Step-by-step how-to

How to raise aquarium pH (safely)

Step-by-step protocol for raising aquarium pH. Crushed coral + aragonite substrate + baking soda + buffers.

Intermediate7 steps

What you'll need

Step-by-step

Step 1: Test current pH + KHVerify both. Low pH usually means low KH. Raise KH to raise pH stably; raising pH alone via baking soda crashes back without KH support.
Step 2: Add crushed coralSubstrate or media bag. 1 lb per 10 gallons. Slowly dissolves and raises pH + KH naturally. Most stable long-term solution.
Step 3: Add aragonite sandFor African cichlid or marine setups: replace inert sand with aragonite. Buffers pH to 8.0-8.4 automatically.
Step 4: Use Seachem Reef BufferFor reef tanks. Raises alkalinity (KH) which stabilizes pH at 8.3-8.4. Dose per manufacturer per gallon.
Step 5: Baking soda (emergency)1 teaspoon baking soda per 10 gallons raises pH by ~0.3. Mix with tank water in a cup first; add slowly. Use only if pH is dangerously low.
Step 6: Monitor over 2 weeksTest pH + KH every 3 days. Target: rise pH by 0.1-0.2 per week. Faster rises also shock fish.
Step 7: Address root causePersistent low pH usually means CO2 buildup (closed room, no aeration), high organics (overdue water change), or naturally soft tap water. Fix the cause, not just the symptom.

Frequently asked questions

How fast can I raise pH safely?

0.1-0.2 pH units per week maximum. Faster causes alkaline shock + slime-coat damage.

Will baking soda raise pH permanently?

No - baking soda raises pH temporarily but the effect drops as CO2 from respiration consumes the buffer. Need ongoing dosing OR substrate-based buffering for stability.

What is the best way to raise pH for African cichlids?

Aragonite substrate + crushed coral in the filter + Seachem Cichlid Lake Salt. Replicates Lake Malawi/Tanganyika water chemistry naturally.

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