Fact Sheet

How Many Goldfish Can Fit in a 10 Gallon Tank?

Contributor
By Linda Allardice
eHow Contributing Writer
(2 Ratings)
How Many Goldfish Can Fit in a 10 Gallon Tank?
How Many Goldfish Can Fit in a 10 Gallon Tank?
U.S. Government Photos and Images

If you have kept a single goldfish in a fishbowl, you probably know that it doesn't live for a very long time. You probably have also seen many goldfish in a single, small tank at the local pet store, but that doesn't mean it's the most healthy environment for the fish. A 10-gallon tank might seem big enough to accommodate more than one goldfish, but in realty, one goldfish per 10 gallons of water is the most healthy environment for the fish.

From Quick Guide: Pond Care Basics

    The gallon per fish rule is debunked

  1. Koi pond fish
     
    Koi pond fish
    Goldfish, whether they be fantails, fancies or koi, are meant to live outdoors in a pond. They can live past 30 years of age and can grow up to 1 foot long. The common belief that a fish will only grow as big as its environment will let it is simply not true. A goldfish kept in a fishbowl will not be restricted in growth, it will merely die way before its time.
  2. Goldfish are messy

  3. Fancy goldfish
     
    Fancy goldfish
    Goldfish expel a lot of waste. Placing too many goldfish in a tank will result in dirty, cloudy water and could lead to disease or ammonia/nitrate poisoning that will wipe out all the fish in the tank. Likewise, the single goldfish placed in a goldfish bowl will suffer the same fate.
  4. Too many is bad

  5. Black Moore
     
    Black Moore
    Goldfish require a lot of room to breathe--literally. Too many fish in one tank will deplete the oxygen supply and cause the goldfish to stress and eventually die. Although you can put oxygen into the tank by means of a filter or air hose, goldfish need surface air, and each one requires roughly 1 square foot of surface area per inch of its size.
  6. Companionship

  7. Fantail Goldfish
     
    Fantail Goldfish
    One goldfish in a 10-gallon tank might seem like one lonely fish. Goldfish are very friendly toward one another and will even eat from a human hand once they've become accustomed to their caregiver. So if you want to keep more than one goldfish, you will need a bigger tank or an outside natural or man-made pond.
  8. Purchasing goldfish

  9.  
    Aquariums and pet stores aren't in the business of keeping goldfish as pets, so you may very well see many goldfish in one tank. When purchasing a goldfish, there are several things to look for. Make sure the tank water is clean and the fish are swimming around in a healthy manner. They shouldn't be lethargic or breathing too fast; both are signs that the water is low on oxygen, causing the fish to be stressed. Make sure the fins, tail and body are in good condition. Goldfish are covered with a protective slime coat--when it is "eaten" away, the fish is prone to infections.

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