Why Water Changes Don’t Always Cut Nitrates in Half in your Aquarium





For aquarists striving to maintain healthy, stable aquariums, controlling nitrate levels is a constant concern. While regular maintenance is essential, there is a persistent myth in the hobby: that a simple water change will greatly reduce nitrate levels in the tank. Although the maths appears straightforward, real-world conditions often tell a different story.





Prevention Comes First

The most reliable way to maintain low nitrate levels is to prevent excessive buildup in the first place. Over-stocking fish, over-feeding, and allowing organic waste to accumulate all contribute to rising nitrate concentrations. Once nitrate has accumulated, removing it becomes far more complicated than many hobbyists assume.


The “50% Water Change” Assumption

The logic behind large water changes seems sound. If an aquarium measures 60 ppm nitrate and you replace half the water, it feels reasonable to expect the level to drop to 30 ppm. After all, half the nitrate-laden water has been removed.

However, this assumption overlooks one critical factor: the nitrate content of the replacement water.

In many regions, tap water is not nitrate-free. For example, in parts of England, municipal tap water can contain around 22.8 mg L⁻¹ (approximately 22.8 ppm) nitrate. If you perform a 50% water change on a 60-litre aquarium with an initial reading of 60 ppm, you remove 30 litres of 60 ppm water—but you replace it with 30 litres of 22.8 ppm water.

Instead of cutting nitrate levels in half, you are diluting them only slightly. In this scenario, the total nitrate concentration would drop by roughly 7.2 ppm, leaving the aquarium at approximately 52.8 ppm—far from the expected 30 ppm. The reduction is modest, not dramatic.


Why Tap Water Matters

Municipal nitrate levels vary widely. Some rural areas report levels below 2 ppm, while other supplies may exceed 32 ppm. Without knowing the nitrate concentration of your source water, it is impossible to accurately predict the impact of a water change.

This variability means that routine maintenance, while important, can create a false sense of control. If your tap water already contains significant nitrate, large water changes may slow the rate of accumulation but will not resolve the underlying issue.


Smarter Nitrate Management

Understanding your water source is essential. Testing tap water directly allows you to calculate the true effect of a water change. In cases where tap nitrate is high, aquarists may consider alternative solutions such as:

  • Reducing bioload and feeding more conservatively
  • Increasing live plant mass
  • Using reverse osmosis (RO) water blended to the desired parameters
  • Employing nitrate-reducing filtration media

Ultimately, water changes remain a valuable maintenance tool—but they are not a magic solution. Effective nitrate control begins with prevention, informed testing, and realistic expectations.

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