How to Do Water Changes Correctly — Step-by-Step Guide
Master aquarium water changes! Equipment, process, frequency, temperature matching, and common mistakes to avoid.
tipps · 10 Min. Lesezeit · water changes, maintenance, beginner, tutorial
How to Do Water Changes Correctly — Step-by-Step Guide
Water changes are THE most important maintenance task. Here's how to do them properly, safely, and efficiently.
Why Water Changes Are Essential
Water changes accomplish:
- ✅ Remove nitrates (not removed by filter)
- ✅ Dilute dissolved organics (fish hormones, tannins, waste)
- ✅ Replenish minerals (trace elements, buffers)
- ✅ Prevent "old tank syndrome" (gradual parameter drift)
- ✅ Restore pH buffering capacity (KH)
Even with perfect filtration and plants, water changes are mandatory!
"Dilution is the solution to pollution."
How Often Should You Change Water?
Standard Schedule:
25-30% weekly for most established tanks
Adjusted by Tank Type:
| Tank Type | Frequency | Amount |
|-----------|-----------|--------|
| Light stocking + plants | Weekly | 20-25% |
| Moderate community | Weekly | 25-30% |
| Heavy stocking | Weekly | 30-50% |
| Goldfish / Messy fish | 2× weekly | 25-30% each |
| Fry tank | Daily | 10-20% |
| Shrimp tank | Weekly | 10-15% |
| Reef tank | Weekly | 10-15% |
Consistency is key! Weekly 25% beats monthly 50%.
Equipment Needed
Essential:
- Gravel vacuum / siphon (with tube + bucket connector)
- Bucket (5-10L, dedicated to aquarium ONLY)
- Dechlorinator (Seachem Prime, API Stress Coat)
- Thermometer (optional but helpful)
Optional (Makes Life Easier):
- Python No-Spill System (connects to faucet — no buckets!)
- Battery-powered siphon (starts siphon automatically)
- Algae scraper (for glass cleaning during water change)
Step-by-Step Water Change Process
Preparation (Day Before or Morning Of):
1. Prepare New Water
If using tap water:
- Fill buckets with tap water
- Add dechlorinator (dose for full bucket volume)
- Let sit 10-30 minutes
Optional: Add water to bucket night before, let it reach room temp naturally.
If heating water:
- Use submersible aquarium heater in bucket
- Heat to match tank temperature (within 1-2°C)
If using RO/DI water (reef tanks):
- Mix saltwater 24 hours before (aerate with powerhead)
- Match temperature and salinity
The Water Change (Step-by-Step):
Step 1: Turn Off Equipment (If Needed)
Turn OFF:
- Heater (if water level will drop below it)
- Canister filter (if intake will be exposed during draining)
- UV sterilizer (if installed)
LEAVE ON:
- HOB filters (safe above water line)
- Air pumps / sponge filters
- Powerheads (unless water level drops too low)
Step 2: Clean Algae from Glass (Optional)
While water is still high:
- Use algae scraper or magnetic cleaner
- Wipe glass (algae floats in water, will be removed during siphon)
Don't clean glass AFTER draining (harder to reach, less effective).
Step 3: Vacuum Substrate
This is the MAIN step!
How to use gravel vacuum:
- Start siphon:
- Method A: Submerge entire vacuum in tank, cover outlet with thumb, lift out while keeping inlet submerged → siphon starts
- Method B: Use battery-powered starter
- Method C: Suck on tube briefly (not recommended — gross!)
- Insert vacuum into substrate:
- Push vacuum tube 2-3cm into gravel/sand
- Debris and waste get sucked up
- Gravel falls back (it's too heavy to siphon)
- Move slowly across bottom:
- Work in sections (front to back, left to right)
- Focus on high-waste areas:
- Under decorations
- Feeding spots
- Areas where fish gather
- Stop when target volume removed:
- 25% of 100L tank = 25 liters
- Count buckets or mark tank with tape beforehand
Tips:
- Don't vacuum ENTIRE substrate every time — alternate areas (left this week, right next week)
- Sand substrates: Hold vacuum 1-2cm ABOVE sand (don't insert) — wave hand over sand to lift debris
- Planted tanks: Avoid vacuuming densely planted areas (disturbs roots)
Step 4: Remove Decorations (If Needed)
While water level is low:
- Rinse decorations in old tank water (siphon bucket)
- Scrub algae with soft brush (NO soap!)
- Don't rinse in tap water (kills beneficial bacteria)
Step 5: Check / Clean Filter Intake
Wipe intake tube/sponge with old tank water if dirty.
Don't clean filter media during water change (wait 1-2 weeks between filter cleaning and water change).
Step 6: Refill Tank
CRITICAL: Match temperature before adding water!
How to add new water safely:
Method 1 (Bucket Method):
- Check temperature of new water (use thermometer)
- Should be within 1-2°C of tank temp
- If too cold → add hot water to bucket
- If too hot → add cold water to bucket
- Pour slowly into tank:
- Don't pour directly onto substrate (disturbs gravel, stirs debris)
- Pour onto plate, hand, or decoration to diffuse flow
- Or: Use jug/cup to add slowly
- Add in stages:
- Pour 25-30% of bucket
- Wait 5 minutes (let water mix)
- Pour more
- Repeat until full
Method 2 (Python System):
- Attach hose to faucet
- Run water into tank
- Adjust faucet to match temperature (feel with hand)
- Fill to desired level
- Add extra dechlorinator to whole tank volume (since water added directly)
Step 7: Dose Additives
After refilling, add:
Essential:
- Dechlorinator (if using tap water)
- Dose for NEW water added (bucket method)
- Dose for FULL tank volume (Python method)
Optional:
- Liquid fertilizer (planted tanks) — weekly dose
- Trace elements (reef tanks)
- Beneficial bacteria (if needed — new tank, after medication)
Seachem Prime is best dechlorinator — also temporarily detoxifies ammonia/nitrite.
Step 8: Restart Equipment
Turn back ON:
- Heater
- Canister filter (prime if needed)
- UV sterilizer
Check:
- Filter flowing properly
- Heater light on
- No leaks
Step 9: Test Water (Optional but Recommended)
Test 1-2 hours after water change:
- Ammonia (should be 0)
- Nitrite (should be 0)
- Nitrate (should be lower than before)
- pH (should be stable)
Log results to track trends over time.
Common Water Change Mistakes
1. Skipping Dechlorinator
Tap water chlorine kills fish AND beneficial bacteria!
Always dechlorinate — even if using Python system.
2. Temperature Shock
Adding cold water (5°C+ difference) = stress, disease outbreak, deaths
Always match temperature within 1-2°C!
3. Vacuuming Too Aggressively (Sand)
Vacuuming deep into sand → releases toxic gas (hydrogen sulfide)
Only surface vacuum sand — don't insert vacuum deeply.
4. Changing 100% of Water
Massive parameter swing = shock, cycle crash
Never change >50% unless emergency (poisoning, medication overdose).
5. Cleaning Filter Same Day
Water change + filter cleaning = double bacteria loss
Alternate weeks:
- Week 1: Water change
- Week 2: Water change + filter rinse (in old tank water)
6. Pouring New Water Directly onto Substrate
Stirs up debris, clouds water, stresses fish
Pour onto plate/hand to diffuse flow.
7. Not Removing Uneaten Food First
Vacuuming waste but leaving uneaten food → waste returns
Remove visible food before water change.
Water Change Hacks
1. Mark Tank with Tape
Place tape at 75% full mark (25% below normal water line).
When draining: Stop when water reaches tape = 25% removed.
2. Heat Water in Bucket Overnight
Fill bucket night before, add heater, set to tank temp.
Morning: Water is perfectly temp-matched!
3. Use a Timer
Set phone timer for 5 minutes while siphoning.
Prevents over-draining while distracted.
4. Keep Siphon in Tank
Leave gravel vacuum tube in tank (attached to rim with suction cup).
Saves time — just attach hose when ready.
5. Dual-Bucket System
Bucket 1: Drain old water
Bucket 2: Pre-prepared new water (heated, dechlorinated)
Swap roles weekly (rotate buckets).
Special Situations
During Cycling (New Tank)
First 4-8 weeks:
- No water changes unless ammonia/nitrite >5 ppm
- If needed: 50% change, re-dose ammonia
After Medication
Remove medication before adding fish back:
- 50-70% water change
- Add activated carbon to filter (absorbs medication)
- Test water (ammonia, nitrite)
Emergency Water Change (Ammonia/Nitrite Spike)
If fish gasping, test shows ammonia/nitrite:
- Immediate 50% water change
- Dose Seachem Prime (detoxifies temporarily)
- Test again in 1 hour
- Repeat if still high
Vacation (Missed Water Change)
If you miss 1 week:
- Do 40-50% change when you return
- Test water
- Resume normal schedule
If you miss 2+ weeks:
- Do 50% change immediately
- Test daily for 3 days
- Do second 30% change after 3 days
Water Change Frequency by Nitrate Level
Use nitrate as your guide:
Test nitrate weekly. Adjust water change schedule based on results:
| Nitrate Level | Action |
|---------------|--------|
| <10 ppm | Maintain current schedule (or reduce to 20% weekly) |
| 10-20 ppm | Perfect! Current schedule working. |
| 20-40 ppm | Acceptable, but consider 30% weekly instead of 25% |
| 40-80 ppm | Too high! Increase to 40% weekly OR 25% twice weekly |
| 80+ ppm | URGENT: 50% change immediately, then 30% twice weekly |
Conclusion
Water changes are NON-NEGOTIABLE.
Golden Rules:
- ✅ 25-30% weekly for most tanks
- ✅ Match temperature (within 1-2°C)
- ✅ Always dechlorinate
- ✅ Vacuum substrate while draining
- ✅ Consistency > volume (weekly 25% beats monthly 70%)
Equipment Checklist:
- Gravel vacuum
- Bucket (dedicated to aquarium)
- Dechlorinator
- Thermometer
Set a recurring reminder (every Sunday 10am, etc.) — make it a habit!
Master water changes, and 90% of fishkeeping problems disappear.
Happy fishkeeping!
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