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Start Here: Fix Your Tank, Save Your Fish

Whether your fish are dying right now or you just want to do this right from day one, this page sends you to the exact help you need — in plain English, with zero jargon.

✓ Join 2,000+ aquarium keepers learning to rescue and grow healthy tanks.

Do it right from day one

The Beginner Aquarium Success Roadmap

Five steps take you from “I just bought a tank” to “my fish are thriving.” Follow them in order — most fish deaths happen when a step gets skipped.

1
Understand the Nitrogen Cycle

The single concept that makes or breaks every tank. Learn what ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate are — and why they matter.

Learn the cycle →
2
Set Up & Cycle Your Tank

Get your filter, heater, and lights running, then cycle the tank before fish go in. Patience here prevents 90% of beginner disasters.

See the setup guide →
3
Test Your Water

A test kit is your most important tool. Learn the 5 numbers to track and the safe range for each.

Get the tools →
4
Add Fish Slowly

Acclimate properly and stock gradually so your filter can keep up. Choose beginner-friendly species.

Browse beginner fish →
5
Maintain With a Weekly Routine

Small, regular care beats big emergency fixes. Get the simple weekly routine that keeps water healthy.

Get the free checklist →

Learn from these

The Most Common Fishkeeping Mistakes

Almost every beginner makes at least three of these. Spotting them early saves fish — and money.

  • Skipping the cycle

    Adding fish to a brand-new, uncycled tank floods them with ammonia.

    Fix: cycle first, or do frequent water changes while it cycles.
  • Overstocking

    Too many fish overwhelm the filter and crash water quality.

    Fix: stock slowly and research adult sizes.
  • Overfeeding

    Uneaten food rots into ammonia — the #1 avoidable killer.

    Fix: feed only what they eat in ~2 minutes.
  • Not testing water

    You can’t see ammonia or nitrite until fish are already suffering.

    Fix: test weekly with a liquid test kit.
  • Forgetting dechlorinator

    Tap-water chlorine kills fish and your good bacteria.

    Fix: treat every drop of new water.
  • Adding too many fish at once

    A sudden bioload spike overwhelms a young filter.

    Fix: add a few at a time, a week or two apart.

Who we are

About DBC Aquatics

DBC Aquatics exists for one reason: to help beginner and intermediate aquarium keepers stop losing fish to problems they could have fixed. Founder Ben started DBC after losing fish he didn’t have to — and couldn’t find a single, clear place that explained what to actually do. Today, DBC Aquatics turns confusing fishkeeping into simple, tested steps anyone can follow. No jargon. No guesswork. Just healthier water and happier fish.

Good questions

Beginner Aquarium FAQ

I’m a complete beginner — where do I actually start?

Start with the Roadmap above. Work through it in order: understand the nitrogen cycle, set up and cycle your tank, test your water, add fish slowly, then maintain a weekly routine. If you only do one thing today, download the free checklist.

My fish are dying right now. What should I do first?

Don’t add random chemicals. Test your water (ammonia, nitrite, pH, temperature), do a 25–50% dechlorinated, temperature-matched water change if you find ammonia or nitrite, and increase aeration. Then head to the Rescue Hub and match your exact symptom.

How long does it take to set up a healthy aquarium?

Plan for 2–6 weeks to fully “cycle” a new tank before it’s safe for a full stock of fish. It feels slow, but rushing this step is the most common cause of early fish deaths.

Do I really need to test my water?

Yes. The things that kill fish — ammonia and nitrite — are invisible. A simple liquid test kit is the single most valuable tool you can own, and it pays for itself the first time it catches a problem early.

How often should I do water changes?

For most freshwater tanks, 20–30% once a week. During an emergency or while cycling, change water more often. Always dechlorinate and temperature-match the new water.

What’s the most common beginner mistake?

Overfeeding and skipping the cycle, tied. Both flood the tank with ammonia. Feed less than you think, and never add a full stock of fish to a brand-new tank.

Your healthiest tank starts with one step.

Pick your problem, follow the roadmap, or grab the free checklist — whatever you need right now, it’s one tap away.