06.04.2026 | LED Lighting

LED Aquarium Lighting: Spectrum, IP Ratings and Power Selection Guide

Elastyczna taśma LED Z ZYWICĄ IP65 24V

LED lighting for aquariums has largely replaced T5 fluorescent and metal halide systems in both freshwater and marine setups. LEDs offer superior energy efficiency (60-80% lower consumption), longer lifespan (30,000-50,000 hours vs 8,000-12,000 for T5), tuneable spectrum, and far less heat transfer to the water. This guide covers the technical requirements for aquarium LED lighting, including spectrum, brightness, IP protection, and component selection.

Light spectrum requirements by aquarium type

Different aquarium types need different spectral profiles. The spectrum determines both the visual appearance of the tank and the biological health of its inhabitants.

Freshwater planted tanks

Aquatic plants perform photosynthesis primarily using red light (620-700 nm) and blue light (430-470 nm). The optimal lighting profile for a planted freshwater tank:

  • Colour temperature: 6500-7000 K (daylight white)
  • Enhanced red peak: 620-660 nm (promotes leaf growth and colouration)
  • Blue component: 430-470 nm (promotes compact growth and root development)
  • CRI: 80+ (for natural fish and plant colour rendering)
  • Photoperiod: 8-10 hours per day

Marine and reef tanks

Corals and marine invertebrates require intense blue and actinic light for photosynthesis by their symbiotic zooxanthellae. Optimal profile:

  • Actinic blue: 420-460 nm (essential for coral health and fluorescence)
  • White component: 10000-20000 K (simulates deep water light conditions)
  • Supplementary violet: 380-420 nm (enhances coral fluorescence)
  • PAR (Photosynthetically Active Radiation): 100-300 umol/m2/s at substrate level
  • Photoperiod: 8-12 hours (with gradual dawn/dusk ramps)

Fish-only tanks

Tanks without live plants or corals have no specific spectral requirements. Choose based on aesthetics:

  • 6500 K — natural daylight look, enhances greens and reds in fish colouration
  • 10000 K — bright, crisp look that enhances blue and silver fish
  • RGB — fully customisable colour for decorative effect

Brightness requirements: lumens per litre

Taśma LED 2835 24V 14.4 W/m — standardowa wydajność świetlna do akwarium
Tank typeLumens per litreExample: 200 L tank
Low-tech planted (easy plants)30-50 lm/L6000-10000 lm
High-tech planted (CO2, demanding plants)50-80 lm/L10000-16000 lm
Marine reef (SPS corals)80-120 lm/L16000-24000 lm
Fish-only15-25 lm/L3000-5000 lm

These are guidelines — actual requirements depend on tank depth (light attenuates in water), plant species, and whether CO2 injection is used. Deeper tanks (above 50 cm) require proportionally higher output to reach the substrate.

IP protection for aquarium LED systems

Aquarium lighting operates in a high-humidity environment with potential water splash. IP rating requirements:

  • IP65 — minimum for LED strips mounted above open-top tanks. Protects against condensation and splash.
  • IP67 — required for strips or fixtures that may be temporarily splashed or submerged during maintenance.
  • IP68 — required for any submersible lighting (in-tank accent lights, underwater strips).
  • IP20 — acceptable only for enclosed canopy-mounted lights where no moisture reaches the fixture.

The power supply should be positioned outside the splash zone. If placed near the tank, use an IP67-rated unit.

LED strip solutions for aquariums

Cyfrowa taśma LED RGB CCT — pełne spektrum i regulacja temperatury barwowej dla roślin akwariowych

LED strips mounted in aluminium profiles are an increasingly popular DIY aquarium lighting solution. Advantages over commercial aquarium fixtures: lower cost, customisable length, replaceable strips, and tuneable spectrum (with RGB/RGBW or multi-channel strips).

Recommended setup:

  • Strip type — high-CRI (90+) white strips for planted tanks; RGB + white for marine or decorative setups.
  • IP rating — IP65 minimum (IP67 if mounted directly above an open tank).
  • Aluminium profile — essential for heat dissipation. The profile should span the tank length and be mounted on legs or a bracket 50-100 mm above the water surface.
  • Power supply — 24V DC, sized at 120% of total strip power. Keep outside the splash zone.
  • Controller — a multi-channel dimmer for separate control of white and colour channels. Programmable sunrise/sunset ramps are highly beneficial for fish stress reduction.

Browse LED strips, aluminium profiles, and controllers at 2K-Trade.

Heat management

LEDs produce significantly less heat than metal halide or T5 systems, but heat management still matters for aquarium applications. Elevated water temperature (above 26 C for most tropical freshwater species, above 27 C for reef tanks) stresses livestock and promotes algae growth. An aluminium profile acts as a heatsink, and mounting the light 50-100 mm above the water surface allows air circulation. For high-power setups (above 20 W/m), consider profiles with larger cross-sections or active cooling (small fans).

Frequently asked questions

How many watts per litre do I need for a planted aquarium?

The watt-per-litre rule is outdated because LED efficiency varies widely. Use lumens per litre instead: 30-50 lm/L for low-tech planted tanks (no CO2), 50-80 lm/L for high-tech (with CO2 injection). A 200-litre low-tech tank needs approximately 6000-10000 lm total, achievable with 4-6 m of high-efficiency LED strip.

Can I use standard LED strips for an aquarium?

Yes, provided they are IP65 or higher for open-top tanks. Standard white LED strips (6500 K, high CRI) work well for freshwater planted tanks. For marine setups, you need strips with enhanced blue channels or dedicated actinic LEDs. Always mount strips in an aluminium profile for heat management — excessive heat shortens strip life and can warm the water.

How long should aquarium lights be on each day?

8-10 hours for planted freshwater tanks, 8-12 hours for marine reef tanks, and 6-8 hours for fish-only tanks. Longer photoperiods encourage algae growth. Use a timer or programmable controller to maintain a consistent schedule. Gradual dawn/dusk ramps (30-60 minutes) reduce fish stress.

Is blue light necessary for freshwater aquariums?

Blue light (430-470 nm) promotes compact plant growth and enhances root development. A small blue component is naturally present in 6500 K white LEDs. Dedicated blue LEDs are not required for freshwater planted tanks but are beneficial for visual pop — blue light makes green plants appear more vivid and enhances fish colour fluorescence.

LED vs T5 fluorescent for aquariums: which is better?

LED is superior in every measurable metric: 60-80% lower energy use, 3-5 times longer lifespan, tuneable spectrum, dimmable, and produces less heat. T5 tubes also degrade in spectrum quality after 6-12 months and need annual replacement. The only advantage of T5 is lower upfront cost for basic setups — but LED pays for itself within 1-2 years through energy savings and zero tube replacements.

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