Aquarium Sump Filter Size Calculator – Size Your Sump Right

🐠 Aquarium Sump Filter Size Calculator

Calculate the ideal sump volume, return pump flow rate, refugium size, and media capacity for your tank

Quick Presets
📏 Tank Configuration
🔧 Sump & System Settings
✅ Sump Sizing Results
📊 Filter Media Reference Data
1 Gal
Bio-Balls
per 5 gal tank volume
1.5 lb
Live Rock/Gal
recommended rate
100mL
Ceramic Rings
per 10 gal display
250mL
Purigen
treats 100 gal
500mL
SeaChem Matrix
per 50 gal display
6–12"
Filter Floss
sock depth standard
1/3
Chaeto Fill
fill refugium 1/3 full
30%
Refugium Zone
of total sump vol.
📋 Sump Sizing by Tank Type
Tank Type Min Sump % Turnover Rate Refugium Skimmer Zone Notes
Freshwater Community15–20%5–7x/hrOptionalNot requiredCanister filter often preferred
Planted Freshwater15–20%4–6x/hrNot neededNot requiredLower turnover preserves CO2
FOWLR20–25%5–8x/hrBeneficialRecommendedGenerous bio-media needed
Reef / Mixed25–30%7–10x/hrRecommendedRequiredInclude skimmer and refugium zones
SPS Dominant30–40%8–12x/hrStrongly Rec.RequiredPristine water quality critical
LPS / Soft Coral25–30%6–8x/hrRecommendedRequiredModerate flow acceptable
Predator25–35%6–8x/hrOptionalRecommendedHigh bio-load demands larger sump
Brackish20–25%5–7x/hrOptionalOptionalSimilar to FOWLR requirements
📏 Common Tank Sizes Reference
Tank Name Dimensions (L x W x H in) Volume (US Gal) Volume (Liters) Min Sump (Gal) Ideal Sump (Gal)
Nano / Pico 5 Gal16 x 8 x 10518.91–1.51.5–2
10 Gallon Standard20 x 10 x 121037.922.5–3
20 Gallon Long30 x 12 x 122075.745–6
29 Gallon30 x 12 x 1829109.867–8
40 Gallon Breeder36 x 18 x 1640151.4810–12
55 Gallon48 x 13 x 2155208.21114–17
75 Gallon48 x 18 x 2175283.91519–22
90 Gallon48 x 18 x 2490340.71822–27
125 Gallon72 x 18 x 22125473.22531–37
180 Gallon72 x 24 x 24180681.43645–54
📋 Return Pump Flow Rate Guide
Tank Volume Freshwater GPH Reef GPH SPS GPH Head Loss Factor Pump Size Tip
10–20 gal50–140 GPH80–200 GPH100–200 GPH1.2–1.4xRate pump 20–40% higher than needed
29–40 gal145–280 GPH200–400 GPH280–400 GPH1.2–1.5xAccount for head pressure from height
55–75 gal275–525 GPH385–750 GPH550–750 GPH1.3–1.5xUse variable-speed DC pumps
90–125 gal450–875 GPH630–1250 GPH900–1250 GPH1.3–1.6xRedundant pumps recommended
150–180 gal750–1260 GPH1050–1800 GPH1500–1800 GPH1.4–1.6xConsider dual-return setup
💡 Tip 1 — Always Size Up Your Sump: The single most important rule in sump design is to go bigger than your minimum calculation suggests. A larger sump adds water volume (diluting pollutants), provides surge capacity during power outages, and gives you room for additional equipment like heaters, skimmers, dosing systems, and reactors.
💡 Tip 2 — Account for Head Pressure When Sizing Your Return Pump: Your return pump must overcome the vertical height between the sump and the display tank (head pressure). For every 10 feet of vertical rise, you lose approximately 10–15% of rated pump flow. Always purchase a pump rated 25–40% higher than your target GPH and use a ball valve to throttle it down if needed.

The Sump Filter sits below or beside your main Aquarium and holds all the heavy gear for filtering and cleaning, which helps to keep the water clear and pure. From the main Aquarium water flows down into the Sump Filter by means of an overflow later it passes through various filtering steps. Here happens mechanical filtering by means of filter socks, chemical cleaning in reactors and biological filtering in refuge spaces then the pump sends everything back up to the display.

The main advantage? Everything hides itself. Heaters, protein skimmers, reactors, pumps, they all sit in the Sump Filter, where no one notices them.

How a Sump Filter Helps Your Aquarium

Your main Aquarium stays natural and without mess. This works well for reef tanks and saltwater systems, although freshwater setups also benefit a lot from it.

In a Sump Filter the water first hits a rough sponge, which removes big dirt from it before it reaches the whole filtering area. A Sump Filter of 40 gallons does what three filters in a FX6 can do. If you try to add extras like refuges or protein skimmers to a setup in a tin?

You find yourself very crmaped. With a Sump Filter you freely place whatever you want. Because corals need more care than average fish, reef hobbyists turn to Sump Filters only for that reason.

In a Sump Filter water usually hits first a rough sponge, then a fine sponge. Between them you can place activated carbon or Purigen, if you want a bit of chemical filtering. Then come ceramic bio media.

This is the same filtering method as in other systems, only cut or shaped to fit the space that you work with.

The disadvantage? Evaporation becomes a constant problem. If you use a Sump Filter, you must regularly add water.

Noise can also matter, especially in wet/dry systems, wear water splashes over loose parts. Some folks place soft foam in their Sump Filter to lower the sound. For planted Aquariums with CO2, a tight lid on the Sump Filter stops loss of CO2 into the open air.

Wet/dry filters got their fame as the best way to handle ammonia and nitrite, both bad poisonous things. Water that flows over bio balls gets well oxygenated, which lets you drop the air stone entirely.

Building a homemade Sump Filter is easy for DIY folks. An old Aquarium or even a bucket with an overflow works well. The overflow pulls water from the main Aquarium down to the Sump Filter by means of gravity, then the pump sends it back up.

The real risk? If something clogs the overflow, your pump keeps working and noticeably empties the Sump Filter. Some store-bought Sump Filters use high-density plastic without glued seams or welds, so you avoid leaks, warping and yellowing after years of use.

That said, Sump Filters are not needed for every system. Aquariums under 100 gallons usually dowell without one. But when you start to go bigger, that extra water volume and filtering truly helps to keep your whole setup stable.

Aquarium Sump Filter Size Calculator – Size Your Sump Right

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.

Leave a Comment