A nano aquarium setup showing where the cost goes

How Much Does a Nano Aquarium Cost?

The nano aquarium cost question has a reassuring answer: a small freshwater tank is one of the cheapest ways into the hobby. A complete beginner setup typically runs $90 to $250, plus a modest few dollars a month to keep it running. This guide breaks down every line item with honest 2026 prices so there are no surprises.

We’ll cover the one-time startup cost, the ongoing monthly cost, and where it’s worth spending more versus where you can safely save.

Nano aquarium cost: the one-time startup spend

This is everything you buy once to get a 5-gallon tank running, before fish and plants. An all-in-one kit can bundle the tank, filter, and light to save money — but always budget separately for a quality heater and test kit.

ItemBudgetMid-rangePremium
Tank (or all-in-one kit)$25$60$120
Filter(in kit)$25$50
Heater (nano-rated)$15$25$35
Light(in kit)$25$60
Liquid test kit$25$30$35
Substrate$10$20$30
Dechlorinator + thermometer$10$12$15
Plants & hardscape$0–10$25$60
One-time total~$90–120~$220~$400+

💡 Spend-where-it-matters rule: save on substrate and decor, but never buy the cheapest heater. A failed bargain heater can wipe out a whole tank overnight — it’s the worst place to cut corners.

Ongoing cost: what it costs to run

The recurring cost of a nano tank is small — usually $5–15 a month, mostly food, dechlorinator, and the occasional filter media or test refill. Electricity for a small heater, filter, and LED is minimal.

Ongoing itemRough costHow often
Fish food$5–10Lasts months
Dechlorinator$6–10Lasts many months
Filter media / sponge$5–15Every few months
Test kit refills$10–20Yearly-ish
Electricity (heater + filter + light)~$2–5Monthly
Replacement plants/livestockVariesOccasional

Hidden costs beginners forget

  • The test kit — essential, and easy to leave out of a budget.
  • A quality heater — cheap ones fail and cost you fish.
  • Re-buying gear — buying junk twice is the most expensive “saving” of all.
  • Livestock replacement — fish lost to a rushed, un-cycled tank.

That last one is the biggest hidden cost in the hobby — and it’s free to avoid. Most early losses come down to the common beginner mistakes, especially adding fish before the tank is ready.

How to keep the cost down (without cutting corners)

  • Buy a sensible all-in-one kit, then add a good heater and test kit.
  • Start with cheap, hardy low-light plants instead of a CO2 setup.
  • Use plain gravel or sand instead of premium aquasoil at first.
  • Skip the gadgets (UV, CO2, reactors) until you actually need them.
  • Be patient and cycle properly — the cheapest fish are the ones that don’t die.

What a realistic first year actually costs

Add the one-time and ongoing numbers together and the full first-year picture is reassuringly modest. A typical mid-range 5-gallon build runs about $220 to get going, then roughly $8 a month in food, dechlorinator, and the occasional media swap — around $100 across the year. That puts a complete, well-kept first year at ~$320 all-in, fish and a few plants included.

It’s worth comparing that to the “cheap” route honestly. A bargain $90 build sounds tempting, but if a failed $12 heater wipes out a $30 school of fish, you’ve spent more and lost the livestock — the false economy that makes the hobby feel expensive when it isn’t. Spend a little more once on the parts that protect everything else, and a nano tank stays one of the cheapest rewarding hobbies around. After year one, costs only fall: the gear is bought, and you’re just topping up consumables.

Related reading

Ready to shop? Our nano aquarium starter checklist lists exactly what to buy, and the tank size guide helps you pick a size that fits your budget and space. New to all of it? Begin with the setup guide. For wider price context across tank sizes, see this 2026 aquarium price overview.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a nano aquarium cost to set up?

About $90–120 for a budget 5-gallon build, ~$220 for a comfortable mid-range setup, and $400+ for a premium one — all before fish and plants.

How much does it cost to run a fish tank each month?

Usually $5–15 a month for a nano tank, mostly food and water conditioner, plus a couple of dollars of electricity for the heater, filter, and light.

Is a small tank cheaper than a big one?

To buy, yes — but small tanks are harder to keep stable, so the “savings” can cost you in lost fish. A 5-gallon is a good balance of low cost and forgiveness.

What’s the most expensive part of a nano tank?

Usually the tank or all-in-one kit and the lighting. But the costliest mistake is a cheap heater that fails — spend a little more there to protect everything else.

Can I set up a nano aquarium for under $100?

Yes, just barely, with a budget build: an all-in-one kit around $25–40, a basic nano heater, a liquid test kit, dechlorinator, and cheap substrate land near $90–100 before livestock. The two things you should never cut to hit that number are the heater and the test kit — skimp there and you’ll pay more replacing fish. If $100 is a hard ceiling, buy the essentials now and add plants and decor later.


About NanoTank Lab

NanoTank Lab is written by hands-on nano and freshwater aquarium hobbyists. We focus on practical setup, husbandry, and water chemistry for small tanks — and we test the gear and routines we write about. We don’t give veterinary or fish-disease treatment advice; for a sick fish, please consult an aquatic vet. Found something we got wrong? Tell us and we’ll fix it.

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