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Best Fish for a 29 Gallon Tank

The best fish for a 29 gallon (110L) aquarium — stocking plans, species to avoid, and setup tips from real fishkeeping experience since 2020.

📖 5 min read
🎯 Difficulty: Beginner
Updated: Jul 2026

A 29 gallon (110 litre) tank gives you significantly more options than a 10 gallon. The key constraint at this size is swimming room — the tank is 30 inches long, which opens up species that need horizontal space. Here's what actually works.

Best fish for a 29 gallon tank

SpeciesAdult SizeHow ManyWhy it works
Angelfish (pair)15 cm2Tall tank — perfect for angelfish height.
Pearl Gourami10–13 cm1 male + 2 femalesElegant, peaceful. Enough room now.
Boesemani Rainbowfish10 cm6+Active schoolers — need the swimming room.
Ram Cichlid (pair)8 cm2Beautiful dwarf cichlids. Warm, soft water.
Rummy Nose Tetra5 cm10–12Stunning school. Water quality indicator.
Kuhli Loach8–10 cm5–6Now you can keep a proper group of these eel-like loaches.

Fish to avoid in a 29 gallon tank

FishWhy not
OscarNeed 75+ gallons.
Jack DempseyNeed 55+ gallons.
Common PlecoStill too big. Use bristlenose instead.

Stocking plans for 29 gallons

These are combinations I'd actually run in a 29 gallon tank. Each respects bioload, swimming space, and compatibility:

Plan 1: Peaceful Community

A balanced mix of mid-level schoolers, bottom dwellers, and a centrepiece fish. Plant heavily, leave open swimming space in the middle, and use sand substrate for the bottom feeders.

Plan 2: Species-Only Display

A single-species tank with a large school. This is often more visually striking than a mixed community — 15 of the same tetra moving as one unit looks incredible. Add a clean-up crew of shrimp and snails.

Plan 3: The Biotope

Replicate a specific habitat — Amazon blackwater, Southeast Asian stream, or African rift lake. Choose fish, plants, and hardscape from one region. This is where fishkeeping becomes art.

Setup tips for a 29 gallon tank

Filtration: A hang-on-back filter rated for 1.5× your tank volume, or a canister filter for 40+ gallon tanks. Sponge filters work for smaller setups.

Heater: 50W for up to 15 gallon, 100W for 20–29 gallon, 200W for 40–55 gallon, 300W for 75+ gallon.

Substrate: For planted tanks, use organic soil capped with sand (Walstad method). For fish-only tanks, use sand or smooth gravel.

Lighting: LED light rated for your tank size. For planted tanks, aim for 1–2 watts per gallon (or the LED equivalent). Avoid overly bright lights — fish feel exposed and will hide.

29 gallons is the entry point for 'real' community tanks — enough volume for stable parameters and diverse stocking.

Before adding any fish, cycle your tank. Use the tank calculator to check your actual water volume, and the stocking calculator to verify your chosen combination fits the bioload.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many fish can I put in a 29 gallon tank?

It depends on the adult size and bioload of the fish. Use the stocking calculator to check your specific combination. As a rough guide, a 29 gallon tank can hold 10-15 mid-size community fish or 3-5 large cichlids.

What fish should I avoid in a 29 gallon tank?

See the 'Fish to avoid' table above. The main rule: don't stock fish that will outgrow the tank, and don't put fast swimmers in a tank that's too short for them to swim properly.

Do I need a special filter for a 29 gallon tank?

A hang-on-back filter rated for 1.5x your tank volume, or a canister filter for 40+ gallons.