Clownfish are the most recognized fish in the ocean, and for good reason. Amphiprioninae species are tough, colorful, and far more forgiving of minor water quality lapses than other saltwater fish.
We've kept saltwater aquariums for years, and clownfish are the one fish we recommend without hesitation to anyone starting out. This guide covers everything you need to keep them alive and thriving.
Clownfish natural habitat and the 26 species you can keep
Wild clownfish live in the warm, shallow waters of the Indo-Pacific, Red Sea, and Indian Ocean. They occupy a very specific niche: the stinging tentacles of sea anemones, which protect them from predators in exchange for nutrients and aeration.
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If you want to see this bond in action at home, our guide to pairing clownfish with host anemones covers every viable host species and how to get captive-bred fish to adopt one.
There are 28 recognized species in the Amphiprioninae subfamily, and 26 are kept in the hobby. The most common is Amphiprion ocellaris (common clownfish), followed by A.percula (true percula).
Most fish sold today are captive-bred, which makes them hardier and easier to feed than wild-caught specimens.
- Ocellaris clownfish: Most common in the trade, peaceful, works in 20-gallon tanks
- Percula clownfish: Slightly smaller, thicker black bands, similar care needs
- Tomato clownfish: More aggressive, single white bar, better with anemones
- Maroon clownfish: Largest species, highly aggressive, needs 30+ gallons solo
- Clarkii clownfish: Most anemone-compatible species, tolerates a wide range of hosts
Captive-bred clownfish have been raised on prepared foods from the start. They accept pellets and frozen foods without the transition period that wild-caught fish require.
Clownfish tank setup: what a 20-gallon needs to succeed
Before stocking, make sure the tank is fully cycled. Our beginner saltwater tank setup walkthrough goes step by step, including the nitrogen cycle mistakes that kill marine fish.
A standard 20-gallon is the minimum for a clownfish pair. You can keep a single clownfish in a 10-gallon, but pairs need the extra territory to establish a hierarchy without constant conflict.
The tank doesn't need to be heavily decorated, but it benefits from structure. Clownfish are shelter-seeking fish.
Without an anemone or suitable host substitute, they'll adopt a coral, a powerhead, or even a filter intake as their home base.
Live rock is the backbone of any saltwater tank. It colonizes with beneficial bacteria faster than ceramic media and provides natural grazing surfaces and hiding spots for clownfish.
For guidance on choosing and curing rock, our guide to choosing and curing live rock covers aquacultured vs. wild-harvested options and how to aquascape before filling the tank.
Water parameters clownfish need: temperature, salinity, and pH targets
Clownfish tolerate a broader parameter range than most saltwater fish. That's part of what makes them suitable for beginners.
But stability still matters more than hitting exact numbers.
| Parameter | Target Range | Critical Limit |
|---|---|---|
| Temperature | 76–80°F | Below 72°F or above 84°F |
| Salinity (SG) | 1.023–1.025 | Below 1.018 or above 1.027 |
| pH | 8.1–8.4 | Below 7.8 |
| Ammonia | 0 ppm | Any detectable level |
| Nitrite | 0 ppm | Any detectable level |
| Nitrate | Below 20 ppm | Above 40 ppm causes stress |
Top-off evaporation daily with fresh RODI water, not saltwater. Evaporation removes water but leaves salt behind, which slowly raises salinity to dangerous levels if not corrected.
A quality protein skimmer keeps dissolved organics low between water changes. Our guide to choosing the right protein skimmer explains how to size one correctly for your tank volume.
Clownfish diet: what to feed and how often
Clownfish are omnivores. In the wild, they eat algae, zooplankton, small crustaceans, and organic debris from within their host anemone's tentacles.
In captivity, they're easy to feed because captive-bred specimens are trained on prepared foods from birth.
New to saltwater keeping entirely? Our starter saltwater fish guide shows how clownfish compare to other hardy species and how to build a complete 30-gallon community.
Feed twice daily, offering only what the fish consume in 2–3 minutes. Uneaten food breaks down rapidly in saltwater and drives nitrate spikes.
- High-quality pellets: New Life Spectrum or Hikari Marine S as the daily staple
- Frozen mysis shrimp: Offered 3–4 times per week for protein and enrichment
- Frozen brine shrimp: Good supplement, lower nutritional value than mysis alone
- Nori (dried seaweed): Clip to the tank glass 2–3 times weekly for plant matter
- Reef Roids or coral food: Useful if keeping anemones or filter feeders
Clownfish health: 4 diseases that target this species
Clownfish are relatively disease-resistant, but they're not immune. Most health problems trace back to poor water quality, temperature instability, or stress from inadequate tank conditions.
- Brooklynella (clownfish disease): Rapid mucus shedding, lethargy, torn fins. Treat with formalin baths. More common in wild-caught fish.
- Marine ich (Cryptocaryon): White spots on body and fins. Treat with copper-based medications in quarantine. Do not treat in display tanks with invertebrates.
- Velvet (Amyloodinium): Gold dust appearance, rapid breathing. Highly contagious. Requires immediate copper treatment in quarantine.
- Uronema: Red ulcers, rapid tissue loss. Often fatal if not caught early. Requires formalin treatment.
A 4-week quarantine for all new fish is the single most effective disease prevention step. It's cheaper than treating a display tank and prevents wiping out established livestock.
Clownfish tank mates: compatible and incompatible species
For a full breakdown of every proven pairing, see our guide to the best tank mates for clownfish, which ranks 10 compatible species by water zone and tank size.
Clownfish pair well with most peaceful reef fish. Their aggression is mostly directed at other clownfish, not at unrelated species.
A bonded pair will defend their host vigorously but generally ignore fish that don't approach that territory.
Royal gramma care is worth reading next because it fills the cave zone in a 30-gallon reef without creating new aggression problems for clownfish.
The biggest mistake is adding two pairs of clownfish to the same tank. Pairs are fiercely territorial toward other clownfish, even of different species.
One pair per tank is the rule.
If you plan to add a tang after the tank matures, jump to the clownfish and tang compatibility guide for tank-size minimums and introduction order.