Aquarium Calculator

Use this aquarium calculator calculator to understand your numbers quickly and make clearer decisions with confidence.

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Aquarium Calculator
Volume & Weight · Fish Stocking · Heater · Filter · Lighting
Gallons
Liters
GPH
Watts
Lux

Calculator Mode

What Is an Aquarium Calculator?

An aquarium calculator is an essential tool for fishkeepers at every level — from setting up your first 10-gallon community tank to designing a sophisticated 125-gallon reef. It solves the core math problems that arise when buying, setting up, and maintaining a fish tank: how much water does it actually hold, how heavy will it be when full, how many fish can I safely keep, and what size heater and filter do I need?

The aquarium calculator above provides 3 specialized modes: Volume & Weight (calculate tank volume in gallons and liters for rectangular, cylindrical, hexagonal, and bow-front tanks with substrate weight and total weight estimates), Fish Stocking (determine safe stocking levels by fish category with a per-species breakdown table), and Equipment Guide (size your heater based on temperature differential, find the correct filter GPH, and estimate lighting requirements). Supports both US imperial (inches/gallons/°F) and metric (cm/liters/°C) units.

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Multi-Shape Volume Calculator

Most aquarium calculators only handle rectangular tanks. This tool supports rectangular, cylinder, hexagon, and bow-front shapes using exact mathematical formulas (π for cylinders, 3√3/2 for hexagons). Results shown in both gallons and liters with water weight and substrate weight.

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Fish Stocking by Category

Go beyond the basic "1 inch per gallon" rule. The stocking guide provides targeted recommendations for nano fish, community fish, cichlids, goldfish, bettas, and reef setups — each with their own space requirements and biological considerations.

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Complete Equipment Sizing

Choose the right heater wattage based on the temperature difference between your room and desired tank temperature. Size your filter by tank type turnover rate. Calculate total lumens needed for your lighting goal — from fish-only to high-light planted to reef setups.

Aquarium calculator infographic: tank volume formulas for rectangular cylinder and hexagon shapes, fish stocking rules comparison (1 inch per gallon, surface area rule, goldfish rule), equipment sizing guide (heater watts per gallon by temperature differential, filter turnover rates by tank type), reference table of common tank sizes from 5 gallons to 125 gallons with dimensions gallons liters and water weight

Tank volume formulas, fish stocking rules, equipment sizing guide, and common tank sizes reference. See tank sizes table →

Tank Volume Formulas: All Shapes

The volume formula depends on your tank's shape. All formulas assume measurements in inches and convert to US gallons using the exact definition: 1 US gallon = 231 cubic inches. For metric calculations, dimensions in centimeters divide by 1,000 to get liters.

① Rectangular Tank (Most Common)

Volume (gal) = L × W × H ÷ 231

Example: 55-gallon standard tank (48" × 13" × 21"):
48 × 13 × 21 = 13,104 in³ ÷ 231 = 56.7 gallons (214.6 liters)
Water weight (freshwater): 56.7 × 8.34 = 472.7 lbs (214.5 kg)

② Cylinder Tank

Volume (gal) = π × (Diameter ÷ 2)² × H ÷ 231

Example: Cylinder tank, 18" diameter, 24" tall:
π × (9)² × 24 ÷ 231 = π × 81 × 24 ÷ 231 = 6,107.3 ÷ 231 = 26.4 gallons (100.0 liters)

③ Hexagonal Tank

Volume (gal) = (3√3 ÷ 2) × × H ÷ 231

Example: Hexagonal tank, 12" side length, 18" tall:
(3√3/2) × 144 × 18 ÷ 231 = 2.598 × 144 × 18 ÷ 231 = 6,736.4 ÷ 231 = 29.2 gallons (110.3 liters)

④ Bow-Front Tank (Approximate)

Volume (gal) ≈ L × W × H ÷ 231 × 1.10

Bow-front tanks curve outward in the front panel. The exact additional volume depends on the curve depth, but a 10% addition to the rectangular volume gives a reliable approximation for standard bow-front configurations. For precision measurements, consult your tank manufacturer's specifications.

Fish Stocking Guide & Rules

Overstocking is the number one cause of poor water quality and fish health problems in home aquariums. The famous "1 inch of fish per gallon" rule is a starting point, but experienced fishkeepers know it has serious limitations — it doesn't account for the fish's body mass (a 6-inch oscar produces far more waste than 6 neon tetras), territorial needs, or surface area for gas exchange.

Fish CategoryStocking RuleMin Tank SizeExamplesKey Notes
Nano fish (<1.5")1 inch/gallon5 gallonsEmber tetra, chili rasbora, pygmy corydorasHigh bioload per inch; need heavily planted tanks; sensitive to water params
Small community (1.5–3")1 inch/1.5 gal10 gallonsNeon tetra, guppy, platy, molly, danioMost forgiving; active schoolers need 6+ per species
Medium community (3–5")1 fish/5–10 gal20 gallonsAngelfish, rainbowfish, bala shark, larger barbsTerritorial during spawning; consider space per individual
Small cichlids (4–6")1 pair/15–20 gal29 gallonsRam, apistogramma, firemouth, convict, kribensisAggressive during breeding; provide caves and line-of-sight breaks
Large cichlids (8–15")1 fish/50+ gal75 gallonsOscar, jack dempsey, flowerhorn, doviiExtreme waste producers; quality canister filters essential
Fancy goldfish20 gal first + 10 each20 gallonsOranda, ryukin, telescope, ranchu, bubble eyeCool water 65–72°F; massive waste; need strong filtration
Common goldfish50+ gal eachPondCommon, comet, shubunkin, wakinGrow to 12"+ in ponds; NOT suitable for home aquariums long-term
Betta splendens1 male/tank minimum 5 gal5 gallonsHalfmoon, crowntail, plakat, deltaMales fight to death; female sorority needs 20+ gal with heavy plants
Marine reef fish1 inch/10–15 gal display30 gallonsClownfish, tang, damsel, dottyback, wrasseBioload varies; tangs need 100+ gal; research before buying

Heater Sizing Calculator

The wattage of your aquarium heater depends on how far above room temperature you need to maintain the tank. The larger the temperature difference, the more watts-per-gallon you need:

Watts Needed = Volume (gal) × W/gal Rate
Temp Difference (ΔT)W/gal RateTypical SituationExample: 55 gal
ΔT ≤ 10°F (5.6°C)2.5 W/galWarm climate; room typically 70°F+; tank needs 78–80°F138 W → 150W heater
ΔT ≤ 20°F (11°C)5 W/galTemperate climate; room 60–65°F; tank needs 78–80°F275 W → 300W heater
ΔT > 20°F (11°C+)7.5 W/galCold climate; unheated room; tropical fish temperature target413 W → 2 × 200W heaters
Pro tip for large tanks: For tanks over 50 gallons, use two heaters of half the required wattage placed at opposite ends of the tank. This provides redundancy (a dead heater won't let the tank crash before you notice), more even heat distribution, and lower risk of a stuck-on heater cooking your fish.

Filter Flow Rate Guide

The filter flow rate is expressed as GPH (gallons per hour) — how many times your filter turns over the entire tank volume per hour. More turnover means better filtration, but excessive flow can stress fish and damage plants:

Filter GPH = Tank Volume (gal) × Turnover Rate (×/hr)
Aquarium TypeTurnover5 Gal29 Gal55 Gal125 Gal
Nano / Shrimp4–6×20–30 GPH116–174 GPH227–340 GPH497–746 GPH
Heavily Planted4–6×20–30 GPH116–174 GPH227–340 GPH497–746 GPH
Community Freshwater6–8×30–40 GPH174–232 GPH340–454 GPH746–994 GPH
African Cichlid8–10×40–50 GPH232–290 GPH454–567 GPH994–1,243 GPH
Goldfish8–10×40–50 GPH232–290 GPH454–567 GPH994–1,243 GPH
Reef / Marine10–20×50–100 GPH290–580 GPH567–1,134 GPH1,243–2,485 GPH

* These are total GPH targets. Note that manufacturer GPH ratings are tested with no media, clean filters, and optimal hose positions. Real-world performance is typically 20–30% lower — factor this in when choosing a filter model.

Common Tank Sizes Reference

Standard aquarium sizes in the United States follow common dimension patterns. Note that the nominal gallon rating is marketing — the actual calculated volume is usually slightly different. Always use the actual interior dimensions for your calculations:

NameDimensions (in)US GallonsLitersWater (lbs)Full Est. (lbs)Best For
5 Gallon16×8×105.520.84575Betta, shrimp, nano
10 Gallon20×10×1210.439.387135Nano fish, breeding
20 Gal Long30×12×1218.770.8156225Low bottom-dwellers, planted
20 Gal High24×12×1619.975.3166240Community, planted
29 Gallon30×12×1828.1106.3234335Community, smaller cichlids
40 Breeder36×18×1644.9169.9374530Turtle, planted, breeding
55 Gallon48×13×2156.7214.6473670Community, African cichlids
75 Gallon48×18×2178.5297.2654920Large community, medium cichlids
90 Gallon48×18×2489.7339.67481,050Large cichlids, reef starter
125 Gallon72×18×22123.4467.21,0291,430Large predators, reef, show tank
180 Gallon72×24×25187.5709.81,5642,150Large reef, predator community

* Full weight estimates include water + gravel substrate (2" depth) + glass tank + equipment. Actual weights vary. Always place your aquarium on appropriate furniture rated for the weight — the floor structure must support 10–20 lbs/sq ft for large tanks.

Frequently Asked Questions

🐟How accurate is the "1 inch of fish per gallon" rule?

The rule is a rough starting point that works reasonably well for small fish under 3 inches. It breaks down badly for larger fish: a single 10-inch oscar produces as much waste as roughly 50 neon tetras, would demolish a 10-gallon tank, yet technically "fits" the rule in 10 gallons. For fish over 4 inches, use the fish-specific requirements listed by experienced keepers for that species, not the inch-per-gallon rule. The surface area rule (1 inch of fish per 12 sq inches of water surface) is more biologically sound since it accounts for gas exchange.

🐟How much does a full fish tank weigh?

A full freshwater aquarium weighs approximately 10–11 lbs per gallon (water = 8.34 lbs, plus substrate ~1.5 lbs, glass ~0.5 lbs, equipment ~0.5 lbs). Saltwater tanks weigh slightly more (8.55 lbs/gal for the water). Practical estimates: 10 gal ≈ 110 lbs, 29 gal ≈ 335 lbs, 55 gal ≈ 670 lbs, 75 gal ≈ 920 lbs, 125 gal ≈ 1,430 lbs. Always place large aquariums against a wall (over a floor joist) and use a dedicated aquarium stand rated for the weight.

🐟What size heater do I need for my aquarium?

The heater wattage depends on your room temperature and the desired tank temperature. For most tropical fish (78°F) in a room at 68–72°F, use 5 watts per gallon. For a 55-gallon tank in a 70°F room targeting 78°F (ΔT = 8°F): 55 × 2.5 = 138 watts → buy a 150W heater. Always buy one size up from your calculation. For tanks over 50 gallons, use two heaters (each half the total wattage) at opposite ends for even heating and safety redundancy.

🐟What size filter do I need for my fish tank?

Choose a filter that processes your tank volume at least 6–8 times per hour for community tanks. For a 55-gallon community tank: 55 × 7 = 385 GPH minimum. Since manufacturer GPH ratings are measured under ideal conditions, real-world performance is 20–30% lower — so buy a filter rated for 500+ GPH for a 55-gallon community tank. Cichlid, goldfish, and heavily stocked tanks need 8–10× turnover; heavily planted tanks with CO₂ injection benefit from lower flow (4–6×) to preserve dissolved CO₂.

🐟How many gallons does my oddly-shaped aquarium hold?

For rectangular tanks: (Length × Width × Height in inches) ÷ 231 = US gallons. For cylinder tanks: π × (Diameter÷2)² × Height ÷ 231. For hexagonal tanks (where S = side length): (3√3/2) × S² × Height ÷ 231. For bow-front tanks: calculate as rectangular and add approximately 10% for the bow curve. Use the Volume & Weight mode in the aquarium calculator above to compute any of these shapes instantly in both gallons and liters.

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