Top 10 Coldwater Aquarium Fish Roundup: Unheated Tank Picks

· emilynakatani · 4 min read
Top 10 Coldwater Aquarium Fish Roundup: Unheated Tank Picks

Singapore’s 28-32°C ambient means truly coldwater species (under 22°C) need a chiller — and the running cost rules them out for most flats. The top 10 coldwater aquarium fish below are reframed for local reality: these are unheated tropical species that thrive at 24-28°C without supplementary heating, plus a handful of true coldwater picks for chiller owners. This roundup from Gensou Aquascaping at 5 Everton Park is honest about which species actually work in HDB rooms versus which require active cooling. Pair with a chiller from the equipment range if you want fancy goldfish or hillstream loaches over the long term, and budget around SGD 30-40 monthly for the electricity that a 1/10 HP chiller consumes in continuous operation.

Chiller vs No-Chiller Reality Check

A 200-litre tank with a chiller maintaining 22°C against 30°C ambient draws roughly 200-300 watts continuously and adds SGD 50-80 monthly to the electricity bill at Singapore tariffs. Air-conditioned bedrooms set to 25°C reduce that load significantly but require the AC to run constantly. The honest baseline: no chiller means no truly coldwater species long-term, only unheated tropicals that tolerate the lower end of tropical ranges.

1. White Cloud Mountain Minnow (Tanichthys albonubes)

Tolerates 16-26°C — perfect for air-conditioned bedrooms or open HDB rooms with ceiling fans. 4cm, group of eight. SGD 2-3. Long-lived (5+ years) and breeds readily in cooler tanks.

2. Hillstream Loach (Sewellia lineolata)

Requires 20-24°C and high oxygen — chiller mandatory in SG. 6cm, group of six. SGD 12-25 at Iwarna. Pair with a strong powerhead and surface agitation; the species evolved in fast-flowing mountain streams and dies in stagnant warm water.

3. Ricefish/Medaka (Oryzias latipes)

Japanese pond minnow, hardy across 16-28°C, breeds prolifically. 4cm, group of eight. SGD 4-10 from Carousell breeders. Visible spawning in spring conditions and a wide range of orange, white and platinum colour morphs available locally.

4. Dojo/Weather Loach (Misgurnus anguillicaudatus)

Long-lived (10+ years), tolerates 18-26°C. 20cm adult, group of three, 150-litre tank. SGD 15-25. Climbs glass during atmospheric pressure drops — secure lid required.

5. Paradise Gourami (Macropodus opercularis)

Old-school labyrinth fish, tolerates 16-28°C. 8cm, single male or pair. SGD 8-15. Aggressive — solo or with hardy non-finnage tankmates only. One of the first ornamental fish kept in Europe historically.

6. Goldfish, Comet (Carassius auratus)

Hardy across 18-28°C but reaches 25cm — needs 200-litre+ tank. SGD 5-15 at C328 Clementi. Avoid in standard nano setups; comets are pond-scale fish that outgrow most flat-suitable aquariums.

7. Rosy Barb (Pethia conchonius)

Tolerates 18-26°C, active schooler. 7cm, group of six. SGD 3-6. Long-finned strains and standard short-fin both available; males develop ruby flanks during breeding season.

8. Native Rainbowfish (Melanotaenia praecox)

Hardy across 22-28°C, no heater needed in HDB rooms. 6cm, group of eight. SGD 6-12. Iridescent neon-blue flanks intensify under morning sunlight or strong daylight LEDs.

9. Zebra Danio (Danio rerio)

Wide range 18-26°C, active. 5cm, group of six. SGD 1-2. Survives unheated rooms better than tropical-only species and remains one of the most commonly stocked starter fish in Singapore.

10. Fancy Goldfish, Oranda (Carassius auratus)

Requires 20-24°C — chiller essential in Singapore. 15cm, 75-litre+ per fish. SGD 20-100 at specialist shops. Pair with the goldfish food range and oversize the filter to handle the heavy bioload. Use a QANVEE Bio Sponge Filter as biological backup alongside a canister. Ranchu, ryukin and telescope eye varieties share similar care needs and prices.

The most common goldfish failure in Singapore is keeping fancies in unheated, undersized tanks where temperatures climb to 30°C. The fish look listless, develop swim bladder problems, and die within a year. A 200-litre tank with a 1/4 HP chiller maintaining 22°C runs roughly SGD 60 monthly in electricity but creates conditions where orandas live 10-15 years and develop the full headgrowth that defines the variety. Honest stocking advice: if a chiller is not in your budget, stick to the unheated tropicals at the top of this list rather than fighting biology with fancy goldfish.

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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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