🐠 Beginner's Guide to Aquariums — Start Here

Quick Answer: Start with a 20-gallon tank, cycle it for 4–6 weeks before adding fish, and choose hardy species like Guppies, Corydoras, or a single Betta. Stable water chemistry — not fancy equipment — is what keeps fish alive.

New to fishkeeping? Start with the right fish, the right tank size, and the nitrogen cycle. This section covers everything a first-time aquarium keeper needs.

⭐ Featured Guide

All Beginner Guides

🏆 Best Tanks

Best Beginner Fish Tanks 2026

Top starter tank kits ranked for filtration, heating, lighting, and value. The right kit makes the difference between success and frustration.

🐟 Stocking

Best Fish for Beginners

Hardy, forgiving, and beautiful — the best beginner fish that survive common beginner mistakes and reward good care.

🐠 Freshwater

Best Freshwater Fish for Beginners 2026

The most beginner-friendly freshwater species ranked by hardiness, compatibility, and availability at local fish stores.

⭐ Popular

Betta Fish Care Guide

Tank size, filtration, temperature, feeding, and why bettas are NOT low-maintenance bowl fish. Complete care for Betta splendens.

🐡 Livebearers

Guppy Care Guide

Colorful, hardy, and easy breeders — guppies are one of the best beginner fish. Care, feeding, breeding, and compatible tankmates.

🔬 Essential

Understanding the Nitrogen Cycle

The single most important concept for keeping fish alive. What it is, how to cycle your tank, and how to tell when it's done.

🏅 Classic

Goldfish Care Guide

Goldfish are NOT low-maintenance. Learn the tank size, filtration, and water quality they actually need to thrive beyond a few months.

🌿 Plants

Best Aquarium Plants for Beginners

Live plants improve water quality, reduce algae, and make tanks look incredible. The best easy-to-grow species that don't need CO2 injection.

🐡 Catfish

Corydoras Catfish Care Guide

Social catfish that need groups of 3+. Sand substrate, cooler temperatures, and why corys are essential for a community cleanup crew.

🪸 Saltwater

Nano Reef Tank Setup for Beginners

Ready to try saltwater? A nano reef (10–30 gallons) is the most accessible entry point. Equipment, livestock, and realistic cost breakdown.

Frequently Asked Questions: Beginner Fishkeeping

How long does it take to cycle a new aquarium?

A fishless cycle typically takes 4–6 weeks. You add an ammonia source (pure ammonia drops or fish food), test every few days, and wait until ammonia and nitrite both read zero while nitrate rises. Using bottled beneficial bacteria like Tetra SafeStart or Seachem Stability can speed this up to 1–2 weeks, but results vary.

Can I add fish right away to a new tank?

No — and this is the most common beginner mistake. An uncycled tank has no beneficial bacteria to process fish waste. Ammonia quickly spikes to lethal levels, killing fish within days. Always cycle first. Use the fishless cycle method: add ammonia without fish, let bacteria colonize your filter, then add fish once ammonia and nitrite read zero.

What equipment does a beginner actually need?

The essentials: a tank (20 gallons minimum recommended), a filter rated for your tank size, a heater (for tropical fish), a thermometer, a liquid test kit (not strips — API Master Kit is the standard), dechlorinator (Seachem Prime is the go-to), and substrate. Lighting is included in most starter kits. You do NOT need a CO2 system, protein skimmer (freshwater), or expensive controllers to start.

Why do my fish keep dying in a new tank?

New tank syndrome — ammonia and nitrite poisoning from an uncycled tank — kills the vast majority of beginner fish. Secondary causes: temperature shock from not acclimating fish, chlorine from untreated tap water, and disease introduced from the fish store. Test your water first with a liquid test kit before assuming anything else is wrong.

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