Recommended Reef Tank Equipment – Complete Beginner Setup Under $500

A reef tank does not need to be expensive to be stable. The most common beginner mistake is not underspending – it is underspending on the wrong things while overspending on things that do not affect water quality or coral health. This page shows you exactly what a complete, functional beginner reef tank costs when you buy smart: where $500 goes, what each item does, and the two places where spending a little more than the minimum actually prevents expensive problems down the line. Looking for the best reef tank kits for beginners? Read on for detailed recommendations.

This build is designed around a 20-gallon AIO reef tank – the recommended starting size for most beginners. Large enough to provide meaningful stability, small enough to keep manageable on any budget.

For the full explanation of what each piece of equipment does and why it matters: Recommended Reef Tank Equipment Guide
For the complete itemized checklist with quantities by tank size: Reef Tank Equipment List


The Complete Under-$500 Build – 20-Gallon AIO Reef Tank

Best Reef Tank Kits for Beginners

ItemRecommended PickEst. CostNotes
AIO Tank + StandCoralife BioCube 29 or Innovative Marine Nuvo 20$200–$260The BioCube 29 is the best value AIO at this price point – stand included, built-in rear chamber, and 29 gallons of water volume for the stability benefit. The IM Nuvo 20 is a step up in build quality at a slightly higher price. Either is a solid starting tank.
Reef LED LightKessil A80$130–$150This is where the budget build spends more than the minimum – on purpose. A $40 fixture cannot grow most corals. The Kessil A80 is the lowest-price reef light that produces genuine coral-grade PAR output. It covers tanks up to 18×18 inches, fits a 20-gallon footprint well, and has a two-knob interface (color and intensity) that needs no app or programming to use. It is the right light for this build. See: Best Reef Tank Lights for Beginners
Heater ×2Eheim Jager 50W ×2$25–$35 each ($50–$70 total)The second place where this build spends on reliability, not just price. Two heaters at 50W each for a 20-gallon tank – the two-heater strategy means if one sticks on, the tank cannot overheat beyond what one 50W heater can produce. A stuck-on single heater is one of the fastest ways to lose an entire tank. The Eheim Jager has been a reliable standard in the hobby for decades. See: Best Reef Tank Heaters for Beginners
WavemakerJebao SLW-5$25–$35Up to 530 GPH, slim profile, fits the rear chamber or mounts on the tank wall. Excellent flow for the price. Buy a spare impeller ($5) when you order it – Jebao units occasionally need impeller replacement and having a spare on hand means a 2-minute fix instead of a week without flow. See: Best Reef Tank Pumps for Beginners
RefractometerAny ATC optical refractometer$15–$20Calibrate with RODI water before first use. Target salinity: 1.025–1.026 SG. Do not use a swing-arm hydrometer – they are inaccurate and not appropriate for a reef tank.
Test KitsAPI Saltwater Master Kit$25–$35Tests ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, and pH. Accurate enough for cycling and routine monitoring. Add a Salifert Alkalinity kit ($15–$22) before corals go in. See: Reef Tank Water Testing Guide
Reef Salt MixReef Crystals (50-gallon bucket)$35–$45Reliable reef-formulated salt with trace elements. One 50-gallon bucket fills a 20-gallon tank twice and covers the first 3–4 months of bi-weekly water changes.
Dry RockBRS Reef Saver Rock (20 lbs)$40–$60Pest-free, porous, well-suited to aquascaping. The budget alternative to live rock – performs identically once seeded with bottled bacteria during cycling. See: Live Rock in Reef Aquariums
Aragonite SandCaribSea Special Grade (20 lbs)$25–$351–2 inch sand bed for a 20-gallon. Natural pH buffer; biological surface area; substrate for nassarius snails and gobies. See: Reef Tank Sand Guide
Bottled BacteriaFritz TurboStart 900$15–$20Accelerates the nitrogen cycle from 6–8 weeks to 7–14 days. Add on day one after filling the tank with saltwater. See: How to Cycle a Reef Tank
Filter Floss + CarbonPolyester filter batting roll + activated carbon bag$15–$25Buy filter batting by the roll from a pet or fabric store – functionally identical to branded aquarium floss at one-fifth the price. A 500g bag of activated carbon ($10–$15) in a mesh bag lasts 3–4 months. Change floss every 5–7 days.
Mixing Bucket + Siphon Hose2× food-grade 5-gallon buckets + vinyl siphon hose$20–$30Dedicated buckets – one for RODI top-off water, one for saltwater mixing. Never use buckets that have held soap or any chemical. Mark them clearly.
Lid or Mesh CoverMesh screen cut to fit$15–$25Required before adding fish. Firefish, gobies, and wrasses jump – a lid is the difference between a live fish and one found on the floor in the morning.

Build Total

CategoryEst. Cost
Tank + stand$200–$260
Lighting (Kessil A80)$130–$150
Heaters ×2 (Eheim Jager 50W)$50–$70
Wavemaker (Jebao SLW-5)$25–$35
Refractometer$15–$20
Test kits$25–$35
Salt mix (50-gal bucket)$35–$45
Rock (20 lbs)$40–$60
Sand (20 lbs)$25–$35
Bottled bacteria$15–$20
Filter floss + carbon$15–$25
Buckets + siphon$20–$30
Lid$15–$25
Total$610–$810

This build lands at $610–$810 – slightly over the $500 headline because the light and the heaters are the two items where buying cheap creates problems that cost more than the savings. Everything else is budget-optimized. The protein skimmer is the most impactful optional add-on if you have an extra $70–$100; it is not in this core build but is worth adding before the first fish.


What Is Not in This Build – and Why

Protein Skimmer – Add If Budget Allows

Not in the core build because a 20-gallon reef tank with a light fish load and consistent water changes can run without one. But a skimmer is the single upgrade that reduces maintenance workload the most – it removes dissolved organic waste before it breaks down into ammonia and nitrate, keeping nutrient levels lower between water changes. The Tunze 9001 ($100–$130) fits most AIO rear chambers and is the recommended first upgrade after the core build is assembled. See: Best Protein Skimmers for Reef Tanks

RODI Unit – Use LFS Water to Start; Buy Within 6 Months

A home RODI unit ($80–$120) is the correct long-term water source but is not in the core build to keep startup costs contained. While building up to buying one, purchase RODI water from a local fish store at $0.50–$1.00/gallon. Do not use tap water – it contains phosphate and silicate that cause persistent algae problems that look like filtration failures. Budget for the RODI unit within the first 3–6 months; it pays for itself within 6–12 months of use. See: Can You Use Tap Water in a Reef Tank?

Auto Top-Off (ATO) – Useful but Not Required to Start

Evaporation raises salinity in a reef tank daily. Manual top-off with fresh RODI water handles this fine – it takes 2 minutes and builds the habit of daily observation that experienced reef keepers have anyway. An ATO ($40–$150) automates this, which is worth adding eventually. It is not needed for the first 3–6 months while the tank is cycling and stabilizing. See: Best Auto Top-Off Systems for Reef Tanks


Where This Build Saves – and Where It Does Not

ItemBudget ApproachWhy It Works (or Doesn’t)
TankCoralife BioCube 29 – functional AIO with stand includedWorks well. The glass quality and fit-and-finish are not as refined as Waterbox or IM, but the system functions identically for a beginner reef.
LightKessil A80 – not the cheapest, but the minimum for coral growthThis is where the build does not cut corners. A $40–$60 fixture produces 30–50 PAR – not enough to grow corals. The A80 at $130–$150 is the lowest price point that delivers coral-grade output. See: Reef Tank Lighting Guide
HeatersEheim Jager – not cheap, but reliableAlso does not cut corners. A heater stuck on at full wattage in a 20-gallon tank is a total livestock loss. Two reliable heaters are cheaper than replacing everything once. See: Reef Tank Temperature and Stability
WavemakerJebao SLW-5 – excellent flow for the priceWorks well at this price point. Keep a spare impeller on hand. See: Water Flow in Reef Aquariums
RockBRS Reef Saver dry rock at $2–$4/lb vs. live rock at $6–$12/lbWorks identically once seeded. The only trade-off is a slightly longer cycling timeline if not using bottled bacteria – which is in this build.
Filter flossBulk polyester batting instead of branded aquarium flossFunctionally identical at one-fifth the price. This is the best cost-saving swap in reef keeping.
SaltReef Crystals vs. Red Sea Coral ProReef Crystals works well for soft coral and LPS tanks. Red Sea Coral Pro is a step up for SPS-focused systems. For a beginner 20-gallon, Reef Crystals is the right choice.

Ongoing Monthly Costs – What to Budget After Setup

ItemEst. Monthly Cost
Filter floss (bulk roll)$3–$5
Activated carbon$3–$5
Reef salt (bi-weekly water changes)$10–$15
RODI water from LFS (until home unit is purchased)$15–$25
Fish food$5–$10
Test reagent refills$5–$10
Electricity$10–$20
Monthly total$51–$90

For the full first-year cost breakdown including livestock: How Much Does a Reef Tank Cost?


Next Steps After the Build Is Complete

For the full beginner path with timelines and milestones:
Beginner Reef Tank Roadmap →

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