Aquarium guide

100-gallon aquarium setup guide

Complete 100-gallon aquarium setup guide. Equipment list, cost breakdown, stocking ideas, lighting + filtration sizing, and the best fish + invertebrates for a 100-gallon tank.

Why a 100-gallon tank?

The 100-gallon footprint is the showpiece size in most living rooms; supports tang trios and full coral diversity. At this volume, water-quality swings are slower than smaller tanks.

Footprint, weight, and structural notes

A 100-gallon aquarium full of water + sand + rock weighs approximately 1050 pounds. Use a stand specifically rated for that load AND a level subfloor.

Equipment shopping list

For a 100-gallon system you need: a sump (recommended), a return pump rated for 5-8x display turnover, a protein skimmer (saltwater), an ATO + reservoir, a controller (Apex/GHL/Hydros), 2-3 gyre pumps, a heater (300W with redundancy), proper LED lighting, and a full water-test kit. Mid-line, expect $2,500-5,500 for the full equipment stack before livestock.

Lighting + filtration sizing

Lighting depends on what you keep. For planted: 30-50 PAR at substrate (low-tech), 60-100 PAR for high-tech. For mixed reef: 250-450 PAR at frag-rack height. For SPS-dominant: 350+ PAR. Filtration: turn over the display volume 5-8x per hour minimum.

Stocking ideas that work

African cichlid mbuna group; reef with multiple tangs + anthias school + LPS garden. The honest mistake most aquarists make is overstocking based on rule-of-thumb counts ("1 inch per gallon") that ignore territorial behavior, adult size, and bioload. Real-world stocking is determined by the species' adult footprint + temperament.

Cost breakdown

Real-world all-in costs for a working 100-gallon system: $3,500-8,000 hardware + $800-3,500 livestock + coral.

FAQ for 100-gallon tanks

Do I need a sump for a 100-gallon aquarium?

Yes - sump-based filtration is the practical default at this size.

What is the most common mistake at the 100-gallon size?

Buying a too-small return pump and undersized skimmer for the bioload.

Can I use a 100-gallon as my first aquarium?

Possible but most beginners benefit from starting with 40-75 gallons.

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