Aquarium Heater Size Calculator

Calculate the right heater wattage for your aquarium based on tank volume, room temperature, desired water temperature, and insulation level.

Calculated Wattage
275W
Exact need
Recommended Heater
300W
Nearest standard size
Dual Heater Option
2 × 150W
Recommended for safety
Temperature Rise
10.0°F
5.6°C
Est. Duty Cycle
90%
On-time percentage
Monthly Energy Cost
$29.16
6.48 kWh/day

Heater Size Scale

25W
50W
75W
100W
150W
✓ Dual option
200W
250W
300W
✓ Recommended
400W
500W

Wattage by Temperature Difference

ΔT (°F)ΔT (°C)Watts NeededHeater Size
5°F2.8°C138W150W
10°F5.6°C275W300W
15°F8.3°C413W500W
20°F11.1°C550W500W
Fish Temperature Requirements
Fish Type°F°C
Betta76-82°F24-28°C
Neon Tetra72-78°F22-26°C
Discus82-86°F28-30°C
Goldfish65-72°F18-22°C
Cichlids (African)76-82°F24-28°C
Clownfish76-82°F24-28°C
Corals (reef)76-80°F24-27°C
Planning notes, formulas, and examples

About the Aquarium Heater Size Calculator

The Aquarium Heater Size Calculator determines the correct heater wattage for your fish tank based on tank volume, the temperature difference between room and desired water temperature, and tank characteristics. Proper heater sizing prevents temperature swings that stress and kill fish.

The general rule is 3-5 watts per gallon for a 10°F (5.5°C) temperature rise. But this oversimplifies — a tank in a cold basement needs much more heating than one in a climate-controlled room. Tank shape matters too: tall, narrow tanks lose less heat per gallon than shallow, wide tanks because of the surface-area-to-volume ratio.

Enter your tank volume, room temperature, target water temperature, and the calculator recommends an exact wattage, suggests whether one or two heaters provide better safety, and shows energy cost estimates. Includes reference tables for popular heater brands and wattage ratings. That makes it easier to size a heater for the room you actually keep the tank in, not just the nominal gallon count.

When This Page Helps

Use this calculator to choose a heater size that matches the room the tank actually sits in, not just the tank volume on the box. It helps when you are comparing single-heater and dual-heater setups, estimating operating cost, or deciding whether a lid and insulation reduce the wattage you need.

How to Use the Inputs

  1. Enter your tank volume in gallons or liters.
  2. Enter the average room temperature.
  3. Enter the desired water temperature for your fish.
  4. Select the tank's insulation level (lid, insulated stand, etc.).
  5. View the recommended heater wattage.
  6. Check the dual-heater recommendation for large tanks.
Formula used
Watts = Volume (gal) × ΔT (°F) × HeatLossFactor. HeatLossFactor: Open top = 0.65, Lid = 0.5, Insulated = 0.4 watts per gallon per °F. Dual heater recommended when >200W total (use 2 × half-wattage for redundancy). Energy Cost = Watts × DutyCycle × Hours × ElectricRate.

Example Calculation

Result: 275 watts recommended (300W heater)

55 gallons × 10°F difference × 0.5 (with lid) = 275W. The nearest standard heater is 300W. For a 55-gallon tank, consider two 150W heaters for redundancy.

Tips & Best Practices

  • In winter, consider a heater 25-50% larger than calculated to handle cold snaps.
  • Always use a thermometer at the opposite end of the tank from the heater to verify even heating.
  • Titanium heaters are more durable and shatter-proof vs glass — worth the premium for large tanks.
  • An insulated tank (foam board on back/sides) can reduce heating costs by 20-30%.
  • If your room temperature fluctuates more than 5°F daily, size up one heater tier.

Understanding Heat Loss in Aquariums

Aquariums lose heat through four mechanisms: (1) evaporation from the surface (largest loss — 60-70%), (2) radiation from glass walls, (3) conduction through glass/stand, and (4) convection from air currents around the tank.

A tight-fitting lid drastically reduces evaporative heat loss, cutting total heat loss by 30-40%. Adding insulation (foam board) to the back and sides reduces conductive/radiative loss by another 20%.

Heater Duty Cycle and Energy

A properly sized heater doesn't run constantly. The thermostat cycles it on and off to maintain temperature. Typical duty cycles: well-insulated tank in warm room = 20-30%. Exposed tank in cool room = 50-70%. The heater's actual energy consumption = Wattage × Duty Cycle.

Emergency Heating

During power outages, aquariums lose about 1-2°F per hour without heating. In winter, a 55-gallon tank can drop from 78°F to dangerous 68°F in 5-6 hours. Emergency options: insulate with blankets, use hand warmers sealed in bags, or use a battery-powered air pump (oxygenation is often more critical than heating in the short term).

Sources & Methodology

Last updated:

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Rule of thumb: 3-5 watts per gallon for a 10°F rise. Colder rooms need the high end (5W/gal). Climate-controlled rooms need less (3W/gal). For a 10°F rise: 10 gal = 50W, 20 gal = 100W, 55 gal = 200-300W.