17 Genius Above Ground Pool Privacy Ideas That Look Luxe
When we put in our above ground pool, I was obsessed with the water and zero percent focused on what it would feel like to swim with the neighbors watching. Turns out, that matters a lot. After two summers of trial, error, and one very awkward wave to a guy three yards over, I found the setups that actually work.
Here are 17 ideas that give you privacy without making your pool look like it’s hiding from the world.
1. Multi-Level Bamboo Planters
Bamboo is the fastest way to get height and coverage without waiting years for a hedge to fill in. Stagger a few planters at different heights instead of lining them up like soldiers, it reads way more natural.
- Clumping bamboo is your friend here, running bamboo will take over your yard
- Use weighted planters so wind doesn’t tip them near the pool
- Group three to five planters in a loose cluster for the best coverage
2. Layered Emerald Green Arborvitae
This is the classic for a reason. Arborvitae grows in a clean, tight column, so you get a living wall without the wild, unruly look some shrubs have.
- Plant in a staggered double row for denser coverage faster
- Give them at least 3 feet of space to breathe and grow properly
- They’re slow growing, so buy bigger starter plants if you want privacy this season, not in three years
3. Oversized Potted Palms & Ornamental Grasses
I leaned on this one hard because it’s the laziest option that still looks intentional. Big potted palms next to tall ornamental grasses break up sightlines without you digging a single hole in the ground.
- Mix heights and textures, one palm and a few grass clusters looks curated, not random
- Great for renters or anyone who doesn’t want permanent landscaping
- Move the pots seasonally to chase sun or block a new angle
4. Trellis Walls with Fast-Growing Flowering Vines
A bare trellis looks like a construction project. A trellis covered in clematis or morning glory looks like something out of a magazine, and it gets there fast.
- Star jasmine and clematis are reliable fast growers in most climates
- Anchor the trellis well, full vine coverage gets heavier than people expect
- Pick flowering vines if you want color, evergreen vines if you want year-round screening
See Also: 13 Small Garden Party Ideas That Feel Charming and Effortless
5. Horizontal Slat Fencing
This is the look I’d choose if I were starting over. Horizontal slats feel modern instead of like a backyard afterthought, and the gaps between boards still let breeze and light through.
- Cedar or thermally modified wood holds up well against pool splash
- Space slats about half an inch apart for privacy that still feels open
- Stain it instead of painting, it ages a lot better around moisture
6. Frosted Glass or Acrylic Panels
If you want privacy without losing the view entirely, frosted panels are the move. You still get light and a sense of openness, just without anyone clocking exactly what’s happening poolside.
- Acrylic is lighter and cheaper than glass, and it won’t shatter
- Etched or frosted finishes block sightlines better than tinted ones
- Clean panels regularly, water spots show up fast on glass
7. Matte Black Metal Privacy Screens
This is the option that makes a pool setup look designed rather than thrown together. Matte black reads expensive even when the screen itself is budget friendly, and it pairs with almost any outdoor style.
- Laser cut patterns add visual interest instead of one flat black slab
- Matte finish hides water spots and fingerprints better than glossy black
- Works especially well against light siding or a neutral fence line
8. Faux Ivy Living Walls
When I needed privacy fast and didn’t trust myself to keep real plants alive, faux ivy panels saved the summer. Zero watering, zero waiting, and from a few feet away nobody can tell it’s not real.
- Buy UV-resistant panels so the green doesn’t fade or yellow by July
- Attach to a simple frame or existing fence for instant coverage
- Mix in a few faux flowers for a less uniform, more natural look
9. Outdoor Cabana Curtains
Curtains around a pool sound fussy, but outdoor fabric panels actually feel like a resort the second you hang them. Pull them closed for privacy, tie them back when you want the breeze.
- Use marine grade or solution-dyed fabric so they don’t mildew
- Hang from a simple pipe frame, you don’t need a full cabana structure
- White or natural linen tones make a small pool area feel bigger
10. Cantilever Umbrella Arrays
One umbrella shades a corner. A few cantilever umbrellas grouped together block sightlines from multiple angles while doing double duty as sun protection.
- Position them based on where the neighbors actually look in, not just where the sun hits
- Choose offset bases so the pole doesn’t eat into your deck space
- Neutral canvas colors blend in better than bright patterns if the goal is low-key privacy
11. Custom Sail Shades
Sail shades pull double duty better than almost anything on this list. Angled right, they block a second story window view and give you shade at the same time.
- Layer two or three sails at different heights and angles for full coverage
- Triangular shapes are easier to angle toward specific sightlines than square ones
- Use marine grade hardware, regular hooks rust fast near a pool
12. Integrated Step-Up Privacy Walls
If your pool already has a deck or step-up entry, building the privacy wall right into that structure looks far more intentional than adding screens around the edge later.
- Match the wall material to your deck for a built-in, custom look
- Leave a small gap at the bottom so water can drain off the deck
- This works especially well for round pools where fencing alone looks awkward
13. Shiplap Accent Walls
Shiplap isn’t just for indoor accent walls anymore. Used outside around a pool, it adds texture and a cottage or coastal feel while doing the actual job of blocking views.
- Use exterior grade or PVC shiplap, regular interior boards will warp
- White or soft gray shiplap keeps the space feeling bright, not boxed in
- Pair with string lights for a softer evening look
14. Modern Louvre Panels
Louvre panels are the upgrade pick if you want something that looks architectural rather than added on. Fixed or adjustable, they create privacy while still letting air move through.
- Adjustable louvres let you control light and airflow throughout the day
- Powder coated aluminum holds up better than wood near constant moisture
- Vertical louvres tend to look sleeker for pool settings than horizontal ones
15. Upcycled Pallet Walls Painted Matte Black or Charcoal
This is the budget hero of the list. Reclaimed pallets, sanded down and painted a deep charcoal or matte black, look surprisingly high end once they’re up.
- Sand thoroughly first, splinters near a pool area are a real hazard
- Two coats of exterior paint is the minimum for it to hold up outside
- Stagger the boards slightly for a more custom, less “pallet” look
16. Reed Fencing Wrapped in Fairy Lights
Reed fencing alone is a quick, cheap privacy fix. Wrap it in warm white fairy lights and it turns into the backdrop for every evening swim from June through September.
- Solar powered lights save you from running extension cords near water
- Reed fencing is light, so secure it well in windy areas
- Warm white lights look far more elevated than cool white or multicolor
17. Strategic Pergola Placement
Sometimes the best privacy fix isn’t a wall at all, it’s a roofline. A pergola placed at the right angle can block a neighbor’s upstairs window completely while making your pool area feel like an actual outdoor room.
- Add retractable canopy or slats for control over shade and privacy
- Position posts to also support climbing vines for extra coverage
- This is the option that adds the most resale value if you’re thinking long term
Pro Tips
A few things I wish someone had told me before I started:
- Walk your own property line and actually look up at neighboring windows before choosing a solution, sightlines are rarely where you assume they are
- Combine two or three ideas instead of relying on one, a single screen rarely covers every angle
- Choose materials rated for constant moisture and chlorine splash, regular outdoor furniture finishes degrade faster near a pool
- Check your local fence height regulations before building anything permanent
- Leave at least one open sightline from your own house to the pool for safety, especially if kids swim unsupervised
Conclusion
You don’t need a six-figure backyard renovation to make your above ground pool feel private and pulled together. Most of these ideas cost less than a single pool party’s worth of snacks and drinks, and they make a real difference in how relaxed you feel out there.
Pick two or three that fit your space and budget, and build from there. Your pool deserves to feel like an escape, not a stage.

















