With a proper school size and adequate tank space, this combination carries a near-zero failure rate for most keepers.
If you are building your first perfect community layers setup, this is the pairing we point to first. It is not complicated to get right, and almost nothing about it goes wrong when the basics are in place.
This guide covers why the pairing works at a biological level, what water parameters both species require, how to spot trouble early, and what alternatives to consider when this combination does not fit your setup.
That 95% success rate reflects what keepers experience in practice. The pairing fails almost exclusively when tank size is too small, school sizes are under the minimum, or water quality is not maintained.
Correct those variables and success is close to guaranteed.
Understanding why the pairing works mechanically is what lets you set it up with confidence confidence from day one.
Why Neon Tetras and Corydoras Work: Zone Separation and Shared South American Origins
The most important reason this pairing succeeds is spatial. Neon tetras occupy the tetra mid-level zone, schooling in the middle and upper portions of the water column.
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Corydoras are are bottom-dwellers that rarely leave the substrate layer except to breach the surface for air.
In a planted 20-gallon tank, these two species can coexist for weeks without any any meaningful interaction. They simply do not share the same space.
The second reason is biotope alignment. Both neon tetras tetras and corydoras originate from slow-moving blackwater rivers and tributaries in South America.
Wild populations overlap in the Amazon basin, where soft, acidic, warm water is the norm.
That shared origin means their water parameter requirements are not just compatible, they are virtually identical. There is no compromise chemistry to run.
- Zone separation: tetras school at mid-level, corydoras forage at the substrate, minimal overlap in standard setups
- Shared biotope: both species evolved in South American blackwater conditions, so water chemistry needs align naturally
- No aggression triggers: corydoras armored body shape and muted coloration do not provoke tetra schooling instincts or defensive behavior
- Peaceful temperament: both species are non-territorial and do not establish or defend feeding zones against other fish
- Schooling fish dynamics: both species form stable groups that reduce individual stress and produce predictable, calm behavior in the tank
Neon tetras tetras also benefit from having active bottom feeders in the tank. Corydoras consume uneaten food that falls past the tetras, which keeps the substrate cleaner and reduces ammonia spikes between water changes.
Both temperament types work well with neon neon tetras. The choice between pygmy and standard corydoras comes down to the look you want and the substrate depth you can offer.
Exact Water Parameters Both Species Need: No Compromise Required
The parameter overlap between neon tetras tetras and corydoras is one of the strongest compatibility arguments in freshwater fishkeeping. You do not need to split the difference or run the tank at a suboptimal point for either species.
| Parameter | Neon Tetra | Corydoras | Shared Target |
|---|---|---|---|
| Temperature | 72-78°F | 72-78°F | 74-76°F |
| pH | 6.0-7.0 | 6.0-7.5 | 6.5-7.0 |
| Hardness (GH) | 2-10 dGH | 2-12 dGH | 4-8 dGH |
| Ammonia / Nitrite | 0 ppm | 0 ppm | 0 ppm |
| Nitrate | <20 ppm | <20 ppm | <20 ppm |
| Minimum tank size | 10 gal (school) | 20 gal (school) | 20 gal |
The only shared vulnerability is ammonia sensitivity. Both species are relatively delicate when it comes to water quality, and an uncycled tank will stress or kill both groups before any compatibility issue becomes relevant.
A full nitrogen cycle, confirmed with a test kit before stocking, is the single most important step in making this pairing succeed. This is the near-zero failure rate's one real condition.
Once the cycle is established and parameters hold steady, maintaining this tank is straightforward. Weekly 25-30% water changes and a quality filter rated for the tank size are sufficient for long-term stability.
Tank Setup Requirements: Substrate, Plants, and School Size
The physical setup of the tank matters as much as water chemistry for this pairing. Corydoras spend their entire lives in contact with the substrate, and the wrong substrate material causes physical damage to their sensitive barbels over time.
Sand is the correct choice. Fine-grain pool sand or aquarium sand lets corydoras sift and forage naturally without abrading their barbels.
Coarse gravel is a slow health problem for corydoras that often goes unnoticed until the damage is already done.
- Substrate: fine sand or smooth-grain substrate only, corydoras barbels are damaged by coarse gravel over time
- Corydoras school size: minimum 6, ideally 8 or more of the same species
- Neon tetra school size: minimum 6, ideally 10 or more for confident schooling behavior and full color display
- Tank size: 20 gallons minimum for both schools together, 29 gallons for a more comfortable long-term setup
- Plants: live or silk plants provide mid-level cover for tetras and shade for corydoras resting spots at the bottom
- Filtration: sponge filter or gentle hang-on-back; both species prefer low to moderate flow
Planting density benefits both species directly. Neon tetras school more confidently and display stronger coloration when they have mid-level plant cover to dart between.
Corydoras use plant roots and low-lying décor as shelter zones during rest periods.
The corydoras bottom zone in a well-planted tank becomes a genuinely active area, with the school sifting through the sand, resting under broad leaves, and occasionally making the rapid surface breach to gulp air that is normal for this genus.
Signs the Pairing Is Failing: What to Watch For
Because the failure rate for this combination is so low, signs of trouble usually point to a tank condition problem rather than an actual compatibility breakdown between the species.
Watch for neon tetras hiding in a tight cluster near the substrate rather than schooling openly at mid-level. This indicates stress, which in a neon tetra-corydoras tank almost always means a water quality issue or the tetras sensing a threat from outside the tank (such as a reflection or an aggressive fish in an adjacent tank).
- Tetras hiding near the bottom: water quality problem or external stress source, not a corydoras aggression issue
- Corydoras with shortened or eroded barbels: substrate is too coarse, switch to fine sand immediately
- Corydoras frequently surfacing for air outside of quick breaches: dissolved oxygen is low or ammonia is elevated, test water immediately
- Tetras showing clamped fins or faded color: disease or water parameter deviation, test and treat promptly
Actual aggression between neon tetras and corydoras is rare enough that if you observe it, re-examine whether the fish you purchased are correctly identified. Some species sold as corydoras, such as larger Brochis or Scleromystax species, can behave differently than standard Corydoras trilineatus or sterbai.
The corydoras versatility as a community fish extends across nearly all peaceful freshwater species. If this pairing is producing stress signals, the substrate, water quality, and tank size are the first three variables to check.
Cherry barbs occupy a similar mid-level niche to neon tetras and pair equally well with corydoras. Our guide on cherry barb community setups covers how they integrate into the same tank configuration without competing directly with the tetra school.
Alternatives to Consider: Other Pairings for Similar Setups
If corydoras are not available in your area or your tank substrate is already established with coarse gravel, there are alternatives that work alongside neon tetras with similar success rates.
Otocinclus catfish fill the bottom-dwelling role with an even smaller footprint than pygmy corydoras and equally peaceful behavior. They require established algae growth in the tank and are sensitive to shipping stress, so sourcing them from a reputable local store matters more than it does with corydoras.
- Otocinclus: excellent bottom-level companion for neon tetras, algae-dependent, needs established tank
- Kuhli loaches: peaceful substrate dwellers, similar water parameters, nocturnal so less visible during the day
- Ember tetras: mid-level schooling fish that complement neon tetras visually, same parameter needs
- Harlequin rasboras: upper-mid schooling companions, slightly larger than neons, same soft-water preferences
For keepers who want to expand the tetra community options beyond corydoras, the ember tetra and harlequin rasbora additions work particularly well because they occupy slightly different positions in the mid-level zone without competing directly with the neon tetra school.
Guppies are another strong companion for this pairing because they occupy the surface zone that tetras and corydoras leave open. Our guppy care guide shows their parameter needs align closely with neon tetras, making the three-species setup easy to dial in.
Adding a bottom-dweller, a mid-level school, and a secondary mid-upper schooler gives you the full three-layer community that makes a planted freshwater tank genuinely interesting to watch.