Aquarium Territory Space Calculator

Aquarium Territory Space Calculator

Estimate territorial footprint, line-of-sight breaks, floor area, and aggression buffer before fish start defending space.

🎯Territory Presets
📏Tank Footprint & Behavior Inputs
30%
Safe Territory Count 0 territories
Usable Floor Area 0 sq in
Sight Break Target 0 pieces total
Aggression Buffer 0% space reserve
🐟Species / Territory Comparison Grid
72Betta sq in
180Apisto pair
65Mbuna each
864Oscar zone
25%Good cover min
45%Dense cover
6+Break pieces
20%Reserve target
📊Territory Baselines by Species
Profile Territory Basis Minimum Breaks Best Layout
Betta or dwarf gourami72-90 sq in per male2-3 floating or vertical breaksPlant clusters near surface
Apistogramma pair160-220 sq in per pair4 caves/wood breaksSeparated cave entrances
Shell dwellers45-65 sq in per fishShell fields in clustersOpen sand between colonies
Corydoras group28-36 sq in per fishSoft cover, not barriersLong open bottom lanes
Mbuna cichlids55-80 sq in per fish8+ rock sight blocksStacked rock territories
Angelfish pair430-520 sq in per pair4 tall vertical breaksBroad plants and tall wood
Oscar or large cichlid800-950 sq in per fish6 heavy landmarksOpen swim lane plus refuge
📐Common Tank Footprints
Tank Footprint Floor Area Territory Note
10 gallon20 x 10 in200 sq inOne small territory
20 long30 x 12 in360 sq inBetter than tall tanks
29 gallon30 x 12 in360 sq inVolume helps, floor is same
40 breeder36 x 18 in648 sq inStrong territory footprint
55 gallon48 x 13 in624 sq inLong chase lanes need breaks
75 gallon48 x 18 in864 sq inGood large cichlid base
125 gallon72 x 18 in1296 sq inExcellent lineal territory
🧱Line-of-Sight Break Guide
Break Type What It Blocks Best For Planning Value
Tall plantsSurface and midwater viewBettas, gouramis, angelsSoft break
Rock stackDirect bottom chase lineMbuna, shell dwellersHard break
Driftwood rootDiagonal line through tankApistos, community fishMedium break
Cave clusterClaimed shelter entrancesDwarfs, plecos, cichlidsTerritory anchor
Open sand laneNothing; it separates zonesShell dwellers, corydorasNeutral buffer
Aggression Buffer Reference
Situation Space Multiplier Extra Breaks Warning Sign
Calm juvenile group0.85xNormal targetBrief posturing only
Adult mixed community1.00xOne per territory edgeShort chases at feeding
Breeding pair1.18x to 1.35xTwo near nest zoneGuarding one corner
High aggression species1.35xMultiple hard breaksRepeated pursuit
Persistent bully1.55xRebuild layout or separateFish pinned at surface
💡Territory Planning Notes
Footprint beats volume: a tall tank can hold more water but still have the same defended floor as a shorter tank with the same length and width.
Break the chase path: the best rock, wood, or plant placement prevents one fish from seeing from one end of the tank to the other.

The first thing is the tank. You’re going to buy the tank. It’s the one thing in your mind that represents all the hope you place into this hobby. It gleams like a rectangular prism of potential as it stands on its grand stand in the corner of your room. And somewhere inside your mind, you picture yourself with fish swimming around in it…fighting for what? You don’t even consider that yet.

That’s another error many aquarists make when getting an aquarium. Volume. That’s the wrong word. Aquarium keepers calculate how many liters/gallons there tank holds. How much water is in there. They believe more water = more space. But the truth of it is, territorial fish don’t give a flying f#@k about cubic capacity. They care deeply about floor area.

Why Floor Space Matters More Than Water Volume

Thirty gallon tanks comes in all shapes and sizes. A tall, narrow tank might hold thirty gallons of water, but if base is only twelve by twelve inches, it offers no more room for a betta to stake his claim then a shallow dishpan with the same footprint. The height are just empty space above activity. That might be good for oxygen exchange, but it does nothing to prevent two cichlids from staring each other down on an empty stretch of sand.

And the calculator above do all of the math for you. Simply input the inches of your tank’s size. You’ll notice it calculates usable territory zones based off actual size of the tank, not the number of gallons. Then, pick which shape it is and choose your species profile. Then the calculator spits out a number. The maximum amount of territories you can safely keep for that particular type of fish based on its normal behaviors.

Why? Because different species defend space differently. Mbuna cichlids from Lake Malawi defend rock piles along the bottom. A betta requires vertical cover towards the top and some surface area. So if you place a betta in a tank made for bottom dwelling fish, or vice-versa, regardless of how much water you have, math isn’t going to work. That’s why this tool consider the differences in zones so you aren’t left with stressed fish pacing around a space that they feel is too small for them.

The other half of the equation are sight lines. When a fish gets spooked in the wild, it can hide in some complex rock work or thick vegetation. It has somewhere to hide. In your bare bottom aquarium with white sand and gravel, what does it have? Nothing. There’s no place to hide, the whole tank becomes one long chase lane. What do you think happens then?

There are breaks in those sight lines. These include things like clumps of tall plants, root masses on driftwood, and rocks. Become barriers. Fish can’t always see each other, and this stops aggression. A fish won’t start a fight if it doesn’t know the other fish is even there. This is where table on the page comes in. It shows you how many break pieces you should of had based on your floor area. Just for aggressive species, you may require eight or ten distinct barriers to maintain peace.

It’s not just about space, however. There’s also issue of buffer space. Hormones change during breeding season. Fish will grow. And, well… Fish change. The tank you think is plenty big enough now may seem like a sardine tin in three months. That is why there is an aggression buffer slider on the tool. If you have a breeding pair, know some bully fish? Add some extra reserve space. Ten percent more space then what’s needed can mean the difference between your community being a bunch of happy campers versus going to war each night over who gets to use which end of a cave.

Don’t confuse quantity with quality. Just because you siphon off half the water doesn’t mean that five gallon bucket is anything but a bucket. Pay attention to length and what’s on the floor. Count those sight breaks. You should plan for the worst behavior. You’ll dump ‘em in that tank when you get home from the store and they ain’t gonna appreciate having a lot of water over their heads. They’re gonna appreciate having somewhere to go when it gets tense. Territory has nothing to do with the amount of emptiness; it has everything to do with the number of places to go by yourself.

Aquarium Territory Space Calculator

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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