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How do you acclimate new fish to an aquarium?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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📅 Published · Updated · 6 min read
How do you acclimate new fish to an aquarium?

How do you acclimate new fish to an aquarium?

Direct Answer

You acclimate new fish by slowly adjusting them to your tank's temperature and water chemistry before releasing them, which prevents the shock that comes from sudden changes in temperature, pH, and salinity. The two standard methods are the floating method (float the sealed bag 15-20 minutes to match temperature, then gradually mix in tank water) and the more gentle drip method (slowly drip tank water into the fish's container over 30-60 minutes).

Never pour the bag water into your tank, always net the fish across, and quarantine new arrivals in a separate tank for 2-4 weeks whenever possible to avoid introducing disease. Keep the tank lights off and minimize stress throughout.

Why Acclimation Matters

A fish at the store lives in water that may differ from yours in temperature, pH, hardness, and, for saltwater, salinity. Dropping it straight into your tank forces its body to cope with abrupt changes all at once, which causes osmotic stress, pH shock, and temperature shock. These can be fatal immediately or weaken the fish so it succumbs to disease days later.

Acclimation gives the fish time to adjust gradually, the same way you would not jump into ice water without easing in. The colder or more chemically different the shipping or store water is from yours, the more important slow acclimation becomes.

flowchart LR A[New fish in bag] --> B[Match temperature] B --> C[Gradually match water chemistry] C --> D[Net fish into tank] D --> E[Discard bag water] E --> F[Lights off, observe]

Before the Fish Arrives: Quarantine

The single best practice, especially for established tanks, is to acclimate new fish into a separate quarantine tank rather than your main display. A quarantine tank is a simple, cycled (or filter-seeded) tank where new arrivals spend 2-4 weeks under observation. This lets you watch for ich, velvet, internal parasites, and other diseases, and treat them, before the fish ever touches your healthy stock.

Introducing a single sick fish to a display tank can wipe out an entire collection. If you cannot run a full quarantine, at minimum acclimate carefully and observe the new fish closely in the days after introduction.

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Method 1: The Floating Method

The floating method is simple and works well when the store water and your tank water are reasonably similar.

  1. Turn off the tank lights and dim the room to reduce stress.
  2. Float the sealed bag in the tank for 15-20 minutes so the temperature inside the bag slowly matches the tank. Temperature is the fastest and most dangerous variable, so this step is essential.
  3. Open the bag and roll the top down to keep it floating.
  4. Add a small amount of tank water to the bag, about a half cup, every 5 minutes for 15-20 minutes. This gradually shifts the fish toward your water chemistry.
  5. Net the fish out of the bag and place it gently into the tank. Do not pour the bag water in; it may carry disease, ammonia, or unwanted chemistry.
  6. Discard the bag water down the drain.

Method 2: The Drip Method

The drip method is gentler and preferred for sensitive species, invertebrates, and all saltwater livestock, where the difference in salinity and pH demands a slow transition.

  1. Pour the fish and its water into a clean bucket or container, ideally so the fish is fully submerged.
  2. Set up a drip line using airline tubing with a control valve or a loose knot, running from the tank down into the bucket. Start a siphon and adjust the valve to a slow drip of about 2-4 drips per second.
  3. Let it drip for 30-60 minutes until the volume in the bucket has roughly doubled or tripled. This slowly equalizes temperature, pH, and salinity.
  4. Discard half the water if the bucket fills, and continue dripping to extend the process for very sensitive species.
  5. Net the fish into the tank and discard the bucket water.

The drip method is the gold standard for corals, shrimp, snails, and marine fish because their tolerance for sudden salinity and pH swings is very low.

flowchart TD A[Fish + water in bucket] --> B[Airline tubing siphon from tank] B --> C[Adjust valve to 2-4 drips/sec] C --> D[Drip 30-60 min until volume doubles] D --> E[Net fish into tank] E --> F[Discard bucket water]

Key Water Parameters During Acclimation

Acclimation is about smoothing transitions in the parameters the fish is sensitive to. Temperature should match within a degree or two; most tropical fish live at 74-80°F (23-27°C). pH differences are common between store and home water, and a swing of more than about 0.3 in a short time stresses fish, which is why gradual mixing matters.

Salinity in saltwater is measured by specific gravity (around 1.024-1.026 for reef tanks) and must be matched slowly, since marine fish and inverts are very sensitive to salinity swings. Make sure your own tank is fully cycled first, ammonia and nitrite at 0 ppm, before adding any fish; acclimating a fish into an uncycled tank exposes it to toxic ammonia no matter how careful the transition.

After You Release the Fish

Leave the tank lights off for several hours, or for the rest of the day, so the new fish can settle without the stress of bright light and curious tankmates. Do not feed immediately; wait until the next day so uneaten food does not foul the water while the fish is hiding. Watch for signs of stress such as gasping at the surface, clamped fins, hiding excessively, or rapid breathing.

Over the next two weeks, observe closely for any signs of disease, since stress from moving can trigger latent infections. If you skipped quarantine, this observation period is your main line of defense.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long should I acclimate a new fish? For the floating method, plan on about 30-40 minutes total: 15-20 minutes to match temperature, then 15-20 minutes of gradually adding tank water. For the drip method, allow 30-60 minutes, and longer for very sensitive species, corals, and invertebrates.

Slower is safer; the goal is a gradual transition, not a fast one.

Can I pour the bag water into my tank? No. Never add the bag or store water to your tank. It can carry disease, parasites, accumulated ammonia, and medications from the store system. Always net the fish out and transfer just the fish, discarding the bag or bucket water down the drain.

Do I need to quarantine new fish? Quarantining new fish for 2-4 weeks in a separate tank is the best way to protect an established tank from disease, and it is strongly recommended, especially for valuable or stocked displays. A single sick fish can infect your whole tank. If you cannot quarantine, acclimate carefully and observe the new fish closely for two weeks.

What's the difference between the floating and drip methods? The floating method matches temperature and then gradually mixes in tank water by hand; it is quick and fine for hardy freshwater fish with similar water. The drip method slowly drips tank water into the fish's container over a longer period and is gentler, making it the standard for sensitive species, invertebrates, and all saltwater livestock.

Should I feed a new fish right after adding it? No. Wait until the next day to feed. A newly added fish is stressed and often hides, so food offered immediately usually goes uneaten and fouls the water. Giving the fish time to settle overnight and feeding the following day reduces stress and keeps water quality stable.

Why did my new fish die after acclimation? Common causes include too-fast acclimation (temperature or pH shock), adding the fish to an uncycled tank with ammonia or nitrite present, an undetected disease the fish arrived with, or aggression from existing tankmates. Slow acclimation, a fully cycled tank, quarantine, and matching tankmate compatibility all reduce these losses.

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