What Size Filter for a 100-Gallon Tank?
A 100-gallon tank needs 400 to 1000 GPH of turnover. Buy a canister filter rated near 900 GPH so real flow stays on target.
Quick answer
~900 GPH rated
Aim for about 600 GPH of real flow on a 100-gallon tank and buy a filter rated near 900 GPH so it still delivers after media and clogging.
A 100-gallon aquarium wants a turnover of 400 to 1000 gallons per hour, with most community tanks landing near 600 GPH. Because a filter's rated flow drops once you load media and it starts to clog, buy a unit rated about 900 GPH. For a tank this size, a canister filter is the right tool.
Filters for a 100-gallon tank
A canister rated near 900 GPH gives a 100-gallon tank strong, quiet flow and big media capacity.
A hang-on-back unit is a handy second filter for redundancy and extra flow.
Confirm the filter is keeping ammonia and nitrite at zero.
How we sized the filter for a 100-gallon tank
Filtration is about turnover, the number of times the filter cycles your whole water volume through its media each hour. The healthy range is 4 to 10 times per hour, so a 100-gallon tank sits between 400 and 1000 GPH. A normal community stocking is happy near 600 GPH, while heavy or messy fish such as goldfish and cichlids push toward the top of the band.
| Detail | Value |
|---|---|
| Tank size | 100 US gallons |
| Healthy turnover band (4x to 10x) | 400 to 1000 GPH |
| Community target (~6x) | 600 GPH |
| Rated GPH to buy (~1.5x) | 900 GPH |
| Best filter type | canister filter |
Why you buy rated 900 GPH, not 600
The gallons-per-hour number printed on a filter box is a best case, measured with an empty unit and no height to pump against. Load it with sponge, ceramic media, and carbon, and add a few weeks of debris, and real flow commonly falls 25 to 50 percent. Lifting water to the tank rim costs more. That is why we size up: a filter rated around 900 GPH still delivers your 600 GPH target once it is doing real work.
Which filter type for a 100-gallon tank?
At 100 gallons a canister filter is the best choice. It holds far more biological media, runs quietly, and hides the hardware below the tank. Many keepers run two filters so the tank stays cycled while one is being cleaned. Whatever you choose, oversized filtration is cheap insurance: more media means a bigger bacteria colony, and you can always tame strong current with a spray bar or by aiming the output at the glass.
Dial it in
Run your real stocking through the filter size calculator to fine-tune the GPH, then round out the build with the 100-gallon tank setup guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
What GPH filter does a 100-gallon tank need?
A 100-gallon tank needs a turnover of 400 to 1000 GPH, which is 4 to 10 times the volume per hour. A normal community stocking sits near 600 GPH. Because rated flow drops once media is added, buy a filter rated around 900 GPH so the real flow stays on target.
What kind of filter is best for a 100-gallon tank?
For a 100-gallon tank a canister filter is the best fit. Canisters hold the most media and run quietly, and many keepers add a second filter for redundancy.
Why buy a filter rated higher than 600 GPH?
Rated GPH is measured with an empty filter and no head height. Once you load sponge, ceramic media, and carbon, and as that media collects debris, real flow drops 25 to 50 percent. Buying a unit rated about 1.5 times your target, near 900 GPH, keeps the real flow where you need it.
Can a filter be too strong for a 100-gallon tank?
Slightly oversized filtration is usually a feature, not a flaw, because extra media means more beneficial bacteria. If the current is too strong for calm fish like bettas or fancy goldfish, reduce it with a spray bar, a flow baffle, or by aiming the output at the glass.
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