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Arctic Spa Frontier Older Model Specs and Manual

The Arctic Spa Frontier is an older model shown in previous Arctic Spas owner manuals. Those manuals list it at about 86 × 93 × 38.75 in (217 × 235 × 98 cm). Its published water capacity is 351 US gal (1,330 L) in the 2019 manual; 334 US gal (1,266 L) in the 2013 manual.

Arctic Spa Frontier dimensions and capacity

Series Legacy hot tub
Model status Older / discontinued model
Dimensions About 86 × 93 × 38.75 in (217 × 235 × 98 cm)
Water capacity 351 US gal (1,330 L) in the 2019 manual; 334 US gal (1,266 L) in the 2013 manual
Empty weight 785 lb (356 kg) in the 2019 manual
Filled weight Not listed in the older manual
Seats Not listed in the older manual
Maximum capacity Not listed in the older manual
Loungers Not listed in the older manual
Jet options Varies by year/package
Pump options Varies by year/package

The filled weight does not include people, steps, accessories, or snow. Have a qualified professional check any deck or raised platform before placing a filled spa on it.

Which Frontier specs does this guide cover?

The Frontier is an older Arctic Spa model. The figures below come from the official owner manual or manuals linked on this page. Older tubs can vary by year, so compare the measurements and equipment label on your spa before buying a cover, filter, pump, or control part.

Frontier seating and layout

The older manuals I found for the Frontier list its size, water capacity, and dry weight, but they do not give a dependable seating count. This is a larger older hot tub with a roughly 7-by-8-foot footprint. Use the shell in front of you, not the seating count from a newer model with a similar name.

If you are comparing models, pay attention to the footwell and lounger setup as much as the advertised capacity. A tub may technically hold the listed number of people but still feel tight once everyone is in it.

Jets and pump packages

Arctic Spas used different jet and pump setups in the Frontier depending on the model year and package. Check the equipment label inside your cabinet before ordering a pump, heater, control panel, or electrical part.

Why the package matters: Both manuals list 50A for the standard Frontier and 60A for Epic. The actual controller programming and label must match the supplied power.

Electrical requirements for the Frontier

240V wiring method 240V fixed-wiring diagram through a GFCI spa subpanel: Line 1, Line 2, neutral, and equipment ground
Published feeder-wire guidance No feeder gauge or blanket copper-only supply-wire rule is stated in the cited legacy manual; use the original certification label and local code
GFCI breaker 50A GFCI; 60A for an Epic configuration
Published equipment input The legacy manual does not separate actual equipment load by package
Heater 5,500W in the cited legacy specification table
Plug N Play No cord-and-plug configuration is documented for this model in the 2013/2019 manuals
Plug-in electrical details Do not retrofit a plug based on a newer model. Use the original certification label and year-specific manual.
Spa disconnect At least 5 ft (1.5 m) from the water, readily accessible, and within sight; within sight is generally no more than 50 ft under NEC terminology
Bonding conductor At least No. 8 AWG solid copper to the local bonding grid in the United States, as required by the Arctic Spas manual and local code

Breaker box and disconnect location: Arctic Spas says the GFCI disconnect must be readily accessible and visible to the hot tub occupant, but at least 5 ft (1.5 m) from the water. Under common NEC terminology, within sight generally means visible and within 50 ft, but the adopted code edition, amendments, product listing, and local inspector control the exact placement. The enclosure installed near the spa is commonly called the spa disconnect, GFCI spa panel, or spa subpanel.

Wiring and bonding: Arctic Spas requires a licensed electrician and local inspection. The certification label beside the controller determines the final voltage, actual load, breaker, and approved configuration. Where Arctic publishes a feeder gauge, it is shown in the model table; conductor insulation, terminal material rating, raceway, run-length adjustments, and local requirements still belong to the electrician. The manual calls for the spa bonding lug to connect to the local bonding grid with at least No. 8 AWG solid copper in the United States or No. 6 AWG stranded copper in Canada. Nearby metal equipment, enclosures, water pipe, conduit, and metal surfaces within 5 ft may also require bonding.

Plug-in configurations: Do not retrofit a plug based on a newer model. Use the original certification label and year-specific manual. The manufacturer’s 5 ft appliance warning is not a complete receptacle-placement rule. Receptacle spacing, GFCI protection, cord length, and Plug N Play placement depend on the product listing and the NEC/CEC edition adopted locally.

Other electrical safety: The North American supply must include a suitable GFCI breaker that opens all ungrounded conductors. The load neutral must connect directly to the GFCI as shown in Arctic Spas’ licensed-electrician diagram. Never bypass the GFCI. The manual says no electrical appliance such as a light, phone, radio, or television may be within 5 ft (1.5 m) of the hot tub. Accessible controls or devices must meet the manual’s low-voltage and local-code requirements.

Do not size the circuit from jet count alone. Pump count, heater size, optional SDS equipment, controller programming, and model year can change the required service. The certification label beside the spa controller is the final authority. Arctic Spas requires this work to be completed by a licensed electrician and approved under local code.

Will the Spa Filter Adapter fit the Frontier?

Our Spa Filter Adapter Kit v3 is made for matching 2020 or newer Custom Series Pro Filter setups. An Arctic Spa Frontier outside that setup should not be assumed to fit. If you are unsure what is in your tub, check the compatibility guide or send us a photo of the filter area before you order.

For any replacement filter, compare the cartridge height and diameter, the top and bottom openings, the thread style, and the space inside the filter housing. Those details matter more than the name printed on the side of the tub.

Frontier manuals and drawings

These links point to Arctic Spas’ official model pages, manuals, brochures, and technical drawings:

The files stay on Arctic Spas’ website, so you will always be viewing the manufacturer’s copy rather than a PDF we downloaded and reposted.

Compare the Frontier with other Arctic Spa models

See every current and older Arctic Spa model in the main hot tub guide.

More help for Arctic Spa owners

Arctic Spa Frontier FAQs

Is the Frontier a current Arctic Spa model?

No. The Frontier is an older Arctic Spa model found in previous owner manuals, not the current May 2026 lineup.

What are the Frontier dimensions?

The Frontier measures about 86 × 93 × 38.75 in (217 × 235 × 98 cm). Before ordering a cover or building around the spa, measure your actual cabinet and check the model year on the serial plate.

How much water does the Frontier hold?

Arctic Spas lists the Frontier at 351 US gal (1,330 L) in the 2019 manual; 334 US gal (1,266 L) in the 2013 manual. Older versions may hold a different amount, so use the manual for your year when adding water-care chemicals.

How much does the Frontier weigh?

The older manual lists an empty weight of 785 lb (356 kg) in the 2019 manual, but it does not give a filled weight. People, steps, accessories, and snow add more load, so have a qualified professional check any deck or raised platform.

How many people fit in the Frontier?

The older manuals I found list the spa's size and water capacity, but they do not give a dependable seating count. Check the shell layout on your tub rather than borrowing the count from a newer model with a similar name.

Where can I find the Frontier manual or PDF?

Use the Arctic Spas links in the Manuals and drawings section above. Choose the document that matches your model year; a current brochure will not cover every part used in an older tub.

What electrical service does the Frontier need?

The published 240V installation is 240V fixed-wiring diagram through a GFCI spa subpanel: Line 1, Line 2, neutral, and equipment ground. Breaker guidance: 50A GFCI; 60A for an Epic configuration. Published wire guidance: No feeder gauge or blanket copper-only supply-wire rule is stated in the cited legacy manual; use the original certification label and local code. No cord-and-plug configuration is documented for this model in the 2013/2019 manuals. The certification label beside the controller is the final authority, and Arctic Spas requires a licensed electrician to follow local code.

Does the Spa Filter Adapter Kit v3 fit the Frontier?

Do not assume it does. The current kit is made for matching 2020 or newer Custom Series Pro Filter setups. Send us a photo of your filter area if you need help checking fit.

These specifications come from Arctic Spas’ model pages, brochures, technical sheets, and owner manuals. Direct links are provided above. Last updated July 11, 2026.

Arctic Spas is a trademark of its respective owner. SpaFilterAdapter.com is an independent aftermarket business and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or approved by Arctic Spas.