Skip to content

Cichlid Care Guide: Species, Setup & Breeding

December 2, 2025
Complete cichlid care guide showing African Mbuna, South American, and Central American aquarium setups

Cichlids represent freshwater aquarium keeping at its most rewarding and most challenging, which is why a clear cichlid care plan matters from day one. With over a thousand described species spanning three continents, these fish offer remarkable personality, vibrant colors, and breeding behaviors you won’t find in most other freshwater families. A pair of convict cichlids will guard their fry with dedication, and an Oscar will recognize you and respond to your presence like a pet.

But cichlids demand more preparation, better equipment, and species-specific knowledge than community fish like guppies or tetras. The payoff is real: you get fish with genuine personality, observable intelligence, and breeding displays that justify the extra effort.

Table Of Contents

Why Cichlids Might Be Your Next Favorite Aquarium Fish

The Rewards

Personality and Recognition

Cichlids interact with their environment and keepers in ways few fish do. Oscars learn to recognize feeding time, respond when you approach the tank, and can be hand-fed. African cichlids establish complex territorial and social hierarchies that are fascinating to observe. This behavioral depth is what keeps cichlid hobbyists engaged long-term.

Breeding Success

Unlike many community fish, cichlids actively care for their eggs and fry. Watching parental behavior-substrate spawners fanning eggs, mouthbrooders holding fry in their mouths, both parents herding fry-offers a window into fish reproduction and natural behavior. For many keepers, successful breeding is the gateway to deepening their hobby.

Visual Appeal

The colors and patterns cichlids display are extraordinary. From the electric blues of Lake Malawi to the subtle beauty of South American planted-tank cichlids, these fish are visually compelling. Many species display brighter colors when kept in optimal conditions and when breeding.

The Challenges

Aggression Management

Cichlids are territorial and can be aggressive toward each other and other tank inhabitants. This isn’t unpredictable violence-it’s driven by territoriality, breeding cycles, and hierarchy establishment. Understanding these triggers lets you prevent problems through tank size, aquascaping, and species selection. But aggression remains the #1 reason cichlid tanks fail.

Water Chemistry Specificity

Different cichlid groups evolved in different water conditions. African Malawi cichlids need hard, alkaline water. South American cichlids need soft, acidic water. Discus are even more demanding. You shouldn’t ignore these preferences or treat them as loose suggestions-they’re the foundation of long-term health and fish wellbeing.

Tank Size Requirements

Most cichlids need larger tanks than beginner-level setups provide. Dwarf species work in 20-30 gallons, but most popular species need 55+ gallons. Large species like Oscars demand 75-125 gallons. Tank size isn’t just about room to swim-it’s about diluting aggression, managing bioload, and maintaining stable water chemistry.

Filtration Demands

Cichlids are messy eaters and produce significant waste. You need filtration that turns over the tank volume 8-10 times per hour-roughly double what peaceful community fish require. This means investing in a quality canister filter from day one, not upgrading later.

Cichlids evolved separately on three continents, resulting in dramatically different water chemistry needs, temperaments, and care requirements. Choosing the wrong type for your tap water is the #1 beginner mistake.

African Cichlids: Rift Lake Specialists

Lake Malawi (Most Popular)

  • Species: Yellow Labs, Red Zebras, Peacocks
  • pH: 7.8-8.6 (hard, alkaline water)
  • Temperature: 76-82°F
  • Tank Size: 55 gallons minimum for colonies
  • Why Beginners Love Them: Very hardy once established and forgiving of minor mistakes. Yellow Labs tolerate parameter swings and breed readily without intervention.

Lake Tanganyika (Specialized)

  • Species: Shell-dwellers, Frontosa
  • pH: 7.8-8.6 (hard, alkaline; some sources suggest up to 9.0)
  • Temperature: 75-80°F
  • Tank Size: 20-125 gallons depending on species
  • Complexity: Less aggressive than Malawi but more sensitive to water quality.

South American Cichlids: Planted Tank Specialists

Dwarf Cichlids (Good Option for Beginners with Soft Water)

  • Species: German Blue Ram, Bolivian Ram, Apistogramma
  • pH: 6.0-7.0 (soft, slightly acidic)
  • Temperature: 78-84°F
  • Tank Size: 20 gallons for a pair
  • Good For: Planted tanks. Unlike Africans that uproot plants, these species generally leave vegetation alone and tolerate peaceful tank mates.

Medium South Americans

  • Species: Angelfish, Discus, Severum
  • pH: 6.0-7.5
  • Temperature: Angels 76-82°F; Discus 82-86°F
  • Tank Size: 55-125 gallons
  • Note: Discus are advanced (require near-perfect water quality). Angels are beginner-friendly alternatives.

Large South Americans

  • Species: Oscar, Green Terror, Jack Dempsey
  • pH: 6.5-7.5
  • Temperature: 74-80°F
  • Tank Size: 75-125+ gallons
  • Oscar Special: The cichlid world’s golden retriever-recognize owners, beg for food. But massive bioload and eat anything that fits in their mouths.

Central American Cichlids: The Hardy Options

  • Species: Convict, Firemouth, Texas Cichlid
  • pH: 7.0-8.0 (adaptable to most tap water)
  • Temperature: 74-80°F
  • Tank Size: 30-75 gallons
  • Why They’re Popular: Hardy once established and forgiving of minor mistakes. Convicts breed readily in suitable conditions, often every 4-6 weeks, making them good for hobbyists interested in breeding.
World map showing three cichlid regions: Africa (Rift Lakes), South America (Amazon), Central America
Three cichlid aquarium setup styles: African Mbuna tanks, planted South American tanks, and Central American species tanks

Tank Requirements for Cichlids

Minimum Tank Sizes

TypeSpeciesMinimumIdeal
DwarfGerman Blue Ram20 gal30-40 gal
Medium AfricanYellow Lab, Peacock55 gal75 gal
Medium S. AmericanAngelfish, Severum55 gal75-90 gal
LargeOscar, Frontosa75 gal125+ gal

Tank shape matters: Long tanks beat tall tanks for territorial species. A 55-gallon long (48″ × 13″) provides more territory than a 55-gallon tall.

Cichlid tank size guide showing minimum tank requirements for dwarf, medium, large, and extra-large species.
Tank size determines which species you can keep. Larger tanks support more species and reduce territorial aggression.

Substrate Selection

For African Cichlids:

  • Aragonite Sand (Best): Naturally buffers pH to 8.0-8.4. Use 1-2 lbs per gallon.
  • Crushed Coral: Works mixed 50/50 with aragonite.
  • CaribSea Aragonite Reef Sand recommended (excellent buffering, natural color).

For South American Cichlids:

  • Pool Filter Sand (Budget): Inert, doesn’t affect pH. Ultra-cheap ($8 for 50 lbs).
  • Fluval Plant Stratum (Planted tanks): Lowers pH naturally to 6.0-6.5, supports plants.
  • Avoid Aragonite: Will raise pH and hardness-opposite of what South Americans need.

For Central Americans:

  • Most flexible. Inert gravel or light aragonite both work.

Aquascaping Strategy

African Cichlids:

  • Create 2-3 rock piles using Texas Holey Rock or Lace Rock.
  • More caves = less fighting over territories.
  • Secure heavy rocks directly on tank bottom (prevent collapse).

South American Cichlids:

  • Use Malaysian Driftwood + Java Fern + Anubias (hardy plants cichlids won’t uproot).
  • Plant heavily along back and sides; leave open swimming space in front.
  • Broken sight lines reduce fighting.

Central Americans:

  • Skip expensive decor (they rearrange everything).
  • Use large river rocks + PVC pipes as caves.
Three aquascaping styles for cichlid tanks: African rocky setup, South American planted setup, Central American sparse setup
Aquascaping strategy differs by cichlid type. African tanks need rock structures, South American tanks need plants, and Central American tanks can be minimal (they’ll rearrange anyway).

Essential Filtration

Cichlid Filtration Rule: Filter must turn over total tank volume 8-10 times per hour. For 75 gallons = 600-750 GPH needed.

Why? Cichlids produce 2-3x more ammonia than tetras. They’re messy eaters. Higher temperatures (78-84°F) = faster bacterial metabolism.

Recommended Canister Filters for Cichlids:

Fluval FX4: 700 GPH flow rate, handles 55-100 gallon tanks effectively. Quiet operation and good value across experience levels.

Fluval FX6: 925 GPH flow rate, suitable for heavily stocked 100-200 gallon systems. A popular choice among serious cichlid keepers.

Fluval 407: 383 GPH flow rate, good option for 40-70 gallon tanks and smaller setups.

Eheim Classic 2217: German-built with a strong reputation for durability. Many keepers report 20+ years of reliable service with basic maintenance.

Pro Tip: Run HOB filter + canister combo for redundancy. If canister fails during vacation, HOB keeps cycle alive.

Cichlid filtration needs comparison chart showing bioload differences and GPH requirements
Cichlids produce 2-3x more waste than community fish. Use filtration rated for 8-10x tank volume per hour, not the standard 4-5x for community tanks.

Heating & Temperature Control

Heater Wattage Formula: 3-5 watts per gallon

  • 55-gallon in 70°F room = 165-275W (use 200W)
  • 75-gallon in 65°F basement = 225-375W (use 300W or two 150W)

Temperature Ranges:

  • African Malawi/Tanganyika: 76-80°F
  • South American Rams: 78-84°F
  • South American Angels: 76-82°F
  • Discus: 82-86°F
  • Central American: 74-80°F
  • Oscars: 74-81°F

Best Heater: Eheim Jager TruTemp ($25-$60). German-made, lasts 5-10 years. TruTemp dial lets you recalibrate if readings drift.

Pro Tip: Use TWO smaller heaters (2x 150W) instead of one large (300W) in 75+ gallon tanks. If one fails “on,” it can’t cook the tank.

Water Chemistry: The Foundation of Success

Lake Malawi cichlids typically struggle long-term in very soft, acidic water, and discus usually do poorly in hard, alkaline setups. Matching species to your tap water parameters gives you a much higher chance of success. Stability in water chemistry matters more than hitting perfect numbers-fish adapt to consistent conditions better than they adapt to constant fluctuation.

Target Parameters

African Cichlids (Malawi/Tanganyika/Victoria):

  • pH: 7.8-8.6
  • GH: 10-25 dGH
  • KH: 10-20 dKH
  • Temperature: 76-80°F

South American Cichlids (Rams/Angels/Discus):

  • pH: 6.0-7.5 (Discus: 6.0-6.5)
  • GH: 2-10 dGH (Discus: 1-6)
  • KH: 2-8 dKH
  • Temperature: 78-84°F (Discus: 82-86°F)

Central American Cichlids:

  • pH: 7.0-8.0
  • GH: 8-15 dGH
  • KH: 6-12 dKH
  • Temperature: 74-80°F

Achieving Target Parameters

If you have hard tap water (pH 7.5+, GH 10+): Well-suited to African cichlids. Use aragonite substrate and appropriate décor, and parameter maintenance becomes much easier.

If you have soft tap water (pH 6.5-7.5, GH <10): Well-suited to South Americans. Use inert sand plus driftwood, which naturally lowers pH over time.

If you have extremely hard water (pH 8.5+): Dilute with RO water. Don’t try to fight your tap water chemistry.

Testing & Maintenance

During Cycling (Weeks 1-6):

  • Test daily: Ammonia, nitrite, nitrate
  • Test pH every 3 days

Established Tanks:

  • Test weekly: Nitrate (keep <40 ppm)
  • Test monthly: pH, GH, KH
  • Test immediately if fish show stress

Best Test Kit: API Freshwater Master Kit. Liquid tests provide 800+ tests per kit. Far more accurate than test strips and industry-standard for hobbyists.

Common Water Chemistry Mistakes

  1. Chasing perfect pH daily → Stability beats perfection. Never swing pH >0.2 per day.
  2. Mixing African + South American → Different water needs. One group is usually compromised.
  3. Ignoring KH (carbonate hardness) → KH buffers pH. If KH drops below 4, pH crashes overnight.
  4. Massive water changes with different parameters → Never change >50% at once. Test tap water before changes.
  5. Using water softener → Replaces calcium/magnesium with sodium. Cichlids can’t process high sodium.
Water chemistry comparison chart for African, South American, and Central American cichlids showing pH, hardness, and temperature ranges.
Each cichlid group evolved in different water conditions. Matching your tap water to the appropriate species reduces parameter management stress.

Diet & Nutrition

Different cichlid species evolved specialized digestive systems. Feed the wrong diet and you’ll see faded colors, bloat, aggression, and shortened lifespans.

Protein Requirements by Type

Herbivorous African Cichlids (Mbuna): 35-40% protein

  • Primary: Spirulina, algae, vegetable matter
  • Feeding: 2-3 small meals daily
  • Warning: High protein (50%+) causes fatal Malawi bloat

Omnivorous Cichlids (Peacocks, Angels, Central Americans): 40-45% protein

  • Primary: Mixed pellets + frozen foods
  • Feeding: 1-2 meals daily

Carnivorous Cichlids (Oscars, Jack Dempseys): 45-55% protein

  • Primary: Carnivore pellets, shrimp, fish, worms
  • Feeding: 1 meal daily (adults); 2 meals daily (juveniles)

Best Foods by Category

High-Protein Pellets:

  • NorthFin Cichlid Formula: 45% protein, no fillers. A popular choice among hobbyists keeping omnivores and carnivores. Mid-range pricing.
  • Hikari Cichlid Gold: Many keepers report visible color enhancement within 2-4 weeks. Floating pellets encourage surface feeding. Mid-range pricing.
  • Ocean Nutrition Cichlid: A balanced, affordable option that works well for multi-species tanks. Budget-friendly.

Herbivore Pellets (Mbuna):

  • Ocean Nutrition Vegi Pellets: Formulated for herbivorous Africans with moderate protein to help prevent bloat. Budget-friendly.
  • NorthFin Veggie Formula: A premium option with organic kelp and spirulina. Mid-range to premium pricing.

Frozen Foods (2-3x weekly):

  • Bloodworms (high protein)
  • Brine Shrimp (growth/color)
  • Mysis Shrimp (excellent for large cichlids)
  • Spirulina Brine Shrimp (for herbivores)

Feeding Tips:

  • Feed what they consume in 2-3 minutes
  • Remove uneaten food after 5 minutes
  • One fasting day per week for adults (prevents obesity)
  • Aim for 70% pellets, 30% frozen/live

Food-Related Health Problems

Malawi Bloat (African Cichlids):

  • Cause: High-protein diet combined with stress and poor water quality
  • Symptoms: Swollen abdomen, loss of appetite, white stringy feces
  • Prevention: Feed vegetable-based pellets to Mbuna species only. Maintain pristine water quality and stable conditions.
  • Treatment: Many hobbyists use metronidazole-based treatments (available at aquarium retailers) and Epsom salt baths according to product directions. When in doubt, consult an aquatic veterinarian or experienced cichlid keeper.
Cichlid dietary protein requirements chart showing herbivorous, omnivorous, and carnivorous species feeding guidelines
Different cichlid species evolved different digestive systems. Feed the right diet to prevent bloat, faded colors, and disease.

Tank Mate Compatibility

General Principles

  1. Generally avoid mixing continents → African and South American cichlids have divergent water chemistry preferences and aggression patterns, so one group is typically compromised in the same tank.
  2. Size matters → Cichlids will eat fish that fit in their mouths. Keep tank mates within a reasonable size range.
  3. Match aggression levels → Pairing peaceful species (Rams) with aggressive species (Jack Dempsey) means the peaceful fish hides and suffers.
  4. Overstocking can help → Counter-intuitive but effective: 20 Mbuna in 55 gallons exhibits less total aggression than 8 Mbuna, because no single fish can dominate everyone.
  5. Territory matters → Every cichlid benefits from having a safe zone (cave, rock cluster, plant thicket) to retreat into.

Sex-Specific Behaviors

Male-Dominant Aggression (Most Species):

  • Males more aggressive than females
  • Males establish territories fiercely
  • Examples: Oscars, Peacocks, Haps, Jack Dempseys

Female-Dominant Aggression (Convicts):

  • Female Convicts MORE aggressive than males during breeding
  • Females attack anything-including males-threatening brood
  • Convict females can show intense territorial behavior during breeding

Mouthbrooding Female Stress (African Cichlids):

  • Females holding eggs become extremely stressed if harassed
  • Can “stress-spit” eggs, losing entire spawn
  • All-male African tanks eliminate this chaos
  • All-male tanks = better color, no breeding harassment

Compatibility by Type

African Mbuna (55-Gallon):

  • Stock 18-22 fish total
  • 5-6 different species
  • All-male or 3 females : 1 male ratio
  • Example: 4 Yellow Labs, 4 Red Zebras, 3 Acei, 4 Rusty Cichlids, 3 Demasoni

South American Community (55-Gallon Planted):

  • 1 pair German Blue Rams
  • 6-8 Corydoras (bottom)
  • 15-20 Tetras (mid-water)
  • 6-8 Hatchetfish (top)

Oscar Tank (125-Gallon):

  • 1-2 Oscars
  • 1 Sailfin Pleco (too large to eat)
  • 1 Jack Dempsey or Firemouth
  • Avoid: Small fish (eaten), long-finned fish (fins shredded)

Dither Fish Strategy:
Fast schooling fish (Giant Danios, Rainbowfish, Silver Dollars) reduce cichlid aggression. School activity signals “no predators nearby.” Use 10-15 minimum.

Cichlid species compatibility matrix showing which fish can be safely housed together
Compatibility depends on size, aggression level, tank space, and individual temperament. This matrix provides quick reference guidance, but tank monitoring is essential.

Cichlid Breeding: Overview & Getting Started

Cichlid breeding is where many hobbyists deepen their commitment to the hobby. Unlike community fish that scatter eggs and abandon them, cichlids show parental care-and you can observe it.

Breeding Methods

Substrate Spawners (Convicts, Angels, Rams, most South Americans)

  • Pairs claim territory and clean a flat surface (rock, plant leaf, or tank wall)
  • Female lays eggs; male fertilizes
  • Both parents fan eggs and guard fry for several weeks
  • Eggs hatch in 48-72 hours; fry become free-swimming in 5-7 days

Mouthbrooders (African Malawi Peacocks, Haps, some Tangs)

  • Male digs breeding pit in sand
  • Female lays eggs; male provides sperm (via “dummy egg” display)
  • Female picks up eggs in her mouth and incubates for 3-4 weeks without eating
  • Fry are protected in mother’s mouth for another 1-2 weeks after release

Basic Breeding Triggers

  • Large (40-50%) water changes with slightly cooler water (mimics rainy season)
  • Temperature manipulation (raise 2-4°F for one week, then return to normal)
  • High-protein diet conditioning (frozen bloodworms, brine shrimp) for 2-3 weeks
  • Extended photoperiod (increase lighting by 1-2 hours daily)

Fry Care Basics

  • First foods: Freshly hatched baby brine shrimp or specialized fry powder
  • Growth foods: Microworms, crushed pellets, small frozen foods
  • Juvenile foods: Small pellets and occasional frozen treats
  • Daily water changes (25-50%) to dilute growth-inhibiting hormones

For detailed breeding techniques, see the species-specific guides (Convict Cichlid Breeding, Breeding Angelfish, etc.).

Cichlid breeding methods comparison infographic showing substrate spawner and mouthbrooder breeding lifecycles
Cichlids use two main breeding strategies. Substrate spawners (Convicts, Angels) show parental care for weeks. Mouthbrooders (Africans) incubate eggs for 3-4 weeks without eating.

Common Problems & Quick Fixes

Excessive Aggression

If one fish hides constantly: Add more hiding spots (caves, rock clusters, plants) to break up territories and give the subordinate fish safe zones.

If one fish bullies everyone else: Rearrange tank décor to reset territories (everyone starts equal), or remove the aggressor to a separate tank for 48 hours before reintroducing. Sometimes this resets dominance hierarchies.

If aggression escalates after breeding: Breeding pairs become hyper-territorial. Either remove the pair to a separate breeding tank, or add more fish to spread the aggression thin across more interactions.

Water Quality Emergencies

Ammonia or nitrite spike after adding fish: Slow your stocking. Beneficial bacteria lag behind bioload. Do 25% water changes every 2-3 days until readings return to 0 ppm.

pH crashes overnight despite substrate buffering: Check your KH (carbonate hardness). If KH drops below 4 dGH, pH becomes unstable. Add cichlid buffer if needed to raise KH back to 6-10 dGH.

Frequent cloudy water despite filter: Bioload is too high. Increase water change frequency (from weekly 25% to twice-weekly 25%), reduce feeding, or reduce stocking density.

Disease & Health

White spots (Ich): Raise temperature to 86°F, increase aeration, and treat with Ich medication per product directions. Treat for 10-14 days even after spots disappear.

Swollen abdomen with loss of appetite (Malawi bloat): Common in Mbuna fed high-protein diets. Switch to vegetable-based pellets immediately, do large water changes, and consider metronidazole treatment per product directions.

Small pits on head and lateral line (Hole-in-the-Head): Often linked to poor diet and high nitrates. Feed vitamin-rich pellets, ensure nitrates stay below 20 ppm, and consider metronidazole treatment.

Cichlid diseases and health issues visual guide showing symptoms, causes, and treatment for ich, bloat, and hole-in-the-head
Recognize these three common cichlid health problems early. Prevention through water quality and proper diet is far easier than treatment.

Month 1: Planning, Setup & Cycling

Week 1-2: Research & Equipment

  • Determine cichlid type based on tap water (test first!)
  • Purchase tank (55-75 gal), canister filter, heater (x2), substrate, décor
  • Test kit (API Master + GH/KH kit)

Week 2: Tank Setup

  • Rinse substrate thoroughly (30+ min until water runs clear)
  • Aquascape before adding water
  • Install equipment, fill with dechlorinated water
  • Run 24 hours to check for leaks

Week 3-4: Nitrogen Cycle (Critical-don’t skip)
Fishless cycling (recommended): Add ammonia to 2-4 ppm → test daily → cycle complete when ammonia and nitrite both read 0 ppm after 24 hours (takes 4-6 weeks)

Month 2: Stocking

Week 5: Add first batch (10-12 fish, all juveniles, 3-4 species)

Week 6-7: Monitor daily for aggression. Rearrange décor if needed. 25% weekly water change.

Week 8: Add second batch (8-10 more fish)

Month 3: Maintenance & Enjoyment

Routine:

  • Feed once daily (adults) or twice daily (juveniles)
  • 25-30% water change weekly
  • Test nitrates weekly
  • Clean filter every 4-6 weeks

Expect Breeding:

  • Convicts breed within 4-6 weeks
  • Africans hold eggs by week 8-10
  • Don’t panic-fry are normal and exciting!
Cichlid aquarium setup timeline showing the first 3 months from planning through establishment
Cichlid success follows a predictable timeline. Plan for 4-6 weeks cycling, slow stocking over 2-3 weeks, and observe for aggression patterns before final stocking.

Quick Start Tank Packages

SETUP 1: African Mbuna Tank (55-Gallon)

What You Need

Tank & Stand

Filtration

Heating (Buy 2 for redundancy)

Substrate (Need 60-80 lbs)

Rockwork & Décor

  • Texas Holey Rock or limestone rocks (30-40 lbs)
  • Cost: $20-40
  • Why: Create 5-6 caves for territories. Reduces aggression.

Lighting

  • LED Aquarium Hood or adjustable LED
  • Cost: $50-100

Test Kit

Food

Total Equipment Cost: $610-755

Monthly Costs

  • Food: $15-25
  • Electricity: $10-15
  • Filter media: $10-15
  • Monthly Total: $35-55

Fish Stocking (20-22 fish)

  • 4× Yellow Lab Cichlids ($12-20)
  • 4× Red Zebra Cichlids ($12-20)
  • 3× Acei Cichlids ($12-18)
  • 4× Rusty Cichlids ($8-16)
  • 3× Demasoni Cichlids ($9-15)
  • Fish Total: $53-89

Why This Works

  • Aragonite substrate buffers pH automatically (no daily adjustments)
  • FX4 filter handles 20+ fish bioload effortlessly
  • Dual heaters prevent temperature crashes if one fails
  • Hardy Mbuna forgive beginner mistakes with parameters
  • Rock décor creates natural territories (less fighting)
  • All-male colonies reduce breeding chaos

3-Month Timeline

  • Weeks 1-4: Setup, aquascape, nitrogen cycle begins
  • Week 5: Add first 10-12 fish slowly
  • Weeks 6-7: Monitor aggression, rearrange décor if needed
  • Week 8: Add remaining 8-10 fish
  • Weeks 9-12: Maintenance routine established, breeding visible

Weekly Maintenance

  • Water change: 25-30%
  • Test nitrate (keep under 40 ppm)
  • Feed once daily (juveniles twice)
  • 5-minute observation for health/aggression

SETUP 2: South American Planted Tank (55-60 Gallon)

What You Need

Tank & Stand

Filtration

Heating (Buy 2 for redundancy)

Substrate (Need 60-80 lbs)

Plants & Décor

  • Malaysian Driftwood: $15-30
  • Java Fern: $10-15
  • Anubias: $10-15
  • Sword Plants: $8-12
  • Total: $50-75

Lighting

  • Included with Fluval Roma LED kit

Test Kit

Food

Total Equipment Cost: $915-1,155

Monthly Costs

  • Food: $20-30
  • Electricity: $12-18
  • Filter media: $10-15
  • Plant fertilizers: $10-15
  • Monthly Total: $52-78

Fish Stocking (8-12 fish)

  • 1× Angelfish Pair: $8-15
  • 1× German Blue Ram Pair: $8-12
  • 6-8× Corydoras Catfish: $18-32
  • 15-20× Neon or Cardinal Tetras: $7.50-20
  • Optional: 1× Bristlenose Pleco: $5-10

Why This Works

  • Planted tank reduces cichlid aggression naturally (fish feel safer)
  • Plant Stratum softens water naturally (no chemical buffers needed)
  • Peaceful species-only setup (no hierarchy battles or predation)
  • Plants consume nitrates (self-sustaining ecosystem, healthier water)
  • Beautiful long-term display (high-end aesthetic appeal)
  • Angels breed readily in proper planted setup

3-Month Timeline

  • Weeks 1-4: Tank setup, plant anchoring, nitrogen cycle
  • Week 5: Add 4-6 foundation fish (Corydoras, Tetras, one Ram pair)
  • Weeks 6-7: Monitor plant growth, add fertilizers, check pH stability
  • Week 8: Add Angelfish pair (establish as main residents)
  • Weeks 9-12: Established planted community, expect Angel breeding behavior

Weekly Maintenance

  • Water change: 25-30% (essential for soft water stability)
  • Test pH (should be 6.5-7.0 and stable)
  • Prune fast-growing plants
  • Feed once daily

SETUP 3: Central American Cichlid Tank (55-Gallon)

What You Need

Tank & Stand

Filtration

Heating (Buy 2 for redundancy)

Substrate (Need 60-80 lbs)

Rockwork & Décor

  • Large River Rocks: $15-25
  • PVC Pipes (4″ diameter as caves): $10-15
  • Minimal philosophy: Let them rearrange it themselves
  • Total: $25-40

Lighting

  • Basic LED Hood
  • Cost: $40-80

Test Kit

Food

Total Equipment Cost: $495-560

Monthly Costs

  • Food: $15-20
  • Electricity: $8-12
  • Filter media: $8-10
  • Monthly Total: $31-42

Fish Stocking (6-8 fish)

  • 1× Convict Cichlid Pair: $5-8
  • 1× Firemouth Cichlid Pair: $8-12
  • Optional: 1× Jack Dempsey: $8-12
  • Optional: 6× Corydoras: $18-24

Breeding Note: Convicts breed every 4-6 weeks. Be prepared to move fry to separate tank or sell to local aquarium stores.

Why This Works

  • Minimal setup = maximum breeding activity (most entertainment)
  • Most affordable option throughout (lowest costs)
  • Hardiest species (most forgiving of poor parameters)
  • Most entertaining breeding and parental behavior to observe
  • No plants to worry about (they destroy them anyway)
  • Fish self-decorate through digging and rearranging

3-Month Timeline

  • Weeks 1-4: Tank setup, basic aquascaping, nitrogen cycle
  • Week 5: Add Convict pair + Firemouth pair
  • Weeks 6-7: Pairs establish territory, monitor aggression carefully
  • Week 8: First breeding activity visible (substrate cleaning, cave selection)
  • Weeks 9-12: First fry appear, new eggs every 4-6 weeks

Weekly Maintenance

  • Water change: 25-30% (important if fry present)
  • Test nitrate (keep under 40 ppm)
  • Feed once daily
  • Watch for fry or breeding behavior

Quick Comparison

African Mbuna Setup

  • Equipment cost: $610-755 startup
  • Monthly cost: $35-55
  • Fish count: 20-22 (colony)
  • Water type: Hard, Alkaline (pH 7.8-8.6)
  • Plants: None (destroyed)
  • Tank setup: Rock-based territories
  • Best for: Color display, hardy beginner setup, multiple species

South American Planted Setup

  • Equipment cost: $915-1,155 startup
  • Monthly cost: $52-78
  • Fish count: 8-12 (peaceful)
  • Water type: Soft, Acidic (pH 6.0-7.5)
  • Plants: Heavy (required)
  • Tank setup: Planted with driftwood
  • Best for: Beautiful display, peaceful community, aesthetic appeal

Central American Setup

  • Equipment cost: $495-560 startup
  • Monthly cost: $31-42
  • Fish count: 6-8 (aggressive pairs)
  • Water type: Adaptable (pH 7.0-8.0)
  • Plants: None (destroyed)
  • Tank setup: Minimal rock/PVC décor
  • Best for: Breeding observation, behavior watching, budget-conscious

How to Choose

Go with African Mbuna if you want:

  • Colorful, active display with multiple species in one tank
  • Hardy, beginner-friendly fish that forgive mistakes
  • Budget-conscious equipment approach with reliable results

Go with South American Planted if you want:

  • Beautiful planted aquascape aesthetic
  • Peaceful community experience with no aggression
  • Premium long-term investment for serious hobbyists

Go with Central American if you want:

  • Easiest breeding project to observe and learn from
  • Most entertaining parental behavior watching
  • Cheapest overall option (startup + monthly)
  • Hardiest fish available (most forgiving)

Before You Buy Anything

  1. Test your tap water – Take sample to local aquarium store for pH, GH, KH testing
  2. Match water chemistry to cichlid type – This is the #1 reason setups fail (African = hard/alkaline, South American = soft/acidic)
  3. Set up tank 4-6 weeks before adding fish – Don’t rush this step
  4. Complete nitrogen cycling – Ammonia and nitrite must both be 0 ppm before adding fish
  5. Have a fry plan – Breeding happens faster than you think (especially Convicts)

General Maintenance for All Setups

Daily

  • Feed once (adults) or twice (juveniles)
  • 5-minute observation for health/behavior/aggression

Weekly

  • Water change 25-30%
  • Test nitrate (should be under 40 ppm)

Monthly

  • Clean filter media (rinse in old tank water, never replace with tap water)
  • Test pH and temperature stability
  • Check for signs of stress (hiding, color loss, clamped fins)

Quarterly

  • Replace filter media if needed
  • Deep clean décor and substrate
  • Review stocking and aggression levels

Pro Tips for Success

Before cycling:

  • Rinse substrate thoroughly (aragonite and sand both need rinsing)
  • Test your water chemistry (you need to know your starting point)
  • Make sure all equipment works before adding water

During cycling:

  • Use API Ammonia or fish food to feed the cycle
  • Test daily (boring but important)
  • Don’t add fish until ammonia and nitrite are both 0

After adding fish:

  • Do partial water changes more frequently first month (helps with mini-cycle)
  • Watch daily for aggression patterns
  • Be ready to rearrange décor if fighting becomes serious

Long-term:

  • Keep backup heater on hand (they fail without warning)
  • Keep spare filter media available (don’t wait until emergency)
  • Document your setup (photos help troubleshooting)
  • Join online aquarium communities (experienced keepers love helping)

FAQ

What is the best beginner cichlid?
African: Yellow Lab (forgiving of parameter swings, vibrant, hardy once established, breeds easily). South American: German Blue Ram (if soft water available). Central: Convict (very hardy once established, fascinating breeder).

What Tank size needed?
Dwarf: 30 gal minimum. African colonies: 55 gal minimum. Large species: 75+ gallons. Bigger is always better.

Can they live in community?
Only peaceful species (Rams, Apistos, Angels) in planted tanks with tetras/corydoras. Avoid mixing African and South American cichlids in the same tank, as their water chemistry needs diverge significantly. Never keep Oscars with small fish.

What do they eat?
Herbivorous Mbuna: 35-40% protein veggie pellets. Omnivores: 40-45% balanced pellets + frozen. Carnivores: 45-55% high-protein + meat.

Are they hard to keep?
Range from beginner-friendly (Convicts, Yellow Labs) to expert-only (Discus). Difficulty is matching water chemistry + managing aggression, not the fish itself.

How long do they live?
Small species: 3-5 years. Medium: 6-10 years. Large: 10-15 years. Lifespan depends on water quality, diet, stress.

Do they need heaters?
Yes, absolutely. All tropical cichlids need stable temps. Use 3-5 watts per gallon. Temperature swings trigger stress and disease.

Can I breed them?
Yes. Convicts breed readily in suitable conditions, often producing fry every 4-6 weeks. African mouthbrooders breed readily in colonies. The challenge isn’t triggering breeding-it’s managing overpopulation and finding homes for juveniles.

Final Thoughts: Your Cichlid Journey Starts Now

Cichlids aren’t just fish-they’re personalities with fins. They’ll recognize you, respond to your presence, and display behaviors that rival saltwater fish at a fraction of the cost. A well-maintained cichlid tank becomes a living ecosystem that rewards daily observation and dedicated care.

The path to cichlid success is straightforward: match species to your water parameters, provide adequate tank size and filtration, maintain stable water chemistry, and feed appropriate diets. Start with hardy species that match your tap water. Master the basics with forgiving species before tackling sensitive varieties like Discus. Build experience through mistakes and learning, then gradually expand into breeding or more challenging species.

Explore the Complete Cichlid Care Library

Species Guides:

  • Yellow Lab Care Guide
  • German Blue Ram Care
  • Oscar Fish Complete Guide
  • Angelfish Care & Breeding
  • Convict Cichlid Breeding Guide

Setup & Equipment:

  • African Cichlid Tank Setup
  • Planted Tank for South American Cichlids
  • Best Filters for Cichlid Tanks

Advanced Topics:

  • Cichlid Breeding for Beginners
  • Managing Cichlid Aggression
  • Cichlid Disease Identification & Treatment

Whether you choose the electric colors of Lake Malawi, the graceful elegance of Angelfish, or the personable companionship of an Oscar, you’re entering a hobby that can last a lifetime. Cichlid keepers become devoted to this family because these fish give back what you invest-attention, intelligence, breeding displays, and genuine connection.

Your cichlid journey starts now. Test your water. Choose your species. Build your tank. Prepare for one of the most rewarding experiences in aquarium keeping.