Freshwater Fish

Cherry Barb: Care, Tank Mates, and Breeding Tips

Cherry Barb: Peaceful Schooler with Brilliant Red Males
QUICK ANSWER
The cherry barb (Puntius titteya) is one of the few barbs that earns its place in community tanks without asterisks. Males turn a deep, saturated crimson during breeding display, making them one of the most visually rewarding fish in the freshwater hobby at their price point. They are gentle, slow-moving, and will not fin-nip anything. This guide covers tank setup, water parameters, diet, compatible tank mates, disease prevention, breeding, and long-term care for a fish that is also, quietly, endangered in its native Sri Lanka.
Best: Peaceful community schooler with stunning male coloration Budget: Under $5 per fish

Temperature
73–81°F

Min Tank Size
20 Gallons

pH Range
6.0–7.0

Lifespan
4–7 Years

Cherry Barb Origin: Sri Lankan Endemic with Vulnerable Status

Puntius titteya is native to the wet zone river basins of Sri Lanka, particularly the Kelani and Nilwala river drainages. These are shaded forest streams with soft, slightly acidic water, heavy leaf litter on the substrate, and low ambient light filtered through a dense canopy overhead.

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Cherry Barb: Peaceful Schooler with Brilliant Red Males

The IUCN lists the cherry barb as Vulnerable in the wild. Deforestation and agricultural runoff have reduced its natural range significantly since the 1980s.

Nearly all cherry barbs sold in the hobby today are captive-bred, most originating from farms in Sri Lanka, Czech Republic, and Southeast Asia.

Understanding their origin matters for two practical reasons. First, they are soft-water fish by evolution, and trying to keep them at pH 7.5 or in hard tap water will stress them long before it kills them.

Second, the captive-bred population is the species at this point. Good husbandry here is not abstract.

  • Native range: Wet zone rivers of Sri Lanka (Kelani, Nilwala, Kalu basins)
  • Wild status: Vulnerable (IUCN 3.1), habitat decline ongoing
  • Captive origin: Virtually 100% of hobby fish are farm-raised
  • Wild water: Soft, acidic, heavily shaded, low current
  • School behavior: Found in loose groups of 20–50 in natural streams

The behavioral shift between a solo cherry barb and a proper school of eight is stark. In the wild, these fish rely on group behavior for predator avoidance and spawning cue synchronization.

That pressure does not disappear in captivity.

Tank Setup for Cherry Barbs: 20 Gallons Is the Starting Point

A 20-gallon long is the minimum tank size for a school of six cherry barbs. The extra horizontal footprint of a long tank matters more than water volume here.

Cherry barbs swim at mid-level and need lateral space to move as a cohesive group.

Planted tanks are the right environment for this species. Dense vegetation along the back and sides gives individual fish visual refuge from one another, which reduces stress within the school even when no external threat exists.

Java fern, Cryptocoryne wendtii, and Amazon sword all work well in the soft, slightly acidic water this species prefers.

Floating plants are worth adding. Water sprite, frogbit, or salvinia cuts surface light and creates the dappled, dim environment that matches their native shaded streams.

Males kept under reduced lighting often show better color than those in brightly lit tanks, because they feel more secure.

Dark substrate amplifies the red of males visibly. Black sand or fine dark gravel reflects less ambient light than white or beige substrates.

This single change produces a measurable difference in how deep and saturated the males appear, particularly during breeding display.

Current should be gentle. Cherry barbs come from slow-moving forest streams and are not built for powerhead turbulence.

A sponge filter or a hang-on-back with a spray bar is better than a directional outlet pushing flow across the tank.

Water Parameters: Cherry Barbs Need Soft, Acidic Conditions

The target range for cherry barbs reflects their Sri Lankan origin: soft water, mild acidity, and warm but not hot temperatures. They tolerate a broader range than their native habitat in captivity, but they thrive and display best when kept within the ideal band.

Parameter Ideal Range Tolerance Limit
Temperature 75–79°F 73–81°F
pH 6.2–6.8 6.0–7.0
Hardness (GH) 4–10 dGH 2–15 dGH
Ammonia 0 ppm 0 ppm
Nitrite 0 ppm 0 ppm
Nitrate <15 ppm <25 ppm

Soft-water tanks lose buffering capacity faster than alkaline setups. A pH swing from 6.5 to 6.0 overnight is more stressful to cherry barbs than it would be to a fish living at pH 7.8, because the absolute acid load is higher relative to the buffer reserve.

NOTE
Cherry barbs are more sensitive to elevated nitrates than most community fish. Keep nitrates under 20 ppm through weekly 25% water changes and heavy planting. If your tap water is hard (above 15 dGH), cut it with RO or distilled water before adding it to the tank. Test pH and nitrates every two weeks even in a mature, planted system. Plants can suddenly uptake less in winter months with reduced light hours.

Indian almond leaves and driftwood both release tannins that soften water naturally and provide a mild pH buffer toward acidity. They also tint the water amber, which reduces light penetration and further replicates the blackwater stream environment these fish evolved in.

Diet: Cherry Barbs Accept Almost Anything, But Quality Matters

Cherry barbs are opportunistic omnivores. In Sri Lankan streams, they feed on small insects, algae, plant debris, and microinvertebrates.

In captivity, they eat nearly any food offered without hesitation.

A high-quality micro pellet or crushed flake is the right daily staple. Standard adult flake is often too large for juvenile cherry barbs.

Crush it between your fingers before feeding young fish. Adult cherry barbs handle whole small flakes without issue.

CARE TIP
Feed small amounts twice daily rather than one larger meal. Cherry barbs compete actively at feeding time, and two smaller sessions ensure subordinate fish in the school get adequate nutrition. The right portion is what the group consumes in two minutes. Uneaten food in a soft-water tank degrades chemistry faster than in buffered setups.

Supplement the diet two to three times per week with frozen or live food. Daphnia, baby brine shrimp, and micro worms are all accepted readily.

Live daphnia in particular triggers intense foraging behavior and visibly intensifies breeding coloration in males within a few days of regular feeding.

  • Daily staple: Micro pellet or crushed flake, high protein content
  • Frozen supplement: Daphnia, baby brine shrimp, micro bloodworms
  • Live food: Daphnia, micro worms, vinegar eels for fry
  • Avoid: Large pellets, high-fat foods, starchy kitchen scraps
  • Frequency: Twice daily, two-minute portions each session

Starchy or high-fat foods foul the water faster in soft, low-buffering-capacity tanks. Keep the diet protein-focused and the portions small.

Cherry Barb Tank Mates: Who Works and Who Does Not

Cherry barbs are among the safest fish in the freshwater hobby for community tanks. They do not nip fins, do not chase smaller fish, and retreat from confrontation rather than engaging it.

The compatibility problem runs the other direction: cherry barbs are small enough that larger or aggressive species prey on them or out-compete them for food.

✓ PROS
Completely peaceful with all non-aggressive species
Will not fin-nip any long-finned species
Compatible with other soft-water fish sharing pH 6.0–7.0
Males display breeding color in mixed groups: strong visual interest
Easy to house with bottom dwellers that occupy a different zone
✗ CONS
Too small and timid for tanks with semi-aggressive or aggressive species
Parameter mismatch with hard-water livebearers like mollies and platys
Shy in the presence of large, fast-moving fish
Require a school of 6+: solo or pair keeping causes chronic stress
Adult angelfish will prey on them

  • Neon tetras share soft, acidic water and occupy the same mid-level zone. One of the best pairings in the hobby.
  • Corydoras catfish occupy the bottom zone entirely, prefer soft water, and add a different dimension to the tank without competing with barbs at all.
  • Dwarf gouramis are similarly peaceful soft-water fish. Keep one male gourami per tank to avoid gourami-on-gourami aggression.

  • Zebra danios tolerate softer water and are peaceful, but their speed and energy can stress timid cherry barbs. Watch for signs of chronic hiding.
  • Guppies prefer harder water (pH 7.0–7.5, GH 10–20). They can coexist with cherry barbs at a pH compromise near 6.8–7.0, but neither species is at its best.
  • Betta fish share soft-water preferences, but an aggressive betta may attack the school. See our guide on tank mates for bettas for how to structure the tank if you try this combination. Use a 20-gallon planted tank and have a backup plan.

  • Platys need pH 7.0–8.2 and moderate to hard water. Keeping platys and cherry barbs at a compromise harms both species.
  • Angelfish will eat adult cherry barbs once they reach full size. Juvenile angels and cherry barbs coexist briefly, but the problem is predictable.
  • Tiger barbs are fin-nippers that harass slower, gentler fish. Cherry barbs kept with tiger barbs become stressed and hide constantly.

If you are building a 10-gallon community tank, cherry barbs are borderline on space. Six fish in 10 gallons works for a species-only setup, but the 20-gallon long is the better choice for any community configuration.

Cherry Barb Sexing: Males Display Brilliant Red, Females Stay Pale

Cherry barbs are one of the easiest freshwater fish to sex visually once they reach three to four months of age. The difference in adult coloration is dramatic.

  • Males: Deep crimson to burgundy body color, especially intense during breeding display. Dark lateral stripe runs from snout to tail base but is often obscured by the red pigmentation.
  • Females: Pale pinkish-brown body with a clear, dark lateral stripe running the length of the body. Rounder belly, especially when carrying eggs.
  • Juveniles: Both sexes look similar until about 12 weeks. The lateral stripe is visible on both, and coloration is uniformly pale.
  • Intensity variation: Male color deepens with age, better nutrition, darker substrate, and larger school size. A pale male is not necessarily a female.

Keep cherry barbs in a 2:1 ratio of females to males. A surplus of females distributes spawning harassment across the group and prevents any single female from being exhausted by persistent male attention.

WARNING
A single male kept with a single female will chase her relentlessly. Females kept in this configuration show visible stress signs: clamped fins, reduced feeding, and pale coloration. Always buy cherry barbs in groups, and always include more females than males. The minimum practical ratio is 2 females per 1 male.

Cherry Barb Breeding: Egg Scatterers That Spawn Without Intervention

Full Cherry Barb Breeding Guide

Cherry barbs are egg scatterers that will attempt to spawn in any well-planted tank without special intervention. The challenge is not triggering spawning.

It is saving enough fry to be worth the effort.

Males in breeding condition turn an intense burgundy-red and pursue females through the vegetation. Spawning typically occurs in the morning, with the male driving the female through fine-leaved plants while both release eggs and sperm simultaneously.

The eggs are small, slightly sticky, and transparent.

To trigger deliberate spawning: feed live or frozen food for one to two weeks, then perform a 25–30% water change with slightly cooler water and lower the pH toward 6.2. Males begin displaying within hours.

The spawning itself follows within one to two days.

  • Breeding tank: Separate 10-gallon with Java moss, hornwort, or a spawning mop as egg deposition sites
  • Trigger: Live food conditioning for one to two weeks, then a cool water change
  • Egg hatch time: 24–48 hours at 77°F
  • First fry food: Infusoria or liquid fry food for five days, then baby brine shrimp
  • Fry coloration: Juvenile sex coloration visible at 10–12 weeks
  • Adult removal: Move adults out of the breeding tank immediately after spawning concludes. Both parents eat eggs and fry without hesitation.

In a community tank without a separate breeding setup, fry survival is near zero. Dense java moss gives fry some refuge, but most are eaten within 24 hours.

A dedicated 10-gallon breeding setup with fine plants and no other inhabitants is the only reliable way to raise a meaningful number of fry.

Fry reach juvenile size at six weeks and adult coloration at three to four months. Males begin showing red tinting at about ten weeks.

Cherry barbs spawn readily enough that accidental breeding in a community tank is common. If you notice males displaying intensely and chasing females through the plants, expect eggs within a day or two.

A fine-leaved plant like Java moss in the corner gives eggs a small chance at surviving in a community setup.

Common Diseases and Health Risks in Cherry Barbs

Cherry barbs are reasonably hardy once settled into stable water, but their small body mass means they respond to water quality problems faster than larger community fish. A nitrate spike that a platy tolerates for a week will show on a cherry barb within two to three days as clamped fins and color loss.

Ich is the most common threat, particularly after introduction to a new tank. White salt-grain spots on the body and fins are the diagnostic sign.

At cherry barb scale, ich progresses quickly.

  • Ich: White spots on fins and body. Raise temperature to 82°F (tolerated briefly) and treat with half-dose copper medication. Their small size makes them more sensitive to full-dose medication than larger fish.
  • Fin rot: Frayed or dissolving fin edges. Almost always follows a water quality event. Test nitrates first. Clean water resolves mild cases without medication.
  • Velvet: Fine gold or rust-colored dust on the body, not discrete spots like ich. Spreads aggressively. Treat with medication and blackout the tank (velvet relies on light to complete its lifecycle).
  • Internal parasites: Cherry barbs that isolate from the school, lose color, and stop eating are frequently carrying internal parasites. Metronidazole-laced food treats most internal infections before they progress to fatal wasting.

Quarantine all new fish for two weeks before adding them to a cherry barb community. A separate 10-gallon quarantine tank is the single most effective disease prevention tool you can have.

The relationship between protocol and disease spread applies across all schooling fish at this size. The smaller the fish, the faster a disease outbreak moves through a group.

Lifespan and Long-Term Care: Cherry Barbs Live 4–7 Years

Cherry barbs live 4 to 7 years in a well-maintained planted aquarium. That range reflects the difference between minimum-care husbandry and optimized conditions.

Fish kept in the lower range of the temperature tolerance, in schools of exactly six, with infrequent water changes, tend toward the four-year end. Fish kept in schools of eight to ten, with weekly water changes and a planted tank, regularly hit six years and sometimes seven.

The most common cause of shortened lifespan is inadequate school size. A cherry barb kept solo or in a pair is chronically stressed.

Chronic stress suppresses immune function, reduces feeding motivation, and bleaches color in males within weeks.

Weekly water changes of 25–30% are non-negotiable in soft-water tanks. Low-buffering water loses stability fast between changes, especially in a system with biological load from a school of six or more fish.

  • Optimal school size: 8–10 produces visibly calmer, better-colored, longer-lived fish than the minimum six
  • Water changes: 25–30% weekly, temperature-matched and dechlorinated
  • Testing schedule: pH and nitrates every two weeks in a mature planted tank
  • Diet for longevity: Varied diet with regular live or frozen food supplements maintains color and immune function

Cherry barbs are listed as Vulnerable in the wild. Their range in Sri Lanka has contracted significantly due to deforestation and agricultural runoff.

The captive population is stable and self-sustaining, but that context gives the species some weight beyond its $3 price tag at the fish store.

THE BOTTOM LINE
Cherry barbs are the answer when someone wants a colorful, peaceful schooling fish that will not disrupt a community tank. Males in full breeding color are among the most striking fish available at this price point. The soft, acidic water requirement is the main constraint: it rules out pairing them with hard-water livebearers like mollies and platys. Build your tank around the cherry barb's parameters rather than trying to compromise, plant it heavily, keep nitrates below 20 ppm, and maintain a school of eight or more. The result is one of the most visually rewarding community setups available to a freshwater keeper at any budget.
Best: Peaceful community schooler with stunning male display Budget: $3–5 per fish, available at most fish stores
Six is the minimum for a functional school, but eight to ten produces noticeably calmer behavior and more intense male coloration. Fewer than six causes chronic stress that shortens lifespan and suppresses the red pigmentation males are known for.
No. Cherry barbs are among the most peaceful barbs available. Unlike tiger barbs or rosy barbs, they will not fin-nip and pose no threat to long-finned species like bettas, guppies, or fancy goldfish. This is one of the primary reasons they are recommended for community tanks.
Males are significantly redder than females, especially in breeding condition. Females are pale pinkish-brown with a clear, dark lateral stripe. The difference is subtle in juveniles under 12 weeks but becomes obvious at three to four months. Keep a 2:1 ratio of females to males to prevent spawning harassment.
With caution. Cherry barbs share soft-water preferences with bettas and will not fin-nip them. The risk runs the other direction: an aggressive betta may attack the school. Use a heavily planted 20-gallon tank minimum and monitor for the first two weeks. Have a separation plan ready if the betta fixates on the barbs.
Three causes account for most cases: school size too small (males display more intensely in larger groups), pale substrate reflecting too much light, and diet lacking live or frozen food. Address all three simultaneously: add fish to reach eight or more, switch to dark substrate, and add frozen daphnia to the weekly feeding rotation. Color improvement is usually visible within two to three weeks.
SOURCES & REFERENCES

1.
Puntius titteya conservation status and range decline in Sri Lanka
IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, Cyprinidae assessment, 2020 Journal

2.
Spawning behavior and egg development in ornamental Puntius species under captive conditions
Journal of Aquaculture Research and Development, Vol. 6, 2015 Journal

3.
Tropical freshwater ornamental fish: water quality requirements and husbandry guidelines
University of Florida IFAS Extension, FA-161, 2019 University

4.
Freshwater fish disease recognition and treatment in small-scale aquarium systems
Dr. Jessie Sanders, DVM, CertAqV, Aquatic Veterinary Services Expert