The Best LED Lights for Planted Aquariums
Light drives everything in a planted tank — growth, color, and unfortunately algae if you overdo it. After cross-referencing the 2Hr Aquarist and aquascaping community testing, these are the LED lights that actually grow plants and make a scape pop.
Top picks
Chihiros WRGB II Pro
Exceptional color rendering and very high PAR with a Bluetooth app — the enthusiast favorite for making reds and greens vivid.
Check price on AmazonFluval Plant 3.0
High PAR, the most intuitive app control, and wide availability — the best all-rounder for most planted tanks.
Check price on AmazonTwinstar S-Line
Premium build and a natural, rounded spectrum favored by competition aquascapers; pricier and simpler control.
Check price on AmazonHow much light do plants need?
More light is not better — it is the throttle that must be balanced with CO2 and nutrients. Too much light without enough CO2 is the number one cause of algae in new tanks. Start any of these lights low (40–50%) and a short photoperiod (6 hours), then increase slowly as plants establish.
For low-tech (no CO2) tanks, run lower intensity and choose easy plants. For high-tech carpets and red plants, you want the high PAR these lights deliver — paired with pressurized CO2.
Spectrum and color
WRGB lights (white, red, green, blue) like the Chihiros render plant colors far better than cheap white-only LEDs — reds actually look red, greens look lush. The Fluval Plant 3.0 and Twinstar achieve similar growth with slightly different aesthetics; it comes down to the look you prefer and how much you want to fiddle with the app.
All three are dimmable and programmable, which matters: a sunrise/sunset ramp looks beautiful and eases plants (and fish) through the day.
Bottom line
For most aquascapers the Chihiros WRGB II Pro is the pick for color and value; the Fluval Plant 3.0 is the easiest all-rounder; the Twinstar S-Line is the premium-build choice. Whichever you buy, start dim and short — controlling light is how you avoid algae.
FAQ
- Do I need CO2 to use these lights?
- Not for low-tech tanks at reduced intensity. But to use their full PAR for carpets and red plants, pair them with pressurized CO2.
- How long should the light be on?
- Start at ~6 hours a day and increase slowly. Long photoperiods on a new tank invite algae.
- Will these grow a carpet like Monte Carlo?
- Yes, at higher intensity with CO2 and good substrate. Without CO2, choose easier foreground plants.