The question comes up constantly in freshwater fish forums and store aisles: can you keep angelfish and neon tetras in the same tank?

The short answer is no. The longer answer explains why tank size, planting density, and juvenile age do not change the outcome.
That 15% represents tanks where juvenile angelfish coexist briefly with neon tetras before reaching the predation threshold size. It is not a long-term success rate.
Every one of those pairings deteriorates as the angelfish grow.
Angelfish vs. Neon Tetra: 4 Key Parameters and Adult Size at Maturity
The core problem is size. tetras reach 1.5 inches at full maturity.
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Angelfish reach 6 inches of body length and stand 10 inches tall. That is not a size mismatch you can manage with tank decor.
The table below shows where these two species overlap and where they do not.
| Parameter | Angelfish | Neon Tetra | Overlap |
|---|---|---|---|
| Temperature | 76–84°F | 72–78°F | 76–78°F (narrow) |
| pH | 6.0–7.5 | 6.0–7.0 | 6.0–7.0 |
| Hardness | 3–8 dGH | 2–10 dGH | 3–8 dGH |
| Tank minimum | 30 gal (pair) | 10 gal | 55 gal for attempt |
| Adult body size | 6 in body / 10 in tall | 1.5 in | No safe shared size |
Chemistry overlaps reasonably well. Temperature is the tightest constraint: neon tetras prefer the cooler end of what angelfish tolerate.
Body size makes the predation outcome inevitable regardless of the chemistry match.
We want to be specific about the chemistry advantage: it means you can run the same tank parameters for both species in a juvenile grow-out situation. It does not mean the pairing is viable long-term.
The pros column applies to a temporary setup. The cons column applies permanently.
Angelfish Predation Timeline: Why 4 Inches Is the Danger Threshold
Angelfish are cichlids. In the wild, Pterophyllum scalare hunts small invertebrates, fry, and small tetras through the flooded forests of the Amazon basin.
That behavior does not disappear in captivity.
Juveniles under 3 inches generally ignore neon tetras. At that size, the tetras are not significantly smaller and the predatory response is not yet fully developed.
By the time an angelfish reaches its full 6-inch body length, a neon tetra fits inside its mouth with room to spare. This is simple geometry.
Stress is a secondary consequence that begins before predation. Neon tetras that share a tank with a visual predator eat less, school more tightly, and display reduced color.
Long-term stress shortens lifespan and weakens immune response.
What Would Need to Be True for Angelfish and Neon Tetras to Work: They Cannot
We get asked this regularly: is there a setup that makes this pairing viable? We built out the full conditions checklist below.
The spoiler is in the title of this section.
Even if every item below were true, the angelfish would still reach adult size and the tetras would still be prey. No tank setup overrides the biological predation threshold.
The checklist describes a temporary grow-out arrangement, not a permanent community tank. If you run this setup, plan your separation date at purchase, not after you start seeing losses.
We have seen keepers run this for 8 months successfully before the angelfish matured. Eight months is not a long-term community tank.
Safer Alternatives: 5 Species That Actually Work With Angelfish
Angelfish need tank mates that are too large to eat, too fast to catch, or both. The species below have proven track records alongside adult angelfish in properly sized tanks.
- Corydoras occupy the bottom level, stay out of the angelfish's midwater zone, and their armored bodies are not worth attacking. Our corydoras care guide covers the best species for larger community tanks.
- Cherry barbs reach 2 inches and are fast enough to avoid ambush. Cherry barb schools of 8 or more hold their own in an angelfish environment.
- Mollies reach 3–4 inches, which puts them outside the angelfish predation window. Mollies alongside angelfish work particularly well in planted tanks with hardness in the 8–12 dGH range.
- Platies stay at 2.5–3 inches and are too stocky for most angelfish to swallow. Platies with angelfish is one of the more reliable pairings in mid-size community tanks.
- Dwarf gourami occupy the same upper-mid level as angelfish but at 2–3 inches, and their labyrinth organ use keeps them near the surface. Check our dwarf gourami compatibility notes before pairing with semi-aggressive cichlids.
Black skirt tetras and Congo tetras also work with angelfish. Both reach 2–3 inches, which is above the practical predation threshold for most angelfish.
The full tetra species comparison shows which tetra sizes are safe with larger cichlids.
Corydoras catfish are the most reliable angelfish companion. They occupy a completely different tank level, their plates make them unappealing to attack, and they eat waste from the substrate that angelfish miss.
Target species: bronze corydoras, sterbai corydoras, peppered corydoras. Minimum school: 6.
Cherry barbs are fast, active, and reach 2 inches at maturity. A school of 8 or more creates enough movement to confuse any attempted ambush.
They share the same soft, slightly acidic water preferences as angelfish. Males display vivid red coloration that complements angelfish finnage.
Mollies at 3–4 inches are one of the few fish that genuinely matches up size-wise with adult angelfish. Sailfin mollies reach 4–6 inches and are visually bold enough to hold territory.
Keep hardness slightly elevated for mollies (8–12 dGH) within the angelfish's tolerance range.
Platies are peaceful, 2.5–3 inch fish that add movement and color without the aggression risk of livebearers like swordtails. They are not fast swimmers, so stock enough planting to give them some cover.
Avoid swordtails: male swordtails can nip the flowing fins of angelfish.
Dwarf gourami fill a similar ecological niche to angelfish in the wild: slow-moving, planted water, mid-to-upper column. At 2–3 inches they are not prey-sized.
Monitor during introduction since both species can be semi-territorial at the surface. Keep one male gourami per tank to prevent intraspecies conflict.
Why Neon Tetras Need Angelfish-Free Tanks: 45 Better Tank Mates Available
Neon tetras are among the most popular freshwater fish in the hobby, and they thrive in community tanks. The critical variable is keeping them away from predators.
Any fish over 3 inches that is carnivorous or omnivorous is a risk.
The species that genuinely work with neon tetras are similarly sized, peaceful fish in the 1.5–2.5 inch range. A betta-neon tetra pairing is another frequently asked question with a more conditional answer: bettas may coexist with tetras under specific conditions, unlike angelfish where the answer is consistently no.
- Guppies at 1.5–2 inches are natural companions for neon tetras in soft-water planted tanks, sharing the same mid-level swimming zone.
- Corydoras on the bottom give neon tetras a full multi-level community without any predation overlap.
- Harlequin rasboras reach 1.75 inches and school loosely alongside neons, creating a layered shoal with distinctive color contrast.
- Otocinclus catfish stay under 1.5 inches and focus entirely on algae, making them a zero-aggression bottom-level option.
- Other small tetras from the tetra species list: ember tetras, glowlight tetras, and penguin tetras all coexist well without size disparity.
For keepers setting up a dedicated tetra community, our 10-gallon tank stocking guide gives a concrete species list for small-tank neon tetra setups. Neon tetras do not need a large tank to thrive.
They need the right companions.
The betta tank mate guide covers additional small, peaceful species that overlap with neon tetra communities and includes size charts for predation risk assessment.