Glass Aquarium Thickness Calculator: Find the Right Glass Size

🐠 Glass Aquarium Thickness Calculator

Calculate the minimum glass thickness needed for a safe, leak-free aquarium — rectangle, cube, cylinder & bow front tanks

Quick Presets
📐 Tank Dimensions
✅ Glass Thickness Results
📊 Glass Type Reference
2500
Annealed Glass
Tensile Str. (psi)
10000
Tempered Glass
Tensile Str. (psi)
2500
Low-Iron Glass
Tensile Str. (psi)
7250
Borosilicate
Tensile Str. (psi)
10000
Acrylic (Cast)
Tensile Str. (psi)
9500
Polycarbonate
Tensile Str. (psi)
0.43
Water Pressure
psi per inch depth
3.8x
Recommended
Safety Factor
📏 Industry Standard Glass Thickness Chart
Tank Size Height Min Thickness (in) Min Thickness (mm) Glass Type
Up to 12 galUp to 12 in3/16 in5 mmAnnealed
12–40 gal12–18 in1/4 in6 mmAnnealed
40–90 gal18–24 in5/16 in8 mmAnnealed/Tempered
90–150 gal22–28 in3/8 in10 mmTempered
150–250 gal24–30 in1/2 in12 mmTempered
250+ gal30+ in5/8+ in16+ mmTempered / Laminated
📋 Common Aquarium Sizes Reference
Tank Name Dimensions (L×W×H in) Volume (gal) Volume (L) Rec. Thickness
Nano / Betta 5 Gal16 × 8 × 105.520.83/16 in (5mm)
10 Gallon Standard20 × 10 × 121037.93/16 in (5mm)
20 Gallon Long30 × 12 × 122075.71/4 in (6mm)
29 Gallon30 × 12 × 1829109.81/4 in (6mm)
40 Gallon Breeder36 × 18 × 1640151.41/4 in (6mm)
55 Gallon48 × 13 × 2155208.25/16 in (8mm)
75 Gallon48 × 18 × 2475283.93/8 in (10mm)
90 Gallon48 × 18 × 2490340.73/8 in (10mm)
125 Gallon72 × 18 × 22125473.23/8 in (10mm)
180 Gallon72 × 24 × 25180681.41/2 in (12mm)
💧 Water Pressure by Depth
Depth (in) Depth (cm) Pressure (psi) Pressure (kPa) Typical Tank Use
10 in25.4 cm0.36 psi2.5 kPaNano / Betta tanks
12 in30.5 cm0.43 psi3.0 kPa10–20 gal standard
16 in40.6 cm0.58 psi4.0 kPa40 gal breeder
18 in45.7 cm0.65 psi4.5 kPa29–55 gal
21 in53.3 cm0.76 psi5.2 kPa55–75 gal
24 in61.0 cm0.87 psi6.0 kPa75–125 gal
28 in71.1 cm1.01 psi7.0 kPa150–200 gal
30 in76.2 cm1.08 psi7.5 kPa200+ gal display
💡 Pro Tip — Always Round Up: The calculator gives you the minimum theoretical thickness. Always select the next standard commercial glass size above your calculated minimum. Standard glass comes in 5mm, 6mm, 8mm, 10mm, 12mm, and 15mm. Never custom-order glass thinner than industry standards for the tank height.
⚠ Safety Reminder — Tall vs. Wide Tanks: The critical dimension for glass thickness is the water height (depth), not the tank volume or length. A tall 30-gallon cylinder needs thicker glass than a shallow 55-gallon long tank. Always base your calculation on the tallest water-filled panel height, and add a support brace (center brace) for any tank panel wider than 24 inches.

Choosing the right Thickness of glass for a Glass Aquarium is not something that you want to ignore. It seriously affects the safety of your tank, its strength and whether it stays whole over long time. The main factor?

The size of the tank. Little aquariums handle thinner glass fine but when you pick a bigger model, you must consider heavy panels that hold the whole water pressure.

How to Choose the Right Glass Thickness for Your Aquarium

What really decides the Thickness is the height of the water column. The higher the Glass Aquarium the thicker the glass must be to resist the pressure. Low short aquariums work well for simple builds.

Here glass of around 3 to 4 mm thick is enough. A 24-gallon aquarium belongs to the small group, and 6 mm glass works great for it. The same goes for a typical 40-gallon tank.

Here the 6 mm Thickness is exactly what you need.

When you go past 4 feet in length, 12 mm glass becomes the better option. If you have really tall setups between 1.5 and 2 metres? Then you need at least 20 mm Thickness for safety.

The most common tanks between 1 and 1.4 metres work well with 12 mm. Deeper models need more Thickness to stop bending, or otherwise you must add braces to the top and bottom. If centre braces and corner support are used, then thinner glass of around 10 mm can really be enough.

So, consider also the part of safety factor. The standard is 3.8, and although it does not guarantee everything, it removes almost all risks of breaking; unless the glass is damaged or has bad quality originally. Take a sample with a 120 x 40 x 55 cm tank with only 8 mm glass.

The calculations show that 10 mm wood reach the 3.8 safety level, but 8 mm only 2.5. That gap does not deserve to be ignored. Some experts push even stricter values; reach 7.6 for no-polished edges or 5 for polished edges in tanks without braces.

Online calculators for glass Thickness can help figure out what you really need. They take volume, surface area, weight and the needed Thickness based on your measures. The problem is that they are not perfect.

One tool approved a 48 x 24 x 24-gallon tank with 12 mm glass, but the actual tank clearly bent when it was filled. Use several calculators and take the average asthe more reliable way.

There is also the choice of material between tempered and standard glass. Tempered glass is almost five times stronger than standard, although one does not suggest it for very big aquariums. PMMA, the acrylic option, weighs almost half of glass and has double the strength.

It bends more easily, has a lower light bending rate and allows clearer sight through slim panels. One big Glass Aquarium window from acrylic had 60 cm Thickness. The bottom panel does not always need to be as thick as the sides (here the forces are mostly pressing), not bending.

Glass Aquarium Thickness Calculator: Find the Right Glass Size

Author

  • Ronan Granger

    Hi, I am Ronan Granger, the owner of AquaJocund.com! At AquaJocund, I’m thrilled to take you on a captivating and immersive journey through the wondrous realm of aquariums and aquatic life.

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