Salinity Temperature Calculator for Aquariums

🌊 Salinity Temperature Calculator

Correct hydrometer, refractometer, and conductivity readings for aquarium temperature, then compare them with safe target ranges.

Calculator Inputs
Enter the hydrometer SG reading seen at the sample temperature.
Typical reef water is near 1.025 to 1.026 at 25°C.
Use the temperature of the tested water, not room temperature.
Most aquarium refractometers and hydrometers are 68°F or 77°F.
Use actual water volume after rock, substrate, and equipment displacement.
Choose the livestock target, then fine-tune gradually during maintenance.
Dose estimates use product strength factors, then require retesting.
For lowering salinity, this estimates the replacement water salinity needed.
Corrected Salinity
--
ppt / PSU
Corrected SG
--
at calibration temp
Target Gap
--
ppt from selected profile
Dose or Dilution
--
salt equivalent
Enter a reading and calculate to see livestock-focused guidance.
🧪Salt & Mineral Product Grid
35
Reef Salt
Full marine ions for reef alkalinity, calcium, and magnesium.
32
Marine Mix
Balanced saltwater for fish-only and macroalgae systems.
8-15
Brackish Mix
Marine salt diluted for puffers, gobies, mollies, and scats.
1-3
Tonic Salt
Plain sodium chloride for short-term freshwater salt use.
1.5
Cichlid Salt
Carbonate and mineral blend for Rift Lake hardness support.
3
Livebearer
Mineralized hardwater support for mollies, guppies, and platies.
0.3
Shrimp GH+
Raises hardness with little salinity change in planted tanks.
2
Pond Salt
Large-volume sodium chloride use for koi and goldfish ponds.
📊Livestock Salinity Comparison
Profile Target PPT Approx SG Temp Range Best For
Soft Freshwater0.0-0.51.000075-82°FBettas, discus, tetras, rasboras
Planted Community0.2-0.81.000272-80°FPlants, corydoras, small schooling fish
Low Salt Freshwater1.0-3.01.000868-78°FGoldfish, short-term supportive care
Mineralized Livebearer2.0-5.01.002374-80°FMollies, guppies, platies, swordtails
Low Brackish5.0-10.01.006075-82°FFigure 8 puffers, bumblebee gobies
Mid Brackish10.0-18.01.011076-82°FMollies, archers, scats, monos
Marine Fish Only30.0-33.01.022575-80°FHardy marine fish, fish-only tanks
Reef Display34.0-36.01.026076-80°FCorals, inverts, reef fish
Hyposalinity QT13.0-15.01.010076-80°FFish quarantine only, no inverts
🌡Instrument Temperature Correction Guide
Tool Common Calibration Temperature Effect Calculator Treatment
Floating Hydrometer60, 68, or 77°FWarmer samples shift density and SGUses pure-water density ratio correction
Swing-Arm HydrometerOften 77°FBubbles and salt creep can exceed temp errorCorrects SG but assumes clean needle movement
ATC Refractometer68 or 77°FSmall residual error outside room tempApplies a light compensation factor
Conductivity Probe25°C standardConductivity changes about 2.1% per °CNormalizes mS/cm to 25°C before ppt
Density MeterUsually 20 or 25°CDensity falls as water warmsConverts kg/m³ to corrected SG and ppt
📐Common Tank & Salinity Reference
Tank Size Water Volume 1 PPT Dose Marine Salt at 35 PPT
10 gallon38 L38 g1.3 kg
20 long76 L76 g2.7 kg
29 gallon110 L110 g3.9 kg
40 breeder151 L151 g5.3 kg
55 gallon208 L208 g7.3 kg
75 gallon284 L284 g9.9 kg
125 gallon473 L473 g16.6 kg
🧮Adjustment Planning Table
Situation Safe Change Water Change Use Retest Timing
Freshwater salt support0.5-1 ppt per dayReplace removed salt after each changeAfter 30 minutes of circulation
Brackish acclimation1-2 ppt per dayUse pre-mixed brackish waterAfter temperature equalizes
Reef correction upward1 ppt per dayTop off with saltwater only when plannedAfter full turnover through sump
Marine dilution downward1-2 ppt per dayUse lower-salinity replacement waterAfter two stable readings
Hyposalinity treatmentFollow veterinary protocolUse calibrated refractometer checksMorning and evening

💡 Measurement Tip

Temperature compensation cannot fix dirty prisms, trapped bubbles, or salt crystals on a swing arm. Rinse tools with fresh water, dry the lens or arm, then take two readings before changing the aquarium.

💡 Livestock Tip

Salinity stress usually comes from speed, not just the final number. Raise or lower salinity over several maintenance sessions unless a quarantine protocol specifically calls for a faster change.

Temperature affect water density measurement and how water density behave in an aquarium. Density change with temperature. Warm water is less denser than cool water.

These tools dont measure the amount of salt in the water. Instead, these tools measure the density of the water. Since density change with temperature, the density of the water measured with a refractometer or an hydrometer will change with the temperature of the aquarium water.

How Temperature Affects Aquarium Salinity Readings

Thus, the salinity reading will change depending on the temperature of the water being measure. To account for this, you will need to account for the temperature of the water in determining the true salinity of the water in the aquarium. The salinity of the water should be measured at it’s calibration temperature.

Measurement tool are calibrated to a specific temperature. For example, salinity measurement tool are calibrated to either sixty-eight degrees or seventy-seven degrees. A salinity calculator can help bridge the gap between the calibration temperature of the measurement tool and the actual temperature of the water in the aquarium.

The salinity calculator will remove the effect of the temperature of the water on the salinity reading from the tool. Thus, using a salinity calculator will allow for the achievement of precise measurement of salinity. When managing a reef tank or a hyposalinity treatment, precise measurement are required.

Salinity change in water can lead to osmotic shock in fish species. Salinity change in the water affect the kidneys of the fish species. Salinity change that are too rapid for the fish kidneys to process can lead to stress in the fish.

A salinity calculator will allow for the viewing of the distance between the current salinity of the tank and the target salinity. Furthermore, the salinity calculator can provide a suggestion as to the specific dose of salt that would be required to reach the target salinity with the specific salt product that aquarium keeper should of used in the aquarium. Different salt product have different density and different chemical weights.

For instance, specialized reef mix salts contain calcium and magnesium in addition to the salts that increase the salinity of the water. Tonic salts, on the other hand, have no additional chemical except for sodium chloride. Because of the difference in chemical compositions in these salt products, there will be a difference in the amount of product that the aquarium require to raise the salinity of the water by one point.

Thus, using a product factor when adding salt to an aquarium will ensure that the amount of salt added is not an overdose of salt to the water in the aquarium. Brackish water tank salinity must be manage carefully. Different species of fish have different salinity tolerance level.

For instance, a Figure 8 puffer fish and a bumblebee goby have different salinity tolerance levels. Thus, the salinity levels must be balanced proper to the requirements of the different species of fish that are contained in the aquarium. Aquarium keeper can utilize tables of the target salinity profiles of different species of brackish water fish.

However, these target salinity value are targets that are to be hit and not law that must be adhered to without exception. Exceeding the target salinity levels can create problem for the health of the fish in the aquarium. In instances when lowering the salinity level of water in an aquarium, dilution should be used instead of adding fresh water all at once.

Planned water change allow for the salinity of the water to be lowered gradual and safely. Before changing the water in the aquarium, calculate the salinity of the water that is to be use for the water change. Although it may take more time to carry out a planned water change than adding fresh water all at once, using this method is the safest means of lowering the salinity of the water in the aquarium.

Salinity level should be managed consistently in the aquarium. Do not make large change to the salinity of the water based off a single salinity reading that has not been corrected for the temperature of the water. If salinity and salinity measurement tools are to be use, rinse them with the aquarium water to remove salt creep.

Take two separate salinity reading to ensure accuracy in the measurement of the salinity of the water in the aquarium. Calculate the salinity using the salinity calculator one more time to ensure that the salinity reading is correct. By treating change in salinity as a slow process, the livestock in the aquarium will remain healthy.

Salinity Temperature Calculator for Aquariums

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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