A nano reef is a 10-30 gallon saltwater tank, typically all-in-one (AIO) format with built-in filtration. Tighter footprint = tighter parameter swings, so equipment quality matters more than in larger tanks. Here's the full build path.
Innovative Marine Nuvo 14g + 20g. AIO format, clean fit + finish, well-engineered media baskets. Industry standard for nano reef.
Waterbox AIO 16g + 25g. Premium glass + low-iron front panel. Slightly higher price point.
Red Sea MAX Nano 20. Plug-and-play with included light + skimmer. Best 'one-box' option for first-time reefers.
AI Prime 16HD. 60w of mixed white + blue + UV. Covers 15-20 gallon footprint. ~$350.
Kessil A80. Single-puck spotlight. Great color rendition, gentler shimmer than Prime. 30 watts.
EcoTech Radion XR15 G6. Premium-tier nano. Overkill for a 14g, perfect for a 25g+.
Use 1 lb of dry rock per gallon. Add a small piece of cured live rock or a bottle of Dr. Tim's One and Only to seed nitrifying bacteria. Cycle for 7-14 days, dosing ammonia to 2 ppm. Tank is cycled when ammonia + nitrite both read zero within 24h of dosing.
Week 1-2: cleanup crew (5-7 hermits + 5-7 nerite snails). Week 4-6: first fish (ocellaris clown). Week 8-10: second fish (firefish goby). Week 12+: corals, then advanced fish. Don't rush - nano reefs reward patience.
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Browse reef-ready saltwater fish →Realistic minimum is 10 gallons AIO. Below that, parameter stability becomes too hard to manage. The sweet spot is 14-25 gallons - large enough to forgive mistakes, small enough to maintain in 30 minutes a week.
Yes. One ocellaris clownfish (captive-bred) does fine in 10 gallons with cleanup crew + soft coral. Skip pairs - they need 20+ gallons.
Mushrooms (Discosoma, Rhodactis, Ricordea), Green Star Polyps, zoas, leather corals. All thrive at moderate light + tolerate parameter swings.
Recommendations on this page cross-checked against the following authoritative references and our internal vendor + breeder database.
Answers to the questions experienced keepers ask after the basic care guide.
Drip acclimation over 60 to 90 minutes is the safest approach for Nano Reef Tank Setup - Fast Aquatics Guide. Match temperature first (15 minute float), then drip 2 to 3 drops per second from the display sump until the bag volume has tripled. Test salinity (or freshwater hardness) at the end - if it is within 0.001 SG (or 2 dGH) of the display, transfer the specimen with a net rather than pouring shipping water in.
Aim for biological + mechanical + chemical staging. Canister or sump-driven filtration sized for 5x to 8x display turnover per hour, mechanical floss replaced weekly, and carbon or GAC swapped every 4 to 6 weeks. Nano Reef Tank Setup - Fast Aquatics Guide responds well to stable nitrate (under 20 ppm) more than to any specific filter brand - stability beats peak performance.
For saltwater specimens, yes - a properly-sized skimmer rated for 1.5x to 2x display volume keeps dissolved organics low and reduces nuisance-algae triggers. Freshwater specimens do not need skimmers; a well-stocked plant grow-out + canister with chemical media achieves the same end. Nano Reef Tank Setup - Fast Aquatics Guide kept without adequate organic export tends to show stress within 90 days.
Compatibility with planted tanks depends on the species behavior + water chemistry overlap. Plant-safe specimens leave foliage alone; some pick at soft-tissue plants like vallisneria or anubias. Check the species page profile + the planted-tank compatibility note before stocking Nano Reef Tank Setup - Fast Aquatics Guide in a high-tech CO2-injected setup with valuable cultivars.
For freshwater specimens with no plant requirements, a basic LED at 30 to 50 PAR at substrate is sufficient and reduces algae. For saltwater + reef specimens, target 100 to 250 PAR depending on photo-tolerance, with a sunrise/sunset ramp + a 8 to 10 hour photoperiod. Nano Reef Tank Setup - Fast Aquatics Guide tolerates a wider lighting band than most keepers expect; consistency matters more than peak intensity.
Most aquarium species evolved in moderate flow with localized turbulence rather than uniform high flow. Aim for 20x to 40x display turnover for reef specimens, 4x to 6x for community freshwater. Nano Reef Tank Setup - Fast Aquatics Guide shows stress fins (clamped, frayed) when flow is mismatched - dial back if you see this within 14 days of introduction.
Sustained drift above +/- 2 F from target is the threshold most keepers miss. Nano Reef Tank Setup - Fast Aquatics Guide tolerates day-night swings of 1 to 2 F without issue but a 4 F shift over 2 hours triggers ich + bacterial bloom risk. Use a controller-driven heater (not the built-in dial) and a backup thermometer at the opposite end of the tank.
For freshwater fish: ich, columnaris, and fin rot are the top three; quarantine + UV sterilizer prevents the majority. For marine fish: ich (Cryptocaryon), velvet (Amyloodinium), and bacterial infections; tank-transfer method or copper QT during the 30-day acclimation cycle prevents nearly all outbreaks. For inverts + corals: tissue necrosis, parasitic isopods, and protozoan blooms.
Captive breeding success varies enormously by species - some breed readily in community tanks (livebearers, cherry shrimp, clownfish) while others have never been captive-bred (most reef fish + most marine inverts). Check the species-specific care guide for the breeding-method note + larval-rearing protocol. Nano Reef Tank Setup - Fast Aquatics Guide kept in pairs or small groups often spawns even without intent if conditions are right.
Avoid same-species rivals (especially male-male pairings for territorial species), known fin-nippers (tiger barbs, certain pufferfish), and anything that out-competes for food or out-grows the tank. Nano Reef Tank Setup - Fast Aquatics Guide also struggles with hyper-aggressive cichlids in freshwater and damselfish in saltwater - both will hold territory at the expense of every other tankmate.
Most ornamental specimens accept cleaner shrimp + cleaner gobies; cleaner wrasses (Labroides) often die in captivity and are not recommended. Nano Reef Tank Setup - Fast Aquatics Guide kept with cleaner pairs typically benefits from parasite control + stress reduction, but verify the cleaner does not get eaten by checking the species size + temperament chart.
Captive lifespan tracks closely to wild lifespan when water chemistry, diet, and tankmate stress are managed. Most aquarium fish live 5 to 12 years; long-lived species (large cichlids, pufferfish, some tangs) reach 15+ years. Nano Reef Tank Setup - Fast Aquatics Guide kept in a stable, properly-sized system should live within 80% to 100% of the species lifespan ceiling - early death usually traces back to chronic-stress causes (parameters, tankmates, diet) rather than disease.