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CalcWolf Pets Aquarium Stocking Calculator
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How Many Fish Can Your Tank Hold?

Calculate the maximum fish capacity for your aquarium. By tank size, fish type, and filtration — avoid overstocking.

📅 Updated April 2026 Formula verified 📖 4 min read 🆓 Free · No sign-up

The Stocking Rule

The classic rule is "one inch of fish per gallon" for freshwater tanks. This is a reasonable starting point for small community fish (tetras, rasboras) but breaks down for larger fish. A 10-inch oscar produces far more waste than ten 1-inch neon tetras. For saltwater tanks, use one inch per 2-3 gallons — saltwater fish are more sensitive to water quality.

Factors Beyond the Rule

Filtration: An oversized filter and live plants can support 20-30% more fish. Fish behavior: Territorial fish (cichlids, bettas) need more space per fish. Schooling fish (tetras, corydoras) need groups of 6+ to thrive. Bioload: Messy eaters (goldfish, plecos) produce more waste per inch than lean swimmers. Always research each species' specific space requirements.

⚡ CalcWolf Insight

New Tank Syndrome kills more fish than any disease. A brand-new aquarium has no beneficial bacteria to process ammonia. Cycle your tank for 4-6 weeks before adding fish — or use a "fish-in" cycle with hardy species (danios) and daily water testing. Ammonia and nitrite must be at 0 ppm before adding more fish.

Frequently asked questions
How many fish can I put in a 10-gallon tank?
For small community fish (neon tetras, guppies): 8-10 fish. For a single betta: 1 betta plus 3-4 small tank mates (corydoras, snails). For medium fish (mollies): 3-4. Never put goldfish in a 10-gallon — they need 20+ gallons each due to their high waste production.
Can I add all the fish at once?
No. Add fish gradually — 2-3 at a time, waiting 1-2 weeks between additions. This gives the beneficial bacteria in your filter time to grow and handle the increasing bioload. Adding too many fish at once causes an ammonia spike that can kill everything in the tank.
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Kevin Glover
Founder, CalcWolf · GLVTS · Blickr
All formulas sourced from primary references — IRS publications, peer-reviewed research, and official standards. Results are tested against independent reference calculators before publishing. Rates and brackets updated when official sources change. Editorial policy →
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