Arowana Tank Size Calculator: Find the Right Aquarium

🐟 Arowana Tank Size Calculator

Calculate the minimum aquarium size for your arowana based on species, current size, and stocking plan

Quick Presets
📐 Arowana Details
Minimum Tank Volume
--
gallons
Minimum Tank Dimensions
--
L × W × H (in)
Adult Size
--
inches
Filtration GPH Needed
--
gallons per hour
Species--
Current Length--
Growth Stage--
Number of Arowanas--
Tankmates Adjustment--
Temperature Range--
pH Range--
Heater Wattage--
Aggression Level--
Lifespan--
📋 Species Reference Grid
36″
Silver Arowana Max
36″
Asian Arowana Max
36″
Black Arowana Max
24″
Jardini Arowana Max
40″
African Arowana Max
24″
Leichardti Arowana Max
SpeciesMax Size (in)Min Tank (gal)Temp (°F)pH RangeLifespan
Silver Arowana3625076–826.0–7.015–20 yrs
Asian Arowana3625076–846.0–7.520–60 yrs
Black Arowana3625076–825.5–7.015–20 yrs
Jardini / Australian2418076–826.5–7.515–20 yrs
African Arowana4030076–826.5–7.515–20 yrs
Leichardti2418076–826.5–7.515–20 yrs
📏 Minimum Tank by Growth Stage
Growth StageFish LengthMin GallonsMin LitersRecommended Dims (in)
JuvenileUnder 8 in7528448 × 18 × 18
Sub-Adult8–16 in12547372 × 24 × 20
Adult16–24 in18068184 × 24 × 24
Full Grown24+ in250–300946–113696 × 30 × 24
🐠 Compatible Tankmates
TankmateCompatibilityMin Tank AdditionNotes
Large PlecosGood+20 galBottom dweller, avoids conflict
OscarModerate+50 galMay spar; needs space
BichirGood+30 galBottom dweller, peaceful
Large CatfishGood+30 galStays low; compatible
StingrayModerate+75 galRequires very large footprint
Clown KnifeModerate+50 galSimilar size; monitor aggression
Silver DollarGood (group)+40 galFast schooling fish; dither
Small FishPoorN/AWill be eaten
💧 Water Parameters
ParameterIdeal RangeCritical Notes
Temperature76–84 °F (24–29 °C)Use reliable heater with backup
pH6.0–7.5Stable pH more important than exact number
Ammonia0 ppmAny detectable ammonia is dangerous
Nitrite0 ppmMust be zero at all times
NitrateUnder 20 ppmWeekly water changes keep this low
Hardness1–8 dGHSoft to moderately hard water preferred
💡 Arowana Tank Tips
⚠ Jumping Risk: Arowanas are powerful jumpers. A tight-fitting, weighted lid is absolutely essential. Many arowana losses occur from fish jumping out of open or loosely covered tanks.
📏 Plan for Adult Size: Always purchase or build a tank sized for the adult arowana, not the juvenile. Arowanas grow rapidly and frequent tank upgrades stress the fish and are costly. A Silver Arowana can reach 24 inches within 2 years.

Arowana rank among the most liked freshwater fishes for aquariums. They became popular because of their shining scales and elegant motion in water. Even so, so that one of them stay healthy and happy, they need quite a lot of Tank Size.

Wrong choose of too little space can create serious troubles.

How Big Should an Arowana Tank Be

Important spot to recall is that Arowana jump from too small tanks. They risk to injure themselves during such action. Young Arowana one can start in a 60-gallon tank, but a full grown one require at least 150 gallons, according to the species.

Some variants far surpass that minimum.

The basic surface of the tank matters more than the whole capacity. Arowana pass the most time swimming near the surface, hence long and broad tanks answer more than high. A tank with 2 feet depth, but 7 feet long and 3 feet wide, form a much more good solution.

Almost all Arowana must have at least 2.5 feet wide for comfort. Lowering the height help to spare costs, if that is the target.

For Asian Arowana, a Tank Size of around 240 until 260 gallons works well. Even a 300-gallon option gives more space. Some keepers succeed with 180 gallons during some years, until the fish grows fully.

Long term housing of Asian or Australian Arowana require minimal tank of 6 feet long and 2.5 feet broad. When the fish surpasses 24 inches, one choose an 8-foot by 3-foot by 2-foot tank for best care.

Silver Arowana become truly huge. A full grown silver requires at least 250 gallons. Some of that type reaches 3 until 3.5 feet, so an 8- or even 10-foot long tank with 3 until 4 feet depth is perfect.

A 125-gallon tank of 6 feet long can suffice for a bit of time, but soon the fish will outgrow it.

Many Arowana reach around 3 feet in captivity. Some species surpass that. Young Arowana of 4 until 6 inches one can keep in a 36-by-18-by-18-inch tank, until it arrives at 12 until 15 inches, what happens about after a year.

Later, far bigger tanks become needed.

Jardini and other Australian Arowana stay slightly more small, commonly around 30 inches or mroe. Tanks of 110 until 170 gallons answer for full grown Australians, if the tank measures 4 feet long and 2 feet broad. The bottom of the tank usually gets covered with small stones or sand.

Floating fake cover always is useful too.

Arowana Tank Size Calculator: Find the Right Aquarium

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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