Freshwater Fish

Cardinal Tetra Care: Care Guide and Facts

QUICK ANSWER
Cardinal tetras are one of the most visually striking schooling fish in the freshwater hobby, and one of the most misidentified. Their red stripe runs the full length of the body.

That single trait separates them from neon tetras and tells you everything about their origin: deep Amazonian blackwater, soft and acidic, warm and tannin-stained. Get the water right and a school of 10 cardinals under blue LED lighting is difficult to match in any community tank.

This guide covers setup, water parameters, diet, tank mates, and why cardinals are the correct tetra for discus tanks. Start with our tropical tetra care overview before setting up your first blackwater community.

Best: 10+ gallon blackwater community Budget: 10-gallon species-only school

Cardinal tetras (Paracheirodon axelrodi) are caught in the Rio Negro and Orinoco basin by the millions each year. Nearly every cardinal you buy at a fish store was born in the wild, netted by local fishers in Brazil and Venezuela, and shipped to you still carrying the memory of blackwater streams.

That origin is not a trivia fact. It explains every care decision you will make for this fish.

We have kept cardinals in both hard tap water and purpose-built blackwater tanks. The difference in color, behavior, and lifespan between those two setups is not subtle.

This guide tells you exactly what the fish needs and why.

TEMP
73-84°F
MIN TANK
10 gal
PH
4.5-7.0
LIFESPAN
4-5 years

That temperature ceiling of 84°F is the detail that makes cardinals the tetra of choice for discus tanks. Neon tetras cannot safely exceed 76°F long-term.

Cardinals thrive at the same temperatures discus require.

Here is what separates the cardinal from every other tetra you will encounter.

✓ PROS
Full-body red stripe is unmatched in visual impact
Tolerates warm discus temperatures up to 84°F
Peaceful with all similarly sized community fish
Stunning iridescence under blue LED lighting
Schools tightly in groups of 10+, creating natural behavior
✗ CONS
Most specimens are wild-caught and sensitive to hard or alkaline water
Breeding in captivity requires extremely soft acidic water (pH 4.5-5.5)
Less forgiving of water quality swings than farm-bred neons
More expensive than neon tetras
Require a school of 10+ to display natural behavior and reduce stress

Cardinal Tetra vs. Neon Tetra: One Stripe Tells the Whole Story

The most common mistake in the freshwater hobby is buying one when you meant the other. From three feet away, a cardinal tetra and a neon tetra look nearly identical.

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Up close, the difference is obvious and permanent.

On a neon tetra, the red stripe starts at the middle of the body and runs to the tail. The front half of the fish is silver below the blue iridescent stripe.

On a cardinal tetra, the red stripe runs the full length of the body, from the gill plate all the way to the tail. There is no silver belly on a cardinal.

The entire lower half of the fish is red.

Feature Cardinal Tetra Neon Tetra
Red stripe coverage Full body length, gill to tail Back half only, mid-body to tail
Max temperature 84°F 76°F
Wild or captive-bred Mostly wild-caught Almost all captive-bred
pH tolerance 4.5-7.0 5.5-7.5
Water sensitivity Higher (especially wild-caught) Lower (farm-adapted)
Adult size 1.5-2 inches 1.25-1.5 inches
Price Higher Lower

The care requirements overlap significantly at the softer end of neon tetra tolerance. Where they diverge is temperature.

A tank running at 82°F for a discus community is too warm for neons long-term. It is within the the ideal range for cardinals.

For a direct side-by-side on which tetra suits your setup, our neon vs cardinal comparison walks through every parameter where the two species differ and why it matters for your specific tank.

CARE TIP
When buying cardinal tetras, inspect the red stripe under the store's lighting. A full red stripe from gill to tail with rich, saturated color means a healthy, recently imported specimen. Faded or patchy red with a silver belly means you are looking at a neon tetra, a stressed cardinal, or a fish that has been in hard alkaline tap water long enough to bleach its pigmentation. Do not buy washed-out specimens hoping they recover in your tank.

Cardinal Tetra Water Parameters: Blackwater Chemistry Is Not Optional for Wild-Caught Fish

Wild-caught cardinal tetras come from the Rio Negro, one of the most chemically extreme natural environments any aquarium fish inhabits. The Rio Negro runs at pH 3.5-4.5 in some stretches, with conductivity conductivity near zero and tannin concentrations that turn the water the color of strong tea.

You do not need to replicate that extreme, but you do need to understand that a fish born in that water and shipped to your tank is now in the most foreign environment it has ever encountered. The closer you get to soft and acidic, the better it will do.

Parameter Ideal Range Absolute Limits
Temperature 76-82°F 73-84°F
pH 5.0-6.5 4.5-7.0
Hardness (GH) 1-5 dGH Under 10 dGH
TDS 50-150 ppm Under 300 ppm
Ammonia 0 ppm 0 ppm only
Nitrite 0 ppm 0 ppm only
Nitrate Under 10 ppm Under 20 ppm

Captive-bred cardinal tetras, which are available from specialty breeders at a higher price point, are meaningfully more tolerant of harder and more alkaline water. If your tap water runs above 150 ppm TDS or pH 7.2, sourcing captive-bred cardinals is a better starting point than fighting your water chemistry to keep wild-caught fish healthy.

WARNING
Do not acclimate wild-caught cardinal tetras with a fast drip or a simple float-and-release. They need a slow, extended drip acclimation over 60-90 minutes to adjust from the low-TDS, acidic store water to your tank.

A sudden shift in pH or hardness causes osmotic shock. Cardinals that die within 48 hours of purchase almost always failed at this stage, not because of disease.

Cardinal Tetra Tank Setup: Recreating Blackwater Without a Chemistry Degree

A blackwater cardinal tank does not require expensive equipment or constant chemistry testing. It requires understanding three things: what lowers pH naturally, what softens water, and what maintains stability between water changes.

The target is a stable, soft, slightly acidic environment with gentle gentle flow and dim or warm lighting. Cardinals are mid-water fish that school in open space.

They do not need caves or territories. They need clear swimming lanes and cover from overhead light.

  • Substrate: dark sand or fine dark gravel; contrasts with the fish's coloring and keeps cardinals calmer than white or bare-bottom tanks
  • Driftwood: Malaysian driftwood and spider wood release tannins naturally; both lower pH slowly over time and require no additives
  • Indian almond leaves: 2-3 leaves per 10 gallons; release tannins, mild antibacterial compounds, and lower pH; replace every 3-4 weeks
  • Live plants: java fern, anubias, and amazon sword tolerate low-light blackwater conditions; floating plants like frogbit reduce overhead light intensity
  • Filtration: sponge filter or gentle hang-on-back; cardinals come from slow-moving streams and cannot handle strong current
  • Lighting: low to moderate intensity; blue LED spectrum brings out the iridescent stripe in a way no white light can match

If your tap water is hard, mixing it with reverse reverse osmosis water or distilled water to reach your target TDS is more reliable than relying solely on driftwood and leaves to soften it. A 50/50 mix of RO and tap water typically brings most municipal supplies into the acceptable range for cardinals.

Building a full blackwater planted tank is a rewarding project. Our planted tank setup guide covers substrate layering, CO2 options, and fertilizer choices that work in soft acidic water without driving pH up.

Cardinals are social fish that regulate stress through school size. A group of 6 survives.

A group of 10 thrives. Below 6, the remaining fish show chronic stress behaviors: hovering near the surface, hiding behind equipment, refusing to school.

A 20-gallon long tank is the ideal home for a school of 15 cardinals. Our 20-gallon stocking guide covers the fish count math and explains which tank dimensions give schooling fish the horizontal swimming space they need.

More fish in the right tank is always better for this species.

Cardinal Tetra Diet: Micro Foods Match a Small Mouth

Cardinal tetras are omnivores with a a small mouth that limits what they can take. Their natural diet in the Rio Negro consists of microcrustaceans, insect larvae, small worms, algae, and decaying plant matter.

In captivity, they accept a wide range of prepared foods as long as the particle size is appropriate.

The biggest feeding mistake is using standard community pellets or flakes sized for medium fish. Cardinals cannot take a full-sized flake.

They nibble around the edges inefficiently, waste falls to the substrate, and the fish stay underfed while nitrates climb from the decaying food.

  • Micro pellets: 0.5-1mm size; NorthFin Fry Starter, Hikari Micro Pellets, or Sera Micron are suitable staples
  • Crushed flake: crush standard flake between your fingers before adding to the tank; instantly turns any flake food into cardinal-appropriate size
  • Frozen baby brine shrimp: excellent protein source; feed 3-4 times per week for best color development
  • Frozen daphnia: naturally sized for cardinals; high in fiber and useful for digestive health
  • Frozen micro worms or white worms: high-fat conditioning food; useful for bringing wild-caught fish up to weight after shipping stress

Feed twice daily in amounts consumed within 2 2 minutes. Cardinals are slow, deliberate feeders.

If you have faster tank mates like barbs or danios in the same tank, the cardinals may not be getting enough food. Spot-feed with a pipette or turkey baster to direct food into the school if competition is an issue.

Color development in cardinal tetras is directly tied to diet quality. Fish fed exclusively on dry food develop visibly less saturated red and blue than fish receiving regular frozen food supplementation.

Three frozen-food feedings per week is the minimum for full color expression.

Frozen brine shrimp and daphnia are the two best color-enhancing foods for cardinals. Our guide on brine shrimp for aquarium fish covers preparation, thawing technique, and how often to feed it without fouling the water in a soft-water tank.

Cardinal Tetras as Discus Tank Dither Fish: Why Temperature Makes Them the Right Choice

Discus tanks run at 82-86°F. That temperature kills most community tetras within months through metabolic burnout and immune suppression.

It is the reason so many discus keepers struggle to find compatible schooling fish.

Cardinal tetras are the standard answer to this problem. Their upper temperature tolerance of 84°F overlaps with the lower end of the discus comfort zone.

A discus tank running at 82-83°F with a school of 15-20 cardinals is one of the classic setups in the freshwater hobby, and it works precisely because of the cardinal's thermal tolerance.

Dither fish serve a behavioral function beyond aesthetics. Discus are skittish in empty tanks.

A large, actively schooling group of cardinals tells the discus that open water is safe, which brings the larger fish out from cover and into natural foraging behavior. The cardinal school essentially teaches the discus to be less fearful.

Our guide on discus dither fish selection covers the temperature argument in full detail and explains exactly why neon tetras fail in this role where cardinals succeed.

CARE TIP
If you are running a discus tank at 84°F or above, watch your cardinal tetras closely for the first two weeks. Individual fish have slightly different thermal tolerances. A school that looks fine at 82°F may show a fish or two breathing rapidly at 84°F. Drop to the lowest temperature that keeps your discus comfortable and your cardinals stable. The overlap zone is narrow but real.

Cardinal Tetra Tank Mates: Building a Blackwater Community

Cardinal tetras are completely peaceful. They ignore every other fish in the tank, including fish their own size.

The only direction compatibility risk runs is inward: predatory or aggressive tank mates will stress, injure, or eat cardinals.

The best blackwater communities pair cardinals with bottom-dwellers that share their water chemistry requirements and mid-to-large species that do not treat small tetras as food.

  • catfish as bottom companions: sterbai corydoras prefer warm water (up to 82°F) and soft, acidic conditions; their armored plating means they are ignored by all tank mates; a group of 6 corydoras and 10-15 cardinals is a low-conflict community baseline
  • as community centerpiece fish: appropriate with adult cardinals only; juvenile angelfish leave adult cardinals alone, but full-grown angelfish may view juvenile cardinals as food if hungry; if mixing, buy adult cardinals that are already larger than the angelfish's mouth
  • Dwarf cichlids: German blue rams and apistogramma species share blackwater preferences and largely ignore mid-water tetras; do not add any cichlid that is actively spawning, as they will attack the entire school
  • Otocinclus catfish: algae eaters that stay on glass and plants; completely peaceful; thrive in the same soft acidic water
  • Rummy nose tetras: similar water requirements; school together with cardinals in a way that looks completely natural; the red nose contrasts well with the cardinal's red body

Avoid tiger barbs, serpae tetras, and any known fin-nipper. Their nipping behavior does not injure cardinals severely, but the chronic stress from being nipped suppresses immune function and shortens lifespan significantly.

A stressed cardinal loses color, schools loosely, and dies 18 months before it should.

Rummy nose tetras are one of the best companions for a cardinal school because they share blackwater chemistry needs and school alongside cardinals naturally. Our rummy nose tetra guide covers their water requirements and explains why their red-nose coloration serves as a real-time water quality indicator.

For the full picture on building a tetra-centered community with the right species ratios, our tetra varieties guide covers which species share water chemistry requirements and which need to be separated.

Cardinal Tetra Breeding: Possible but Demanding

Breeding cardinal tetras in captivity requires conditions that are genuinely difficult to achieve without a purpose-built breeding tank. The requirements are not approximate targets.

They are thresholds that either trigger spawning or prevent it entirely.

Wild-caught cardinals add an additional layer of difficulty: fish born in Rio Negro water may not respond to spawning cues in water that is merely soft and acidic. They may require the extreme end of the range to initiate any spawning behavior at all.

  • pH: 4.5-5.5 for reliable spawning; above 6.0 and most cardinals will not spawn regardless of other conditions
  • Hardness: near zero; 0-2 dGH; virtually distilled water with tannin staining
  • Temperature: 76-80°F; slightly cooler than display tank to mimic dry season onset
  • Lighting: very dim or dark; spawning is a nighttime behavior; cover the tank or use a timer to reduce light hours
  • Trigger: simulate the rainy season by doing a 50% water change with slightly cooler, very soft water

Eggs are light-sensitive and will die if exposed to normal aquarium lighting after spawning. The breeding tank must be completely blacked out within hours of spawning.

Fry require infusoria or commercial fry food at the smallest particle size available for the first two weeks before graduating to baby brine shrimp.

For most keepers, breeding cardinals is a specialist project rather than a standard goal. The captive-bred specimens available from specialty breeders are produced in exactly these conditions and cost more to reflect that investment.

If breeding is your interest, start with captive-bred stock and purpose-build a breeding tank before attempting it.

WARNING
Never breed cardinal tetras under standard aquarium lighting. The eggs are photosensitive and die within hours of light exposure.

If you observe spawning behavior in the evening in your display tank, remove the parents to a blacked-out container immediately. Eggs left in a lit community tank will not survive regardless of water chemistry.

Cardinal Tetra Health and Common Problems

Wild-caught cardinal tetras arrive with the stress of an international supply chain behind them. The first 30 days in your tank are when losses happen.

After a successful acclimation period, cardinals that are kept in appropriate water chemistry are genuinely hardy fish.

Know the disease patterns that affect this species before they appear.

  • Neon tetra disease (Pleistophora hyphessobryconis): despite the name, this microsporidian parasite affects cardinals too; symptoms are a fading white patch replacing the red stripe, starting mid-body and spreading; there is no effective treatment; remove and euthanize affected fish immediately to prevent spread
  • Ich: white salt-grain spots on fins and body; more common in fish stressed by cold or hard water; raise temperature to 82°F and treat with a half-dose of standard ich medication (cardinals are sensitive to many medications at full dose)
  • Bacterial infections: fin rot, body ulcers, and cloudy eyes follow water quality failures; clean water first, antibiotics only if no improvement in one week
  • Velvet (Oodinium): gold dust appearance on skin, especially visible under a flashlight at an angle; treat with copper-based medication in a quarantine tank; remove all invertebrates before treating
  • Shipping stress and internal parasites: wild-caught fish may carry internal parasites from their natural environment; a prophylactic treatment with praziquantel in a quarantine tank after purchase is standard practice among experienced cardinal keepers

Quarantine all new cardinal tetras for 2-4 weeks before adding them to an established tank. The investment in a small quarantine setup saves the fish already in your display tank from imported pathogens that wild-caught specimens carry at a higher rate than farm-bred fish.

A 10-gallon tank makes a practical quarantine setup that doubles as a hospital tank. Our 10-gallon tank guide covers filtration and equipment choices for small tanks that need stable parameters on a tight budget.

The red stripe. On a cardinal tetra, the red stripe runs the full length of the body from gill plate to tail. On a neon tetra, the red stripe covers only the back half of the body; the front half is silver below the blue iridescent stripe. Cardinals are also slightly larger, require softer and more acidic water, are mostly wild-caught rather than captive-bred, and tolerate warmer temperatures up to 84°F. Neon tetras are more adaptable to standard tap water and cost less. Both are schooling fish that need groups of 10 or more.
Yes. Cardinal tetras are the standard dither fish for discus tanks specifically because their temperature tolerance overlaps with discus requirements. Discus tanks run at 82-86°F. Most community tetras cannot survive those temperatures long-term. Cardinals thrive up to 84°F and their active schooling behavior encourages discus to come out of hiding and feed. Use a school of 15-20 cardinals for the visual and behavioral effect to work properly.
Fading color in cardinal tetras has three common causes: water that is too hard or alkaline, poor diet lacking in frozen protein foods, or chronic stress from incompatible tank mates or a school too small. Wild-caught cardinals that are kept in hard tap water above pH 7.0 or 150 ppm TDS will gradually bleach their red and blue pigmentation. Feed frozen baby brine shrimp or daphnia at least three times per week and test your water parameters before blaming diet.
A minimum of 10. Cardinals are schooling fish that regulate stress through group behavior. Below 6, they show chronic stress symptoms: hiding, surface hovering, and refusing to school. A group of 10-15 in a 20-gallon long tank displays natural schooling behavior and holds stable social structure even when one or two fish are lost. Buy the whole group at once rather than adding fish in batches, which disrupts school hierarchy and introduces stress.
Yes, but it requires a purpose-built breeding tank with extreme water conditions: pH 4.5-5.5, near-zero hardness, dim or complete darkness, and a simulated rainy season trigger. Eggs are photosensitive and will die if exposed to light within hours of spawning. Most hobbyists find it easier to purchase captive-bred cardinals from specialty breeders than to attempt breeding in a home setup. If you want to try, source captive-bred stock rather than wild-caught fish, as farm-adapted specimens respond more reliably to standard spawning cues.
SOURCES & REFERENCES

1.
Paracheirodon axelrodi species profile: taxonomy, distribution, ecology, and captive requirements
FishBase. Paracheirodon axelrodi species profile. Froese, R. and Pauly, D. (Eds.), 2024 University

2.
Rio Negro blackwater chemistry and implications for captive husbandry of Amazonian ornamental fish
Chao, N.L., Petry, P., Prang, G., Sonnenschein, L., Tlusty, M. (Eds.). Conservation and Management of Ornamental Fish Resources of the Rio Negro, Amazonia, Brazil. University of Amazonas Press, 2001 Journal

3.
Pleistophora hyphessobryconis (neon tetra disease) in small characins: clinical signs, diagnosis, and management
Yanong, R.P.E. Fish Health Management Considerations in Recirculating Aquaculture Systems. University of Florida IFAS Extension, 2003 University

THE BOTTOM LINE
Cardinal tetras reward keepers who respect their origin. Wild-caught fish from the Rio Negro need soft, acidic, warm water and a school large enough to behave naturally.

Get those three variables right and you have one of the most visually striking displays in the freshwater hobby. They are the correct tetra for discus tanks, the correct schooling fish for a planted blackwater community, and one of the few species where the care investment is immediately visible in the fish itself.

A school of 15 cardinals in a tannin-stained 20-gallon under blue LED lighting does not look like a beginner's tank. It looks like a slice of the Rio Negro.

Best: 20-gallon long blackwater community with corydoras Budget: 10-gallon species-only school of 10