Fishkeeping Time Commitment: A Realistic Weekly and Monthly Guide
One of the first questions new hobbyists ask is how much time an aquarium actually demands. The honest answer depends on your setup, but it is far less than most people fear. This fishkeeping time commitment guide gives you a realistic breakdown of weekly and monthly tasks so you can plan around your schedule. Gensou Aquascaping at 5 Everton Park, Singapore has helped hundreds of beginners set up tanks that fit busy lifestyles over more than 20 years.
Daily Tasks: Five Minutes or Less
Feeding your fish once or twice a day takes under a minute each time. While you are there, glance at the tank for anything unusual: a fish hiding when it is normally active, cloudy water, or a filter that has stopped flowing. This quick visual check is the single most effective habit in fishkeeping. It catches problems early when they are cheap and easy to fix. An automatic feeder handles feeding on days you are away, costing around $20-40 on Shopee.
Weekly Tasks: Thirty to Sixty Minutes
The weekly water change is the backbone of aquarium maintenance. For a typical 60-100 litre tank, draining 20-25 % of the water, treating the replacement water with dechlorinator, and refilling takes about 20-30 minutes. Add another 10 minutes for wiping algae off the glass with a magnetic cleaner and rinsing the filter sponge in old tank water once a month. In total, you are looking at roughly 30-45 minutes per week for a straightforward community setup.
Monthly Tasks: One to Two Hours
Once a month, test your water parameters with a liquid test kit: ammonia, nitrite, nitrate and pH. This takes about 15 minutes. Trim any overgrown plants, clean intake strainers, and check equipment like heaters and air pumps for wear. A planted tank with CO2 injection adds time for refilling the CO2 cylinder every six to eight weeks and adjusting the bubble count seasonally. Budget an extra 30-60 minutes on your monthly deep-clean day.
High-Tech Planted Tanks Need More Time
If you run a densely planted aquascape with pressurised CO2, high light and liquid fertiliser dosing, expect to spend an additional 15-20 minutes per week on trimming, replanting cuttings and adjusting nutrient levels. Competition-grade aquascapes can demand several hours during the initial growth-in phase when daily trimming shapes the layout. Once mature, maintenance drops to a predictable weekly routine. The reward is a living piece of art, but go in with realistic expectations about the first two months.
Shrimp Tanks: Less Feeding, More Monitoring
Shrimp-only tanks are lower maintenance in some ways and higher in others. Feeding is minimal, as shrimp graze on biofilm constantly. Water changes are smaller, around 10-15 % weekly, and must be done slowly to avoid parameter shock. The extra time goes into monitoring TDS, checking for berried females, and culling lower-grade specimens if you are breeding selectively. A single shrimp tank adds perhaps 20 minutes per week beyond basic maintenance.
Time-Saving Tips for Busy Hobbyists in Singapore
Invest in a Python-style water changer that connects directly to your kitchen or bathroom tap. It eliminates bucket carrying and cuts water-change time in half. Use a programmable light timer so you never have to remember to switch lights on and off. For HDB flat dwellers, a small rolling cart with your maintenance supplies stored underneath the tank stand saves trips back and forth. These small efficiencies compound over months and keep the hobby enjoyable rather than feeling like a chore.
When to Consider Professional Maintenance
If your schedule genuinely cannot accommodate 30-60 minutes per week, professional aquarium servicing is a practical option. In Singapore, monthly maintenance packages typically cost $150-350 depending on tank size and complexity. This covers water changes, filter servicing, plant care and health checks. Many hobbyists handle daily feeding themselves and outsource the heavier weekly and monthly tasks. There is no shame in it: the goal is to enjoy the aquarium, not to feel burdened by it.
Related Reading
- Fishkeeping for Couples: A Shared Hobby That Grows Together
- Fishkeeping for Seniors: A Gentle and Rewarding Hobby
- Top Fishkeeping Mistakes Beginners Make and How to Avoid Them
- Fishkeeping Mistakes That Kill Shrimp: Copper, pH Swings and More
- Fishkeeping on a Student Budget in Singapore: Affordable Setups
emilynakatani
Still Have Questions About Your Tank?
Drop by Gensou Aquascaping — most walk-in questions get answered in under 10 minutes by someone who has set up hundreds of tanks.
5 Everton Park #01-34B, Singapore 080005 · Open daily 11am – 8pm
