4-Gallon Tank: Stocking & Equipment Guide
Complete 4-gallon tank plan: 25 W heater, ~36 GPH filter, ~3 inches of fish, 4 to 6 lb substrate, 1-gal weekly change.
Quick answer
4-gallon setup
Heater 25 W, filter ~36 GPH, about 3 inches of fish, 4 to 6 lb of substrate, and a 1-gallon weekly water change.
This is your one-page plan for a 4-gallon aquarium. Below are the computed numbers for heating, filtration, stocking, substrate, and water changes, each linked to a full breakdown. A 4-gallon tank holds about 3.6 gallons of real water once substrate and equipment take up space, and every figure here is sized to that reality.
Core gear for a 4-gallon tank
About 16 watts keeps a 4-gallon tank at a steady tropical temperature.
A HOB (hang-on-back) filter rated near 36 GPH covers a 4-gallon tank with margin.
Cycle the tank and keep ammonia and nitrite at zero.
Equipment for a 4-gallon tank
The core kit for a 4-gallon tank is a heater, a filter, a thermometer, substrate, and a light if you want plants. Heating works out to about 16 watts, delivered as 25 W. Filtration should turn the tank over 4 to 10 times an hour, so target 16 to 40 GPH and buy a HOB (hang-on-back) filter rated near 36 GPH to allow for media and clogging. A sponge filter is a great gentle alternative at this size.
| What | Answer for 4 gal | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Heater | 25 W (~16 W) | Heater guide |
| Filter turnover | 16 to 40 GPH, buy ~36 | Filter guide |
| Stocking | ~3 in of fish (2 neons) | Stocking guide |
| Substrate | 4 to 6 lb | Substrate guide |
| Weekly water change | ~1 gal (25%) | Water change guide |
Stocking a 4-gallon tank
With about 3.6 gallons of real water, a 4-gallon tank holds roughly 3 inches of small, slim fish. That is best used as a shrimp or snail tank rather than a fish tank. Remember that big or messy fish such as goldfish and common plecos need far more room than their length suggests, so always check minimum tank sizes before buying.
Substrate and maintenance
Lay down 4 to 6 pounds of gravel or sand for a 1 to 2 inch bed. Once the tank is cycled and stocked, a weekly 25 percent water change of about 1 gallons keeps nitrate low and the water stable. Treat every batch of replacement water with dechlorinator, roughly 0.1 mL for that change, and use a gravel vacuum to pull out waste as you go.
Run the numbers yourself
Every figure here comes from our free tools: the volume, heater, filter, stocking, substrate, and water change calculators.
Frequently Asked Questions
What equipment does a 4-gallon tank need?
A 4-gallon tank needs a heater of about 16 watts (25 W), a HOB (hang-on-back) filter rated near 36 GPH, 4 to 6 pounds of substrate, a thermometer, and a light if you keep plants. Add a test kit and a gravel vacuum for maintenance.
How many fish can a 4-gallon tank hold?
A 4-gallon tank holds only about 3.6 gallons of real water, so it suits shrimp or snails rather than fish. For fish, move up to at least 5 to 10 gallons.
How often do you change water in a 4-gallon tank?
Change about 25 percent weekly, which is roughly 1 gallons for a 4-gallon tank. Treat the new water with dechlorinator first. Heavily stocked tanks may need a larger 50 percent change of about 2 gallons.
Is a 4-gallon tank good for beginners?
It can be, but smaller tanks swing in temperature and chemistry faster, so they are less forgiving than a 20-gallon or larger. Test the water often, stock lightly, and avoid overfeeding.
Planning or running a tank?
Use our free calculators and guides to get every number right.
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