 15ft than on the smaller Easy Sets. Drain takes 4-6 hours through the included garden-hose adapter — most owners route the hose to a lawn area that can absorb 4,400 gallons or to a storm drain (check local rules first). Deflate the top ring, fold the pool loosely, and store in a dry indoor space. The filter pump should be disconnected, drained, and stored separately to prevent freeze damage in winter; the ladder can stay outside but rusts faster if left exposed. Owners who leave the pool inflated through fall need to address two issues: leaves clog the filter quickly without a cover (the included debris cover helps), and freezing water expands and stresses the soft PVC walls. Most owners in cold climates tear down by mid-October. Owners in warm climates (year-round above 50°F) can leave the pool inflated with the cover on, but should still drain partially and add winterizing chemicals to prevent algae bloom. A correctly stored 15ft Easy Set will be ready to redeploy the following May with no surprises beyond inflating the top ring; a poorly stored one will reveal seam cracks, mildew patches, or rusted pump parts within minutes of bringing it back out. The off-season hour spent on proper teardown saves an entire summer's worth of frustration the following year. Some owners keep a checklist taped to the inside of the garage door covering teardown steps, winterizing chemical additions, and storage location of each component. Replacement filter cartridges, ladder feet, and even the inflatable top ring itself are available directly from Intex, which extends the pool's effective lifespan by years for owners willing to maintain it rather than replace it. The single most common reason owners abandon an Easy Set after one summer is mildew from improper drying, not actual failure of the pool itself.

Strengths

  • +Same inflatable-top-ring mechanism as the 10ft model, but at 4,440 gallons it crosses into real swimming territory
  • +Bundle includes 1,000 GPH cartridge filter pump, ladder, debris cover, and ground cloth — no buying a starter kit separately
  • +Reaches 42 inches of usable water depth, enough for adults to actually swim a few strokes and play with kids in shoulder-deep water
  • +Setup remains a one-person, 15-minute exercise once the ground is prepped — no metal frame to assemble
  • +Puncture-resistant 3-ply PVC is the same material spec as the smaller pools, with thicker reinforcement at stress points

Watch-outs

  • Footprint demands roughly an 18-foot circle of flat lawn including walk-around space
  • Filling takes 8-12 hours and 4,400 gallons of municipal water — check your local rate and any drought restrictions
  • Soft PVC walls are less durable over multi-year use than steel-frame alternatives at the same diameter

How it compares

Within this list, the 15ft Easy Set is the only pick that supports real swimming for adults — the 10ft Easy Set stays at chest height for kids and the Jungle Adventure Play Center maxes out at 8 inches of water. It is also the only pick whose ongoing operating cost (filter cartridges, chlorine, evaporation refills) matters at the household-budget level.

Who this is for

At a glance: families with school-age and teenage kids who want a pool that adults can actually swim in, without committing to an in-ground build.

Why you’d buy the Intex Easy Set 15ft x 48in Inflatable Pool Set

  • Same inflatable-top-ring mechanism as the 10ft model, but at 4,440 gallons it crosses into real swimming territory.
  • Bundle includes 1,000 GPH cartridge filter pump, ladder, debris cover, and ground cloth — no buying a starter kit separately.
  • Reaches 42 inches of usable water depth, enough for adults to actually swim a few strokes and play with kids in shoulder-deep water.

Why you’d skip it

  • Footprint demands roughly an 18-foot circle of flat lawn including walk-around space.
  • Filling takes 8-12 hours and 4,400 gallons of municipal water — check your local rate and any drought restrictions.
  • Soft PVC walls are less durable over multi-year use than steel-frame alternatives at the same diameter.

Rating sources

Our 4.5 score is the average of these published ratings. Ratings marked * were derived from the reviewer’s written analysis or video transcript — the publisher didn’t print an explicit numeric score, so we inferred one from their own words. Click through to verify. More about methodology.

Frequently asked questions

Is the Intex Easy Set 15ft x 48in Inflatable Pool Set worth buying?
The Intex Easy Set 15ft is the largest pool in the lineup that still uses the inflatable-top-ring construction rather than a metal frame. That means you get genuine family-of-five swim depth (42 inches, 4,440 gallons) without the two-hour metal-frame assembly. It ships as a complete set: 1,000 GPH cartridge filter pump, ladder, ground cloth, and debris cover are all in the box. Sizing the yard and the filling cost are the real planning constraints — the pool itself goes up in 15 minutes once the ground is flat.
What is the Intex Easy Set 15ft x 48in Inflatable Pool Set's biggest strength?
Same inflatable-top-ring mechanism as the 10ft model, but at 4,440 gallons it crosses into real swimming territory
What is the main drawback of the Intex Easy Set 15ft x 48in Inflatable Pool Set?
Footprint demands roughly an 18-foot circle of flat lawn including walk-around space
What sources back the 4.5/5 rating?
Our 4.5/5 rating is the average of scores from 3 independent inflatable pools reviews — reviewed.com, intexcorp.com, and bobvila.com. Click any source on the product page to read the original review.

How it compares

See all 5
Intex Easy Set 10ft x 30in Inflatable Pool
#1 · Top Score

Intex Easy Set 10ft x 30in Inflatable Pool

The 10ft Easy Set sits one tier below the Intex Easy Set 15ft for capacity but takes a fraction of the yard space and fills in half the time. Versus the Intex Jungle Adventure Play Center it trades cartoon slides and ring-toss features for actual swim depth.

Intex Jungle Adventure Inflatable Play Center
#3

Intex Jungle Adventure Inflatable Play Center

Within this list, the Jungle Adventure Play Center sits between the Sunset Glow Baby Pool (toddler-only, no features) and the Intex Easy Set 10ft (older-kid pool with no features). It serves the 2-to-6 age window better than either — too feature-rich for a one-year-old, too small and shallow for a teenager.

Intex Sunset Glow Inflatable Baby Pool
#4

Intex Sunset Glow Inflatable Baby Pool

Within this list, the Sunset Glow is the only pick designed for kids one to three — every other pool in the category requires age 2+ or 6+. It is also the smallest and cheapest by an order of magnitude versus the Intex Easy Set 10ft or the Jungle Adventure Play Center, both of which need an older child to be useful.

Funboy Clear Pink Heart Inflatable Pool
#5

Funboy Clear Pink Heart Inflatable Pool

Within this list, the Funboy Heart is the only pick designed primarily as an aesthetic object rather than a swim or play product. Versus the Intex Easy Set 10ft it is one-tenth the water volume but five times the per-gallon cost; versus the Sunset Glow it is the adult-aesthetic answer to the same form factor.

Intex Easy Set 15ft x 48in Inflatable Pool Set
4.5/5· $450
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