Tank&Tendril
A Field Reference for the Freshwater Aquarium

Browse

Cichlids Tetras Livebearers Catfish Gouramis & Bettas Rasboras & Danios Barbs Loaches Shrimp & Snails Aquatic Plants Aquarium Care

About Editorial Policy Contact Privacy Disclaimer Terms
Aquarium Care

Cycling a New Aquarium: Fishless Method and Timelines

HM

Dr. Helena Marlow

Ichthyologist & Aquarist · ·

Cycling a New Aquarium: Fishless Method and Timelines
Photo  ·  Pngbot · Wikimedia Commons  ·  CC BY-SA 3.0
Quick Answer
Fishless cycling builds the biofilter before fish enter the aquarium. Dose pure ammonia to 1 to 4 ppm, keep the filter warm and oxygenated, and test until the tank can process ammonia and nitrite to nitrate within 24 hours. Fish-in cycling exposes animals to toxins and should be reserved only for rescue situations.

Fishless cycling builds the biofilter before fish enter the aquarium. Dose pure ammonia to 1 to 4 ppm, keep the filter warm and oxygenated, and test until the tank can process ammonia and nitrite to nitrate within 24 hours. Fish-in cycling exposes animals to toxins and should be reserved only for rescue situations. The practical question is not whether the tank looks clear today, but whether the mechanism behind the reading or symptom is understood well enough to prevent repetition.

Part of the The Complete Aquarium Care Guide.

Problem Statement

The common failure is simple: new aquaria contain clean surfaces, not mature nitrifying biofilm. The water may remain visually clear while chemistry, oxygen, or microbial balance is already unsafe. Clear water is not a diagnostic result. A tank can read 0.5 ppm ammonia with polished water, or carry a parasite outbreak under perfect-looking aquascaping.

This matters most for German blue rams, dwarf gouramis, and guppies. These animals expose mistakes quickly because their gills, osmoregulatory systems, skin, or moulting biology leave little margin. A robust zebra danio may survive a lapse that kills a ram cichlid or shrimp colony.

Mechanism

Nitrifiers reproduce slowly compared with ordinary heterotrophic bacteria. At 25 to 28 °C and good oxygenation, a fishless cycle commonly takes 3 to 6 weeks; seeded mature media can shorten that to days. An unfamiliar new-tank smell during the first few weeks is a cycling signal, not a reason to restart. If the cycle stalls and nitrite refuses to drop past week six, why your aquarium won't cycle covers the most common arrest points. In practical terms, the aquarium is a set of rates: waste enters, bacteria process it, plants consume part of it, water changes remove the remainder, and equipment moves oxygen to the surfaces doing the work.

Temperature changes those rates. At 28 °C, fish metabolism, pathogen reproduction, and oxygen demand all rise. At low oxygen, nitrifiers slow before many keepers notice fish distress. pH changes toxicity: ammonia is more dangerous in alkaline water, while low KH makes acidification more likely. The point is to correct causes rather than treating every symptom as an isolated accident.

Diagnostic Checklist

Reading or observation What it suggests First response
Ammonia above 0 ppm Biofilter overloaded, immature, or damaged Stop feeding for 24 hours, test source water, protect filter media
Nitrite above 0 ppm Nitrite oxidisers lagging behind ammonia oxidisers Add aeration, water change, chloride protection where appropriate
Nitrate rising weekly Normal end-product accumulation or overfeeding Adjust water-change volume and feeding
Sudden pH shift KH exhaustion, CO2 change, or source-water mismatch Test KH before adding any pH chemical

Record results in units. "Fine" is not a value. Use ppm for ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate; °dH for GH and KH; °C for temperature; µS/cm or TDS when comparing source water and shop water. Re-test any surprising result before making a large correction.

Immediate Actions

  1. Test ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, pH, KH, and temperature before adding medication or chemicals.
  2. Add aeration if fish breathe rapidly, hover at the surface, or cluster near filter outlets.
  3. Perform a 25 to 50% water change when ammonia or nitrite is detectable, matching temperature within 1 to 2 °C. Preventing ammonia spikes in a new tank covers the dosing schedule and testing cadence for the fishless cycling period.
  4. Stop feeding for 24 hours in water-quality emergencies; adult fish tolerate a day without food far better than they tolerate ammonia.
  5. Protect the biological filter. Rinse media only in dechlorinated water or removed tank water, and keep it wet during maintenance.

If livestock is newly purchased, move diagnosis into Quarantine Tank Protocol rather than risking the display. If the issue began after new fish arrived, read Acclimating New Fish before assuming the shop or the home tank is solely responsible.

Ongoing Prevention

Prevention is a schedule, not a rescue purchase. Keep a weekly log of nitrate, maintenance volume, plant trimming, feeding changes, and any deaths. A stable community tank might need only 30% weekly water changes; a heavily fed cichlid tank or grow-out system may need 50% twice weekly. Shrimp and blackwater systems often benefit from smaller changes because TDS stability matters.

Cross-check related systems: Nitrogen Cycle Explained, Choosing a Filter, Acclimating New Fish. These topics overlap because aquarium failures rarely respect article boundaries. Lighting changes affect algae; CO2 changes affect pH; substrate changes affect hardness; new fish affect disease pressure and bioload.

Common Mistakes

  1. Treating symptoms before measuring. Medication in bad water gives two stressors instead of one solution.

  2. Changing too many variables. Altering pH, light, fertiliser, filter media, and feeding in the same week makes cause and effect impossible to read.

  3. Trusting livestock as test kits. By the time sensitive fish gasp, clamp fins, or stop feeding, damage may already be underway.

  4. Assuming the display is safer than quarantine. A mature display has stable biology, but it also contains animals worth protecting from an unobserved newcomer.

  5. Cleaning the filter too thoroughly. Sterile media is not clean media; it is uncycled media.

FAQ

How quickly should improvement appear?

Water-quality corrections should improve breathing and posture within hours if toxins were the cause. Tissue damage, parasite burdens, algae, and plant deficiencies take days to weeks because biology must regrow, detach, or complete lifecycles.

Is a large water change dangerous?

A large change is safe when temperature, dechlorination, and mineral content are matched. It is dangerous when straight cold tap water or very different TDS water is added suddenly to soft-water fish or shrimp.

Should carbon be used in the filter?

Activated carbon is useful after medication or for removing specific organic contaminants. It is not a substitute for biological media, water changes, or diagnosis.

When is a veterinarian needed?

Mass deaths, deep ulcers, neurological signs, repeated treatment failure, or valuable breeding stock justify aquatic veterinary help. Home diagnosis has limits.

See Also

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I test first?

Test ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, pH, KH, GH, and temperature before treating. These numbers separate water-quality problems from disease or equipment faults.

Can this be fixed without chemicals?

Often yes. Water changes, stable temperature, correct hardness, mature filtration, and reduced feeding fix many early care problems without medication.

How often should I re-test?

Daily during emergencies, weekly during a new setup, and monthly in stable mature tanks unless livestock, source water, or equipment changes.

Does this apply to shrimp tanks?

Yes, but shrimp need gentler changes. Match TDS and temperature carefully and avoid copper-containing medications or abrupt mineral shifts.

Sources & References

  • Hovanec, T.A. & DeLong, E.F. (1996). Comparative analysis of nitrifying bacteria associated with freshwater and marine aquaria. Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
  • Noga, E.J. (2010). Fish Disease: Diagnosis and Treatment. Wiley-Blackwell.
  • Walstad, D. (2013). Ecology of the Planted Aquarium. Echinodorus Publishing.
  • Stoskopf, M.K. (1993). Fish Medicine. W.B. Saunders.