How many fish in a 90 gallon tank?
A 90-gallon (340 L) tank is a showpiece aquarium — large fish, multiple big schools, and rock-solid stability.
At 90 gallons you have the length, depth and volume for genuinely large communities or bigger fish. Stability is excellent, but so is the bio-load potential — this is a tank that rewards strong filtration, a real maintenance routine, and careful stocking against the engine.
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Stocking ideas for a 90-gallon tank
Each idea below is scored by the same engine as the planner — tap one to load it.
Large angelfish community
✓ Good starter plan5× Freshwater Angelfish, 20× Rummynose Tetra, 12× Bronze Corydoras
A proper angelfish group, a big rummynose school, and a large cory shoal across a 90-gallon.
Load this build in the planner ↑Rainbow + gourami display
✓ Good starter plan10× Boesemani Rainbowfish, 3× Pearl Gourami, 2× Bristlenose Pleco
A big rainbow shoal, a pearl-gourami trio, and bristlenose plecos — colour and movement at scale.
Load this build in the planner ↑How many of each popular fish fit a 90-gallon tank?
The honest, engine-derived answer instead of a single guess: comfortable single-species display counts for popular community fish at this size. Each number is deliberately conservative — it leaves headroom for water-quality swings and tankmates, so it is a comfortable target, not a hard ceiling. Tap a count to load that fish in the planner.
| Species | Adult size | Comfortable count (this tank) |
|---|---|---|
| Neon Tetra | 3 cm | ~50 |
| Cardinal Tetra | 3 cm | ~50 |
| Ember Tetra | 2 cm | ~50 |
| Harlequin Rasbora | 4.5 cm | ~50 |
| Zebra Danio | 5 cm | ~41 |
| Cherry Barb | 5 cm | ~50 |
| Guppy (Fancy) | 5 cm | ~50 |
| Platy | 6 cm | ~47 |
| Molly (Common / Sailfin) | 12 cm | ~20 |
| Bronze Corydoras | 7 cm | ~36 |
| Kuhli Loach | 9 cm | ~40 |
| Cherry Shrimp | 3 cm | ~50 |
Good to know
What is the maximum number of fish for a 90-gallon tank?
There is no single number — it depends on the adult size, waste output, and social needs of the species. The planner above estimates a stocking level for your exact list rather than guessing from gallons alone.
Can I use the "one inch of fish per gallon" rule?
It is a rough starting point at best and breaks down quickly: a 3-inch goldfish produces far more waste than three 1-inch tetras, and the rule ignores schooling needs, aggression, and adult size. TankStocking weights bio-load by body size and waste class and applies hard welfare checks instead.
Should I add all the fish at once?
No. Cycle the tank first, then add fish in small batches over several weeks so the biological filter can keep up. A fully-stocked plan is the destination, not the starting point.
Plan a 90-gallon tank
Related guides on TankStocking — each scored by the same welfare engine as the planner.
Tank-mate guides for these fish
Stocking levels are planning estimates, not guarantees — individual fish, filtration, planting, and maintenance all matter. Cycle the tank before adding livestock and verify your own water. How TankStocking works →