Estimate the total cost of setting up and maintaining an aquarium. Includes equipment, livestock, electricity, food, and supplies.
Setting up an aquarium involves more than just buying a tank and fish. Equipment costs for filters, heaters, lights, substrate, and decorations can add up quickly, and ongoing monthly expenses for electricity, food, water treatments, and replacement supplies are often underestimated by beginners.
A basic freshwater setup for a 20-gallon tank might cost $150-300, while a 55-gallon reef tank can easily exceed $1,000-2,000 in initial setup. Monthly costs range from $10-30 for a simple freshwater tank to $50-150 or more for a reef system with calcium dosing, premium salt, and specialized foods.
This calculator helps you estimate both the upfront setup cost and the ongoing monthly operating cost so you can budget appropriately before diving into the hobby.
Responsible pet owners, breeders, and veterinary professionals benefit from accurate aquarium cost data when making care decisions, budgeting for expenses, or monitoring health benchmarks. Revisit this tool whenever your pet's needs, weight, or age changes to keep recommendations current.
Many hobbyists abandon aquariums within the first year because they underestimated the ongoing costs. This calculator prevents sticker shock by laying out all expected expenses upfront, including often-forgotten costs like electricity and replacement media. Instant recalculation lets you explore different options and scenarios, ensuring your pet-care decisions are guided by accurate, reliable numbers.
Total Setup Cost = Tank + Filter + Heater + Lights + Substrate + Decor + Livestock + Test Kit Monthly Cost = Electricity + Food + Water Treatment + Replacement Media + Misc First Year Total = Setup Cost + (Monthly Cost × 12)
Result: $650 first year total
Setup cost of $350 plus monthly expenses of $25 × 12 months = $300, yielding a first-year total of $650. Subsequent years cost approximately $300 per year in ongoing expenses.
The tank itself is often the least expensive component. A quality stand, filter, heater, LED light, substrate, and live plants or rock typically cost 2-3 times the tank price. Don't forget test kits, a thermometer, fish net, and a gravel vacuum — these small items add $50-100 to the initial investment.
Electricity is the largest ongoing cost most hobbyists overlook. Heaters running 8-12 hours per day and lights running 6-10 hours contribute to a meaningful increase in your electric bill. Water treatment chemicals, replacement filter cartridges, and food add another $15-30 per month for freshwater setups.
Saltwater aquariums cost 2-5 times more than comparable freshwater setups. Premium salt mixes, protein skimmers, RO/DI units, calcium reactors, and specialized reef lighting drive up both initial and monthly costs. However, many reef hobbyists consider the stunning visual results worth the premium.
A basic 20-gallon freshwater setup costs $150-300 including tank, filter, heater, light, substrate, and a few fish. A 55-gallon setup runs $300-600. Fully planted tanks with CO2 injection can add $200-400 to these estimates.
A basic 30-gallon saltwater setup starts at $500-800. A 75-gallon reef tank with quality lighting, protein skimmer, and live rock can cost $1,500-3,000+. Monthly costs are typically $50-150 for salt, supplements, and electricity.
Monthly costs include food ($5-15), electricity ($5-20 for heater and filter), water conditioner ($3-5), and replacement media or supplies ($5-10). Reef tanks add salt mix ($15-30), calcium/alkalinity supplements ($10-20), and higher electricity for lighting.
A typical 55-gallon freshwater tank uses about 200-400 kWh per year ($25-50 at average rates). The heater is the largest consumer, followed by lighting. Reef tanks with metal halide lights can use 800+ kWh annually; LED conversions significantly reduce this.
Buy used tanks and stands, use LED lighting, grow your own live food, buy fish from local breeders, and purchase supplies in bulk. Joining a local aquarium club often provides access to deals, trades, and shared knowledge.
Common freshwater fish cost $2-10 each. Specialty freshwater species run $15-50. Marine fish range from $15-100 for common species to $100-500+ for rare specimens. Corals can cost $20-200+ per piece depending on species and coloration.