Best Breeding Boxes and Nets for Aquariums

· emilynakatani · 11 min read
Best Breeding Boxes and Nets for Aquariums

Table of Contents

Why You Need a Breeding Box

Finding the best breeding box aquarium solution can mean the difference between a successful spawn and losing every last fry to hungry tank mates. Breeding boxes, nets and isolation chambers give vulnerable fish and shrimp a protected space inside or alongside the main tank, allowing fry to grow large enough to survive before being released into the community.

At Gensou, our shop at 5 Everton Park has served Singapore’s aquarium hobbyists for over 20 years, and breeding enquiries are among our most common. Whether you keep guppies, bettas, Corydoras or Caridina shrimp, this guide covers every type of breeding enclosure so you can choose the right one for your livestock and tank setup.

When to Use a Breeding Box or Net

Protecting Livebearer Fry

Guppies, mollies, platies and swordtails give birth to free-swimming fry that are immediately at risk of predation — including from their own parents. Moving a gravid female into a breeding box shortly before she drops allows the fry to fall through a partition into a safe compartment below.

Isolating Egg-Laying Pairs

For species like bettas or Apistogramma, a breeding box can serve as a temporary isolation chamber to condition a pair before moving them to a dedicated breeding tank. It also allows you to observe courtship behaviour without committing a full tank.

Shrimp Berried Females

While shrimp are generally not at risk from their own colony, moving a berried female to a box can protect her from aggressive tank mates or allow you to separate a specific colour line for selective breeding.

Quarantine and Recovery

Breeding boxes double as quarantine and hospital chambers. A sick or injured fish can be isolated for treatment without setting up a separate tank, and medication can be dosed directly into the box if it has its own water circulation.

Fry Grow-Out

Once fry are born, a breeding box or net provides a safe nursery where you can target-feed with baby brine shrimp or powdered food without the offerings being consumed by adults in the main tank.

Key Buying Criteria

Size and Capacity

Bigger is almost always better. A cramped breeding box stresses fish and limits water volume, making temperature and water quality harder to maintain. For livebearers, choose a box that is at least 1.5 litres; for larger species, 3 litres or more is preferable.

Water Circulation

Stagnant water inside a breeding box leads to low oxygen levels and waste accumulation. The best designs allow water from the main tank to flow through the box via mesh panels, pump-fed circulation or airlift-driven exchange.

Fry Separation Mechanism

Livebearer breeding boxes often include a V-shaped or slotted divider that lets newborn fry slip through to a lower compartment while keeping the mother above. Check that the slot width is appropriate for your species — guppy fry are much smaller than swordtail fry.

Material Quality

Look for smooth, burr-free plastic or fine-mesh netting. Rough edges can injure fish, and coarse mesh can trap tiny fry. Transparent materials make observation easier and cause less stress to the fish inside.

Mounting Method

Consider how the box attaches to your tank. Hang-on designs clip to the rim, in-tank boxes use suction cups, and net breeders have rigid frames that rest on the tank edge. Ensure the mounting method is compatible with your tank’s rim style (rimless, braced, or framed).

Ease of Cleaning

Fry produce waste, and uneaten food accumulates quickly in a small space. Choose a box with removable panels or wide openings that make it easy to siphon debris without disturbing the occupants.

Hang-On Breeding Boxes

Hang-on breeding boxes mount externally on the side of the tank, with water circulated by a small air pump through inlet and outlet tubes.

Advantages

  • Do not take up space inside the tank
  • Air-driven circulation keeps water fresh and oxygenated
  • Easy to observe from the side and top
  • Larger models (2–3 litres) provide ample room

Disadvantages

  • Require an air pump and tubing
  • Water temperature inside the box can differ from the main tank
  • Not suitable for rimless tanks without modification
  • Airline tubing can become clogged with biofilm over time

Best For

Livebearer breeding, fry grow-out and short-term isolation. The external position makes feeding and cleaning convenient, and the air-driven flow keeps oxygen levels high.

In-Tank Breeding Boxes

In-tank boxes sit inside the aquarium, held in place by suction cups or clips. Water exchanges passively through mesh or perforated panels.

Advantages

  • Maintain the same temperature as the main tank
  • No external equipment required (no air pump needed)
  • Simple installation — just attach suction cups to the glass
  • Available in many sizes for different species

Disadvantages

  • Occupy space inside the display tank
  • Passive water flow may be insufficient in low-circulation tanks
  • Suction cups can lose grip, especially in humid conditions
  • Smaller models can stress fish due to limited swimming room

Best For

Quick isolation, shrimp separation and small fry protection. In-tank boxes are the most popular choice in Singapore due to their simplicity and low cost.

Net Breeders and Mesh Enclosures

Net breeders consist of a rigid plastic or stainless-steel frame wrapped in fine mesh netting. They hang from the tank rim and sit partially submerged.

Advantages

  • Excellent water circulation through the mesh on all sides
  • Lightweight and easy to move between tanks
  • Collapsible designs store flat when not in use
  • Large surface area relative to rigid boxes

Disadvantages

  • Mesh can snag on fish spines or shrimp legs
  • Algae growth on the netting reduces water flow over time
  • Less durable than rigid plastic boxes
  • Not suitable for very small fry that can squeeze through the mesh

Best For

Medium-sized fry (Corydoras, cichlid fry), temporary holding during tank maintenance, and conditioning breeding pairs. Net breeders offer the best water quality of any breeding enclosure because the mesh allows unrestricted flow.

Dedicated Isolation and Nursery Tanks

When a breeding box is not large enough, a separate nursery tank is the next step. Even a small 20-litre tank with a sponge filter and heater provides far more space and stability than any in-tank enclosure.

Advantages

  • Maximum space and stable water parameters
  • Can be customised with substrate, plants and hides
  • Allows targeted feeding and medication without affecting the main tank
  • Essential for serious breeders producing large batches of fry

Disadvantages

  • Requires additional equipment (filter, heater, light)
  • Takes up physical space in your home
  • Higher ongoing maintenance and electricity cost
  • Needs its own nitrogen cycle

Best For

Dedicated breeders, species that produce large spawns, and any situation where fry need to be raised for several weeks before being introduced to the main tank.

Breeding Box Type Comparison

Feature Hang-On Box In-Tank Box Net Breeder Nursery Tank
Typical Volume 1–3 litres 0.5–2 litres 1–5 litres 10–40 litres
Water Circulation Active (air-driven) Passive (mesh panels) Excellent (open mesh) Independent filter
Temperature Stability Moderate (external) Excellent (in-tank) Excellent (in-tank) Independent heater
Space Inside Tank None Some Some Separate tank
Typical Cost S$8–S$25 S$5–S$15 S$5–S$20 S$30–S$100+
Ease of Cleaning Easy Moderate Moderate (mesh scrubbing) Standard tank maintenance
Best For Livebearers, fry grow-out Quick isolation, shrimp Medium fry, conditioning Serious breeding

Recommendations by Species

Guppies, Mollies, Platies

A hang-on breeding box with a fry separator is the classic choice. Move the gravid female in when her gravid spot darkens and her belly becomes noticeably squared. Remove the mother promptly after she drops to prevent her from eating the fry.

Bettas

Use an in-tank box or net breeder to isolate the male with his bubble nest. After spawning, remove the female and let the male tend the eggs. Once fry are free-swimming, remove the male and raise the fry in the breeding box or a dedicated nursery tank.

Corydoras and Small Catfish

Collect eggs and place them in a net breeder or hang-on box with gentle aeration. Methylene blue can be added to prevent fungal growth. Once hatched, keep fry in the enclosure until they are large enough to avoid predation.

Caridina and Neocaridina Shrimp

In-tank boxes with fine mesh panels work well for isolating berried females or separating colour morphs. Ensure the mesh is fine enough to contain newborn shrimplets, which are extremely small. Alternatively, a small dedicated tank is often the better long-term approach for shrimp breeding programmes.

Cichlids

Large net breeders (5 litres or more) are useful for temporarily holding mouthbrooding females or newly released fry. For prolific species like convict cichlids, a nursery tank is almost essential to manage the number of offspring.

Singapore Availability and Buying Tips

Local Fish Shops

Most aquarium shops in Singapore stock basic in-tank breeding boxes and net breeders. Popular areas for aquarium shopping include Thomson Road, Clementi, and Pasir Ris Farmway. Prices are generally competitive, and you can inspect the build quality before buying.

Online Marketplaces

Shopee and Lazada offer a wide selection of breeding boxes, including hang-on models with air-pump circulation that may not be stocked in every local shop. Compare prices and check seller ratings — shipping from overseas warehouses can take one to two weeks.

DIY Options

Resourceful hobbyists in Singapore often make their own breeding boxes using plastic containers, mesh from fabric shops and suction cups from hardware stores. A simple DIY box can be assembled for under S$5 and customised to fit any tank.

Bulk Buying for Breeding Racks

If you run a breeding rack system with multiple tanks, buying breeding boxes in bulk from wholesale suppliers or online platforms can reduce per-unit cost significantly. Some local importers offer discounts for orders of 10 or more units.

Visit Gensou

We stock a curated selection of breeding boxes and accessories at our 5 Everton Park shop. Our team can recommend the right enclosure for your species and tank setup, drawing on more than 20 years of breeding and aquascaping experience.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long should fry stay in a breeding box?

Keep fry in the breeding box until they are large enough to avoid being eaten by adult fish in the main tank. For guppies, this is typically two to three weeks; for larger species, it may take four to six weeks. Transfer fry to a nursery tank if they outgrow the box before they are ready for the community.

Can I keep a breeding box in the tank permanently?

You can, but it is not ideal. A permanently installed box reduces swimming space, collects algae and detritus, and may stress the community fish. Use breeding boxes as temporary tools and remove them when they are no longer needed.

Do breeding boxes stress pregnant fish?

Confinement can stress livebearers, especially in small boxes. Minimise stress by using the largest box practical, maintaining good water flow, providing a small amount of floating plant cover inside the box, and limiting the time the female spends confined. Move her in only when birth is imminent.

What is the best breeding box for shrimp?

An in-tank box with very fine mesh (0.5 mm or smaller) is ideal for shrimp. The mesh must be tight enough to contain newborn shrimplets, which can be as small as 2 mm. Hang-on boxes with air-pump circulation also work but ensure the intake slots are fine enough to prevent escapes.

Related Reading

Conclusion

Choosing the best breeding box aquarium setup depends on the species you breed, the size of your tank and how many fry you expect to raise. Hang-on boxes excel for livebearers, in-tank boxes suit quick isolation tasks, net breeders offer superior water circulation, and dedicated nursery tanks remain the gold standard for serious breeders. In Singapore, all of these options are readily available and affordable.

Whatever your breeding goals, Gensou is here to support you. With over two decades of hands-on experience, we understand what works in Singapore’s tropical conditions and can guide you towards the right equipment.

Start your breeding project today. Reach out to us for advice, explore our online shop for breeding accessories, or enquire about a custom aquarium designed with breeding in mind.

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

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