Fish Care & Health

How to Quarantine New Fish and Avoid Wiping Out Your Tank

A practical quarantine protocol for new arrivals that prevents ich, velvet, and other diseases from devastating your display tank.

Bare quarantine tank for observing new fish
Photograph via Unsplash

I have wiped out a display tank exactly once, and I only needed to do it once to become a quarantine evangelist. A single unquarantined Kole tang carried marine velvet into a reef I had spent two years stocking, and within four days I lost nine fish. Everything below is what I wish someone had drilled into me before that week, and it applies whether you keep a planted community tank or a full-blown reef.

Why Quarantine Matters More Than You Think#

The fish you buy has already had a rough life. It was caught or farmed, bagged, shipped, dumped into a wholesaler's system, shipped again, and then held in a store tank plumbed to dozens of other tanks full of fish from all over the world. By the time it reaches you, its immune system is exhausted and it has been exposed to every pathogen in that store's water.

Most diseases that devastate aquariums are already present at low levels on new fish. A healthy, unstressed fish keeps them in check. The problem is that adding that fish to your tank stresses it further, and the parasites bloom. Ich and velvet in particular reproduce in cycles, so what looks like three white spots on Monday becomes a fatal infestation across every fish by the following week.

Quarantine does two things. It gives you a window to spot and treat problems while they are still contained, and it lets the new fish recover from shipping stress in a low-competition environment before it ever meets your established livestock. Both matter. I have had fish arrive looking flawless and break out in ich on day five, purely from the accumulated stress finally catching up.

Setting Up a Quarantine Tank#

You do not need anything elaborate. My quarantine setups have always been deliberately bare, and that is a feature, not a compromise.

The bare essentials#

  • A tank sized to the fish. A 10 or 20 gallon works for most small to medium fish. Larger tangs or aggressive cichlids need 40 gallons or more so they are not pacing the glass.
  • A sponge filter run off an air pump. Sponge filters are gentle, provide biological filtration, and are trivial to sterilize between uses.
  • A heater matched to the species, and a lid, because stressed fish jump.
  • PVC pipe or plastic plant cover. A frightened fish that cannot hide stays stressed, and stress is what you are trying to eliminate.

Notice what is missing: no substrate, no live rock, no live plants. Bare glass on the bottom is intentional. It lets you see waste, uneaten food, and any parasites that have dropped off. More importantly, most medications bind to substrate, rock, and carbon, which either neutralizes the treatment or leaches it back unpredictably later. A bare tank keeps your dosing honest.

Keeping the biofilter alive#

The classic quarantine problem is that you only need the tank occasionally, so the beneficial bacteria starve between uses. My solution is to keep the sponge filter running permanently in my display sump. When new fish arrive, I move that already-cycled sponge into the quarantine tank. Instant biological filtration, no cycling scramble.

If you cannot do that, keep bottled ammonia and a bacterial supplement on hand, and be prepared to test daily and do water changes. An uncycled quarantine tank means water changes are your filter, and you have to stay on top of them.

The Quarantine Protocol, Step by Step#

Here is the routine I run for every new arrival. Timelines flex with the species and how the fish looks, but the structure holds.

  1. Acclimate slowly. Temperature-match the bag, then drip acclimate over 30 to 60 minutes for saltwater or sensitive freshwater species. Do not pour store water into your quarantine tank; net the fish out and leave the shipping water behind.
  2. Observe for the first 48 hours. Do not medicate immediately. Let the fish settle, offer food, and simply watch. Rushing to dose a healthy fish just adds chemical stress.
  3. Feed to build strength. A well-fed fish fights disease far better than a starving one. Offer a variety, and if the fish refuses, try live or frozen foods to trigger a feeding response.
  4. Watch daily for symptoms (covered in detail below).
  5. Treat only if needed, or run a prophylactic course if you keep saltwater and want maximum safety.
  6. Hold for two to four weeks symptom-free before transferring to the display.

The two-week minimum exists because ich's life cycle can take that long to fully express at typical temperatures. Four weeks is safer, especially for velvet and brooklynella, which are the real reef killers. I run four weeks for anything going into my reef and two weeks for hardy freshwater fish going into a community tank.

To treat prophylactically or not#

This is a genuine trade-off, and reasonable hobbyists disagree.

  • Freshwater community tanks: I generally do not medicate unless I see symptoms. Observation quarantine is usually enough, and unnecessary meds harm your beneficial bacteria and the fish.
  • Saltwater and reef tanks: The stakes are higher and the diseases are nastier, so many reefers, myself included, run a prophylactic copper course for ich and velvet as a matter of routine, because these parasites are frequently present without visible spots.

If you go the copper route, use a copper test kit and dose to a therapeutic level, holding it steady for the full treatment window. Copper is effective but has a narrow margin, and guessing gets fish killed. Never use copper with invertebrates present; it is lethal to them.

Reading the Early Warning Signs#

The whole point of quarantine is catching trouble early. These are the signs I check for every single day.

  • Ich (white spot): Discrete white dots the size of salt grains on fins and body. In freshwater it is Ichthyophthirius; in saltwater it is Cryptocaryon. Fish may flash, scraping against surfaces.
  • Marine velvet: The one that terrifies me. It looks like a fine dusting of gold or grey powder, often first seen as rapid gilling and clamped fins before any visible dust. Velvet moves fast and kills faster than ich.
  • Brooklynella: Common on clownfish, presenting as excess slime, sloughing skin, and heavy breathing. Sometimes called clownfish disease.
  • Bacterial infection: Red streaks, frayed or rotting fins, ulcers, or cloudy patches.
  • Flukes: Flashing and scratching with no visible spots, often with heavy breathing.

Behavioral changes usually precede visible symptoms. A fish that stops eating, breathes hard, hangs in a corner, or clamps its fins is telling you something is wrong before a single spot appears. Trust behavior over your eyes.

A note on false alarms#

Not every twitch is a disease. Shipping stress causes clamped fins and lethargy that resolve on their own within a day or two. A single scratch against a rock is not automatically ich. This is exactly why the 48-hour observation period matters. Diagnose the pattern, not the isolated symptom, and resist the urge to throw medication at a fish that is simply tired from travel.

Common Mistakes That Undo All the Effort#

I have made most of these, so consider this a confession as much as a warning.

  • Skipping quarantine "just this once." The one fish you skip is the one that carries velvet. There is no safe exception.
  • Quarantining the fish but not the plants, snails, or rock. Parasites hitchhike on everything wet. Corals, macroalgae, and even a bag of snails can carry ich tomonts. Hardy reefers run a separate coral dip and quarantine.
  • Adding a "clean" fish partway through. Every new addition resets the clock. If you add a fish to a quarantine tank on day 10, you are back to day zero for the whole tank.
  • Under-medicating or stopping early. Fish look better before the parasite is gone. Finish the full course.
  • Overcrowding the quarantine tank. Cramming six new fish into a 10 gallon spikes ammonia and stress, which defeats the purpose entirely.

Reef-Specific Considerations#

Because saltwater is where I live, a few extra points for reef keepers. Your invertebrates and corals cannot be copper-treated, which means your quarantine strategy has to be split: fish go through copper or a similar therapeutic process, while corals and inverts go through their own dip-and-observe pipeline for pests like flatworms, aiptasia, and nudibranchs.

The hardest discipline in the reef hobby is patience during a fallow period. If disease does break out in your display, the only reliable cure is removing every fish for 76 days or more so the parasite dies without a host, while treating the fish separately in quarantine. It is miserable and it works. I would rather quarantine diligently up front than ever run a fallow period again.

Final Thoughts#

Quarantine feels like an obstacle between you and the fish you are excited about, and that impatience is exactly what wipes out tanks. A bare 20 gallon, a cycled sponge filter, and two to four weeks of honest observation is a tiny price against losing an entire display. Set the quarantine tank up before you buy the fish, treat every new arrival as a potential carrier, and let behavior guide you more than spots. Do that consistently and the catastrophic week I went through becomes a story you only ever read about, never live.

Mei Lin
Written by
Mei Lin

Mei runs a mixed reef and has the test logs to prove how much she respects stability. She explains saltwater keeping honestly — the costs, the patience and the payoff — so newcomers go in with clear eyes and healthy corals.

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