| Quick Answer What is a cube saltwater tank? A cube saltwater tank is a square-profile aquarium (equal or near-equal width and height dimensions) designed for saltwater fish, corals, and invertebrates. Popular cube sizes range from 10-gallon desktop nano cubes to 60-gallon statement tanks. Their symmetrical proportions make them visually distinctive and allow efficient use of aquascaping space. They are used for nano reef, FOWLR (fish only with live rock), and custom reef setups. |
Cube aquariums have a devoted following in the saltwater hobby. Their proportions — equal or near-equal in all dimensions — create a unique viewing experience and allow aquascaping in three dimensions more naturally than the horizontal format of standard rectangular tanks.
This guide covers cube tank selection, setup, aquascaping principles specific to cube format, appropriate stocking, and the maintenance routines that keep a cube saltwater tank thriving.
Why Choose a Cube Format?
Visual depth: cube format creates the illusion of greater depth in aquascaping; live rock structures gain natural dimension
Efficient footprint: more water volume per square foot of shelf/floor space than many rectangular tanks
Aquascaping flexibility: equal horizontal and vertical space allows taller, more dramatic rock structures
Aesthetic versatility: cube tanks look appropriate as centerpiece furniture pieces in ways that long rectangular tanks don’t
Popular Cube Saltwater Tank Sizes
10-gallon nano cube: desk-appropriate; challenging to maintain stable parameters; best for experienced keepers
20-gallon cube: practical beginner reef size; forgiving; room for 2–3 small fish and a modest coral collection
30–40 gallon cube: the reef hobbyist sweet spot; stability of larger volume with compact footprint
60-gallon cube: statement piece; full reef capability with significant visual impact
Cube Aquascaping Principles
The Negative Space Approach
Leave the front-bottom area of the cube clear of rock. Position the primary rock structure toward the back-center, creating visual depth and open swimming space. This approach is particularly effective in smaller cubes where overstuffing with rock is a common beginner error.
Towers and Overhangs
The cube’s equal height and width dimensions make vertical tower structures proportionally dramatic. A central rock spire with live coral at multiple heights uses the full cube volume effectively.
Corner Islands
Place rock structures in two opposing corners, creating a natural island appearance with open sand between. This separates territories for territorial fish species and creates multiple coral placement zones.
Water Parameters for Cube Saltwater Tanks
Same target parameters as any reef tank:
Salinity: 1.025–1.026 SG
Temperature: 76–80°F
Alkalinity: 8–11 dKH
Calcium: 400–450 ppm
Phosphate: < 0.1 ppm
Nitrate: < 10 ppm for LPS/softies; < 5 ppm for SPS
Cube tanks, particularly smaller ones (10–20 gallons), require more attention to parameter stability than larger reef tanks. More frequent testing (2x per week rather than weekly) is recommended for the first 6 months.
Stocking Guide for Cube Reef Tanks
20-Gallon Cube
Fish: 1 pair of clownfish OR 1 small dragonet (after 6+ months when copepod population is established)
Corals: mushrooms, zoanthids, hammer/frogspawn, torch, green star polyps
Invertebrates: hermit crabs (5–10), turbo snails (3–5), cleaner shrimp (1–2)
40-Gallon Cube
Fish: pair of clownfish + 2 small reef-safe fish (royal gramma, tailspot blenny, firefish)
Corals: all soft and LPS corals; beginning SPS possible with upgraded lighting
Full cleanup crew: 15–20 hermit crabs, snails, serpent star, sea urchin
Maintenance Schedule
Daily: top off evaporation with RODI water; observe livestock; check temperature
Weekly: 10–15% water change; clean skimmer neck
Bi-weekly: test alkalinity, calcium, pH
Monthly: full parameter test; clean glass; check equipment; clear any algae from powerheads
Related Articles
Nano Reef Tank Setup: A Beginner’s Complete Guide — [Link to Article #17]
Nano Tank Guide: Best Setups Under 20 Gallons — [Link to Article #18]
Recommended: Innovative Marine AIO Aquarium — Innovative Marine’s all-in-one cube design is purpose-built for reef keeping — filtration, skimming, and reactors all tuck inside the back chamber.
Frequently Asked Questions
What cube saltwater tank is best for beginners?
A 20 to 30-gallon all-in-one cube format tank from Innovative Marine or Red Sea is the most beginner-accessible entry point. The larger water volume provides more parameter stability than 10-gallon nano cubes, and the AIO design simplifies equipment selection.
Can a cube tank be used for a fish-only saltwater setup?
Yes — cube tanks work well for FOWLR (fish only with live rock) setups, which are less demanding than reef setups. Without coral, lighting requirements are relaxed and there’s no need to maintain alkalinity, calcium, or magnesium at reef levels. A basic hydrometer, thermometer, and protein skimmer are sufficient equipment.
| About the Author Itsy Bitsy Pets Editorial Team The ItsyBitsyPets.com team combines hands-on keeping experience with peer-reviewed arachnology research to produce accurate, practical care guides. We update our content when new scientific evidence or community findings warrant revision. Site: itsybitsypets.com | Twitter: @ibp2025 |
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