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How to Use Aquarium Salt for Betta Diseases (Baths vs In‑tank)
🧂 Aquarium salt is a powerful, inexpensive treatment for many betta diseases – but only when used correctly — This guide covers in‑tank vs bath use, dosages, safety, and species that cannot tolerate salt.
What Is Aquarium Salt and How Does It Help Bettas?
Aquarium salt works by increasing the salinity of the water, which makes it harder for parasites (ich, velvet) to survive. The Merck Veterinary Manual describes salt as an adjunct treatment for many external infections. Salt also reduces osmoregulatory stress, allowing injured bettas to heal faster. It adds essential electrolytes and promotes slime coat production. However, salt does not cure bacterial infections – it only supports healing. For fin rot with red streaks, you still need antibiotics.
What Is the Difference Between Aquarium Salt, Epsom Salt, and Table Salt?
Aquarium salt (sodium chloride) treats ich, velvet, and mild fin rot. The Merck Veterinary Manual distinguishes between these salts. Epsom salt is used for constipation (internal) and dropsy (reduces fluid retention). Table salt contains iodine, which harms bettas, and yellow prussiate of soda (anti‑caking agent), which is toxic. Rock salt (ice cream salt) may contain impurities. Only buy aquarium salt from pet stores or use non‑iodized sea salt without additives. Never use salt intended for water softeners.
When to Use In‑Tank Salt Treatment (Low Concentration)
Low‑dose salt (0.05% salinity) is safe for bettas for up to 2 weeks. Aquarium Co‑Op recommends 1 teaspoon per 5 gallons for general support. This concentration will not kill ich but reduces stress. It is safe for most bettas, but monitor for signs of irritation (excessive slime, erratic swimming). Do not use in‑tank salt with live plants – most plants die above 1 teaspoon per 10 gallons. Also avoid salt if you have snails or shrimp. For in‑tank treatment, dissolve salt in a cup of tank water first, then pour slowly. Do not add dry salt directly.
When to Use a Salt Bath (High Concentration, Short Duration)
Salt baths create a 0.5‑1% salinity shock that kills parasites on the fish’s body. The Merck Veterinary Manual warns that baths must be timed precisely. Overdose or prolonged exposure damages kidneys. Use a separate container (1‑2 gallons). Dissolve 1 tablespoon of aquarium salt per 2.5 gallons of dechlorinated water (matched to tank temperature). Place betta in bath for 5‑10 minutes (start with 5 minutes for sensitive fish). Watch for stress: if fish rolls over or gasps, remove immediately. Return to main tank. Repeat once daily for 3‑5 days. Do not leave betta in bath longer than 15 minutes.
Step‑by‑Step: How to Perform a Salt Bath
Detailed steps: 1. Fill a clean container (plastic or glass) with 2.5 gallons of dechlorinated water. 2. Use a heater or mix warm water to reach 80‑82°F (same as main tank). 3. Add 1 tablespoon of aquarium salt and stir until fully dissolved. 4. Gently net the betta and place it into the bath. 5. Set a timer for 5 minutes. Observe the betta – if it shows severe distress (frantically swimming, rolling), remove early. 6. After 5‑10 minutes, net the betta and return it to the main tank. 7. Discard the bath water – do not pour into main tank. 8. Repeat daily for 3‑5 days, or as directed by medication protocol. Bettafish.com has video tutorials.
– Adult betta (2‑3 inches): 5‑10 minutes
– Large betta (>3 inches): 10 minutes
– Always start with the shorter time.
How to Use Aquarium Salt for Specific Diseases
Ich (white spot): Combine 1 tsp/5g in‑tank salt with 82°F temperature for 10 days. Salt alone may not cure ich – use formalin/malachite green if severe. Fin rot (mild): 1 tsp/5g salt for 7 days plus daily 30% water changes. Velvet: Salt baths (1 tbsp/2.5g for 5 minutes) daily for 5 days, plus darkness (velvet requires light). Stress/transport: 1 tsp/10g salt reduces osmotic shock. Prevention: Add 1 tsp/5g when setting up a new tank or after a water change during quarantine. Always test salt concentration with a hydrometer if going above 1 tsp/2g.
– Ich: 1 tsp/5g + 82°F, 10 days
– Velvet: Bath 1 tbsp/2.5g, 5 min daily
– Dropsy (with Epsom salt): bath 1 tbsp/5g, 15 min daily
Which Fish and Plants Cannot Tolerate Salt?
Scaleless fish absorb salt more rapidly through their skin. The Merck Veterinary Manual advises caution. For corydoras, use half dose (1 tsp/10g). Snails (nerite, mystery) will die in salt concentrations above 1 tsp/5g. Most aquatic plants will melt within days at 1 tsp/2g. Java fern and Anubias tolerate up to 1 tsp/5g for short periods (1‑2 weeks), but growth slows. Shrimp (neocaridina) tolerate 1 tsp/5g, but Amano shrimp are more sensitive. If you have a community tank, treat sick fish in a hospital tank instead of adding salt to the main tank.
How to Remove Salt After Treatment
After treatment, bettas should not stay in salt water long‑term (exceeds 2 weeks at 1 tsp/5g) because it stresses kidneys. Aquarium Co‑Op recommends a series of water changes. Example: after 10 days of 1 tsp/5g, do a 25% water change (reduces salt to 0.75 tsp/5g). Next day, another 25% (reduces to 0.56 tsp/5g). Repeat until salt is negligible. If you used a bath, no removal needed – the betta returns to fresh water. Do not add salt to a tank with plants or scaleless fish after treatment without removing them first. Always test salinity with a refractometer if you are unsure.
• API Aquarium Salt
• Seachem Aquarium Salt
• Aquarium Co‑Op Salt
📊 Aquarium salt dosage quick reference
| Application | Concentration | Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stress reduction / mild fin rot | 1 tsp per 5 gallons | 7‑10 days | Safe for most bettas, remove by water changes |
| Ich (in‑tank) + heat | 1 tsp per 5 gallons | 10 days | Raise temp to 82°F, add water changes |
| Salt bath (ich, velvet, fungus) | 1 tbsp per 2.5 gallons | 5‑10 minutes | Daily for 3‑5 days, watch for distress |
| Quarantine / new fish | 1 tsp per 10 gallons | 1‑2 weeks | Prevents external parasites |
| Scaleless fish / snails | Half dose (1 tsp/10g max) As needed Monitor closely |
• Merck Veterinary Manual – Salt treatments
• Aquarium Co‑Op – Aquarium salt guide
• Bettafish.com – Salt bath tutorials
• Merck – Disease protocols

