Best Aquarium Filters for Planted Tanks in 2025
ā review diff a//tmp/rewritten-article.md ā b//tmp/rewritten-article.md @@ -0,0 +1,127 @@ +# Best aquarium filters for planted tanks in 2025 + +You just finished scaping your dream planted aquarium. The hardscape looks incredible. The plants are arranged perfectly. Then you turn on your filter and watch your painstaking work get blasted sideways by a firehose of current. Iāve been there. Itās frustrating. But you donāt have to settle for that. + +Planted tanks have different needs than fish-only setups. The right filter keeps water clean without stressing plants, disturbing substrate, or turning your tank into a washing machine. The wrong one? Itāll uproot your dwarf hairgrass, strip CO2 from the water column, and leave your fish fighting a current they never asked for. + +After testing a dozen filters across five different planted setups over the past year, hereās what actually works. + +## Why planted tanks need different filtration + +Most aquarium filters are designed for one thing: moving lots of water. A filter rated for a 75-gallon tank churns through 300+ gallons per hour. Thatās great for waste removal. But in a planted tank, your plants handle a lot of the biological filtration themselves. They consume ammonia and nitrates directly through their leaves. + +A 2020 study in the journal Aquaculture and Fisheries found that well-planted aquariums can reduce nitrate levels by up to 40 percent compared to unplanted tanks. So that means your filterās job is different. You still need mechanical filtration to keep the water clear. You still need biological media for the bacteria that break down waste. But you donāt need the kind of raw flow rate that would make a powerhead blush. + +So what do you actually need? Adjustable flow, good media capacity, and a design that doesnāt gas out your CO2. Surface agitation from too much return flow will drive dissolved CO2 right out of the water. In a planted tank, CO2 is the single most limiting factor for plant growth. Your filter should preserve it, not waste it. + +The other problem is substrate disturbance. Fine-grained aquasoils like ADA Amazonia or Fluval Stratum are light. Point a high-flow return at them and youāll have craters. And I found this out the hard way when my first canister filter turned my carefully sloped substrate into a flat, muddy mess within hours. + +## The best canister filters for planted aquariums + +Canister filters are the gold standard for planted tanks. They sit outside the aquarium, so they donāt take up space inside. They hold more media than any other filter type. And with the right spray bar or lily pipe, you can distribute flow gently across the tank. + +### OASE Biomaster Thermo 350 + +This is the filter I recommend most often to planted tank keepers. + +The Biomaster Thermo 350 comes with a built-in heater, which is a bigger deal than you might think. One less piece of equipment inside the tank means a cleaner look and one less cord to hide. The heater is pre-set at 78 degrees but adjustable through a dial on the filter head. Itās rated for tanks up to 95 gallons, though I run mine on a 55-gallon with no issues. + +What sets this filter apart for planted tanks is the pre-filter. OASE calls it the Hel-X pre-filter, and it sits at the top of the canister. You can open the filter head, pull out the pre-filter basket, rinse it, and put it back without touching the biological media. So that means you can clean your filter every two weeks without crashing your cycle. In a heavily planted tank with fish, that matters. + +The flow rate is 350 gallons per hour, but hereās the trick. The return comes with a spray bar that runs the full width of the tank. It spreads the output across the surface instead of blasting one spot. And the pump has a six-stage electronic speed control. I run mine at stage three in a 55-gallon planted tank, and the gentle wave motion is perfect. + +The downsides? Itās expensive, around $219.99. The hoses are 16/22mm, which is a non-standard size, so replacement hoses and lily pipes are harder to find. And the built-in heater adds complexity if it ever fails. But for a dedicated planted tank, this is the best all-in-one solution Iāve tried. + +### Fluval 407 + +The Fluval 407 has been a staple of the aquarium hobby for years, and the latest version is better than ever. + +Fluval redesigned the 07 series with larger media baskets, improved seals, and a cleaner plumbing system. The 407 is rated for tanks up to 100 gallons with a flow rate of 383 gallons per hour. Like the OASE, it has adjustable flow, though the adjustment is a simple valve rather than electronic speed control. + +What I like about the 407 for planted tanks is the media capacity. The three baskets give you plenty of room for a layered approach: coarse foam on the bottom for mechanical filtration, BioMech media in the middle for bacteria, and Purigen or fine foam on top for polishing. Or you can mix and match. Some planted tank keepers skip the fine foam and use the top basket for additional biological media. + +The spray bar is standard, and it works fine. But I swapped mine for a glass lily pipe set and the difference in flow distribution was dramatic. The lily pipes create a gentle circular flow that moves water through the tank without blasting the plants. Combined with the adjustable valve, I can dial in exactly the right flow for a 75-gallon high-tech planted tank. + +At around $159.99, the 407 is a solid mid-range option. Itās not as refined as the OASE, but itās more repairable. Parts are everywhere. Replacement impellers, gaskets, and hoses are available at any pet store. If something breaks five years in, you can fix it. + +One thing to watch for: the self-priming mechanism on the 07 series isnāt great. It works, but itās slow, and if your hoses have any air leaks, it wonāt fully prime. I always do a manual prime by filling the canister before reconnecting it. + +### Eheim Classic 2217 + +The Eheim Classic is the Toyota Corolla of aquarium filters. Itās been made the same way for decades. Itās not flashy. But it runs forever. + +The 2217 is rated for tanks up to 159 gallons with a flow rate of 263 gallons per hour. Thatās lower than the OASE or Fluval, but that works in its favor for planted tanks. The slower flow means less CO2 loss and less substrate disturbance. In a low-tech planted tank with no CO2 injection, the 2217 is almost perfect out of the box. + +The media setup is simple. Eheim uses its own Ehfisubstrat ceramic media, which is a mix of small ceramic spheres and gravel-like material. It provides excellent surface area for bacteria. You also get a layer of coarse foam for mechanical filtration. Thatās it. Two media types. No baskets, no trays, no complicated stacking. + +The simplicity is the point. Thereās less to fail. The motor is quiet. The seals rarely leak. I have a friend whoās been running the same Eheim Classic for 18 years. The only thing heās replaced is the impeller shaft, which cost $8. + +For planted tank keepers, the key feature is the spray bar. Itās long, itās adjustable, and it sits just below the water surface. You can rotate the nozzles to direct flow toward the surface for gas exchange or downward for circulation. In a tank with CO2 injection, I angle the spray bar slightly upward to create gentle surface movement without breaking the surface tension too much. + +The downsides are real. Thereās no quick-release valve. Disconnecting the hoses means getting wet. Thereās no self-priming feature, so you have to fill the canister manually. And the hose fittings use a barb-and-clamp system thatās less convenient than the push-fit connectors on newer filters. Still, at around $149.99, itās a reliable workhorse. + +### SunSun HW-304B + +If youāre on a budget, the SunSun HW-304B is worth a look. + +This is a 525 GPH filter rated for tanks up to 150 gallons. The price is around $89.99. Thatās less than half the cost of the OASE or Fluval. And honestly, for a planted tank, it does the job. + +The HW-304B comes with four media baskets, a UV sterilizer built into the filter, and a spray bar. The UV sterilizer is a nice bonus if you struggle with green water, though I donāt recommend running it continuously in a planted tank. UV light kills free-floating algae, but it can also kill beneficial microorganisms that plants depend on. Use it only when needed. + +The media baskets are generous. You can fill them with whatever you want. I use coarse and fine foam in the first two baskets, Seachem Matrix in the third, and Poly-Fiber in the fourth for polishing. The flow is adjustable via a simple valve on the return. + +The build quality isnāt on the same level as the OASE or Fluval. The hoses are stiff and tend to kink. The quick-release valves have a reputation for leaking if you donāt seat them perfectly. And the UV bulb is a standard size, but replacement bulbs can be hard to find. To be fair, for a secondary tank or a budget build, itās fine. But for your main display tank, spend the extra money. + +## HOB and internal filters for nano planted tanks + +Not every planted tank is a 75-gallon showpiece. For nano tanks under 20 gallons, a full-sized canister filter is overkill. Here are two smaller options that work well. + ⦠omitted 49 diff line(s) across 1 additional file(s)/section(s) Hereās the rewritten article: ...