How to Cycle a Saltwater Tank: The Complete Beginner Guide
Cycling is the single most important step in reefing, and the one most beginners rush. It is the process of growing the bacteria that turn toxic fish waste into harmless nitrate. Skip it and you will lose livestock; do it right and your reef starts on solid ground. Here is exactly how.
Top picks
Salifert Master Reef Combo
You cannot cycle blind — you need to track ammonia, nitrite and nitrate. Salifert is the hobby-standard kit.
Check price on AmazonBottled nitrifying bacteria
A bottled bacteria starter (Dr. Tim's, Fritz) seeds the cycle and can shave a week or two off the wait.
Check price on AmazonInstant Ocean Reef Crystals
Mix saltwater to 1.025 specific gravity with RODI water before you add anything to the tank.
Check price on AmazonThe nitrogen cycle in plain English
Fish waste and uneaten food release ammonia, which is toxic. One group of bacteria converts ammonia into nitrite (still toxic), and a second group converts nitrite into nitrate (mostly harmless, removed by water changes). "Cycling" simply means growing enough of both bacteria colonies to handle your tank's waste before livestock arrives.
You will watch this happen on your test kit: ammonia rises then falls to zero, nitrite rises then falls to zero, and nitrate climbs. When ammonia and nitrite both read zero, your tank is cycled.
Step by step
1) Mix saltwater with RODI water and salt to 1.025 specific gravity. 2) Add your rock and sand and get flow and a heater running at ~78°F. 3) Add an ammonia source — a few drops of pure ammonia to ~2 ppm, or a bottled bacteria starter plus a tiny pinch of food. 4) Test every 2–3 days. 5) When ammonia and nitrite both hit zero and you see nitrate, do a water change to bring nitrate down and you are ready for your first (hardy) fish.
Expect 2–6 weeks. Bottled bacteria and live rock speed it up; patience is still your best tool. Never add fish to "help" cycle — it is slower and cruel.
Bottom line
Cycling means growing bacteria until ammonia and nitrite both read zero — usually 2–6 weeks. Test every few days, use a bottled starter to speed it up, and do not rush livestock. A patient cycle is the foundation every healthy reef is built on.
FAQ
- How long does cycling take?
- Typically 2–6 weeks. Bottled nitrifying bacteria and quality live rock can shorten it.
- How do I know cycling is finished?
- When ammonia and nitrite both read 0 ppm and you measure nitrate. That means both bacteria colonies are established.
- Can I cycle with fish?
- Avoid it — "fish-in" cycling exposes livestock to toxic ammonia. Use pure ammonia or a bacteria starter instead.