Fish Tank Glass Calculator
Planning to build your own aquarium? Use our free glass thickness calculator to determine the minimum safe glass thickness for your tank based on dimensions, water height, and safety factor. Avoid leaks, bowing, or catastrophic failure — build with confidence.
📐 Calculate Required Glass Thickness
Total glass height (water will be 1‑2″ less)
Actual water column height (bottom to surface)
🔹 Recommended Glass Thickness: -- mm
🔹 Equivalent inches: -- inches (approx.)
🔹 For bottom panel (tempered recommended): -- mm
* Calculation uses industry‑standard formula derived from water pressure and glass tensile strength. Always consult a professional for very large tanks.
What Is a Fish Tank Glass Calculator?
A fish tank glass calculator helps DIY aquarium builders determine the minimum safe glass thickness for the walls and bottom of a tank. It uses the tank’s dimensions (length, height, water depth) and a safety factor to compute how thick the glass must be to withstand water pressure without bowing or breaking.
Whether you’re building a small 10-gallon nano or a large 200-gallon custom reef, using the correct glass thickness prevents costly leaks, structural failure, and potential injury from broken glass.
Why Glass Thickness Matters – Safety First
Water Pressure Increases with Depth
The deeper the water, the greater the pressure on the bottom of the glass. A taller tank requires thicker glass even if the length is the same.
Glass Bowing
Thin glass will bow outward under pressure, eventually weakening the silicone seals and causing leaks.
Catastrophic Failure
If glass thickness is too low, a side panel can crack or the bottom can blow out, releasing hundreds of gallons of water into your home.
Long-term Reliability
Proper thickness ensures the tank remains safe for a decade or more.
How Aquarium Glass Thickness Is Calculated
Our calculator uses a modified version of the standard aquarium engineering formula, which has been validated by decades of DIY builds and commercial tank manufacturers. The formula is:
But for simplicity, we use an empirical approximation: t = √(0.00037 × waterDepth_in × length_in × SF)
- Water depth – the actual height of water (inches)
- Length – the longest unsupported panel length (inches)
- Safety factor (SF) – multiplier for unknown stresses (3.8–5.0)
- Glass tensile strength – 19 MPa for float, 40 MPa for tempered
The result is rounded up to the nearest standard glass thickness (4mm, 6mm, 8mm, 10mm, 12mm, 15mm, 19mm).
Factors That Affect Glass Thickness Requirements
- Tank height (water depth): The single most important factor – a 24″ tall tank needs much thicker glass than a 12″ tall tank of the same length.
- Length of unsupported glass: Longer front/back panels bow more, requiring thicker glass or bracing.
- Safety factor: Rimless tanks use a higher safety factor (4.5+) because there is no top brace to reduce flex.
- Glass type: Tempered glass is about twice as strong as annealed glass, but it cannot be drilled after tempering.
- Edge quality: Polished, ground edges reduce stress risers.
Common Glass Types Used in Aquariums
Our calculator supports both float and tempered glass. For the bottom panel, we strongly recommend tempered glass.
Rimless vs Braced Aquariums – How It Affects Glass Thickness
Rimless (no top frame) tanks have no support at the top edge. The glass must be thicker to prevent bowing. For rimless tanks, select a safety factor of 4.5 or higher in our calculator.
Braced aquariums use a plastic rim or glass eurobrace that reduces panel flex. You can use a lower safety factor (3.8) with the same dimensions.
Many DIY builders add a eurobrace (a strip of glass around the top perimeter) to reduce required thickness, especially for tanks over 100 gallons.
Common Aquarium Building Mistakes (And How to Avoid Them)
- Using glass that is too thin: Always round up to the next standard thickness.
- Forgetting to temper the bottom panel: A rock dropped on float glass can crack it; tempered is much safer.
- Poor joint preparation: Glass edges must be clean and flat. Use 100% silicone aquarium sealant (not hardware store silicone).
- Ignoring water weight: Also calculate total weight using our Aquarium Weight Calculator to ensure your stand can support it.
- No leveling mat: Always place the tank on a foam leveling mat to distribute pressure evenly.
Safety Tips for DIY Aquarium Builders
- Wear safety glasses and gloves when handling glass.
- Test the tank outdoors or in a garage for 24‑48 hours before moving indoors.
- Use a leak test with only 1‑2 inches of water first, then gradually fill.
- Reinforce with eurobracing for tanks longer than 48″ or taller than 24″.
- Consult an aquarium builder for tanks larger than 200 gallons.
Practical Examples: Small, Medium & Large Aquariums
🐟 Small (20 gallon long): 30″L × 12″W × 12″H (water depth 11″) → recommended thickness: 6mm float glass sides, 6mm tempered bottom. Safety factor 3.8 is fine.
🐠 Medium (75 gallon): 48″L × 18″W × 21″H (water depth 19″) → requires 10mm sides, 12mm tempered bottom. Use eurobrace for safety.
🦈 Large (180 gallon): 72″L × 24″W × 24″H (water depth 22″) → needs 15mm float glass sides, 19mm tempered bottom. Must have eurobrace and possibly cross braces.
Always use our calculator with your exact dimensions.
Frequently Asked Questions
📚 Related Calculators for Your Aquarium Project
Fish Tank Volume
Empty tank capacity in gallons/liters.
Actual Water Volume
Volume after substrate & decorations.
Aquarium Weight
Total weight (water + glass + stand).
Gravel Calculator
Substrate amount for desired depth.
Heater Size
Wattage based on water volume.
Filter Size
Flow rate (GPH) for your tank.
Build Safe, Build Smart
Before you cut glass or order a custom tank, always calculate the required thickness, tank volume, total weight, and filtration needs. Use our suite of aquarium calculators to plan every aspect of your build — from glass thickness to heater size. A well‑planned tank means decades of enjoyment without accidents.