How to Choose Your First Aquarium Plant (Low Tech Guide)

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Published: May 11, 2026
Updated: May 17, 2026
How to Choose Your First Aquarium Plant (Low Tech Guide) | Aqualista

🌱 Picking your first aquarium plant can feel overwhelming – but it doesn’t have to be — This guide walks you through a simple decision process based on your tank size, light, and fish.

What Are Your Goals for Adding Plants?

First, decide: do you want plants for aesthetics, algae control, fish hiding spots, or nutrient absorption? Your goal determines which plants to choose and how much light/fertilizer is needed.

Plants serve many purposes. For aesthetics: Anubias, Java fern, and Bucephalandra provide a natural look. For algae control: Fast‑growing floating plants (Salvinia) and stem plants (Hornwort) absorb nutrients. For fish cover: Dense plantings of Java moss or floating plants with long roots (Frogbit) work well. For nutrient export: Fast‑growing plants like Water wisteria or Hornwort. If you are unsure, start with a low‑tech combination of Anubias, Java fern, and a floating plant. For more on plant benefits, see our main plant guide.

What Kind of Light Do You Have?

Most standard aquarium LEDs provide 20‑40 PAR, which is enough for low‑light plants (Anubias, Java fern, Cryptocoryne). If you have a high‑output light (e.g., Fluval Plant 3.0 at 100%), you can grow medium‑light plants like Amazon swords.

Light intensity is the most limiting factor. 2Hr Aquarist recommends using a PAR meter or referencing manufacturer data. If your light came with the tank and is not adjustable, assume it is low‑light (20‑40 PAR). That suits Anubias, Java fern, Cryptocoryne, and mosses. If you have a powerful LED (e.g., Chihiros, Fluval, Twinstar), you can also grow Amazon swords, Vallisneria, and some stem plants. Avoid carpet plants (Monte Carlo, Dwarf hairgrass) unless you have a high‑tech setup with CO₂. For more on lighting, see our plant care guide.

💡 Light guide by tank type – Low‑light (20‑40 PAR): Anubias, Java fern, Crypts, mosses
– Medium‑light (40‑80 PAR): Amazon sword, Vallisneria, Hygrophila
– High‑light (80+ PAR): Carpet plants, Rotala (needs CO₂)

Do You Have CO₂ Injection?

If you do not use pressurized CO₂, stick to low‑light plants. CO₂ is only needed for high‑light demanding species (carpets, red stems). Most beginners should skip CO₂ entirely.

Pressurized CO₂ is an advanced investment. 2Hr Aquarist notes that without CO₂, even high light will not produce good results – it will cause algae. For a first planted tank, avoid CO₂. Choose plants from our top 10 easy plants list. If you later want to grow red stems or carpets, you can add CO₂, but that doubles the complexity and cost. Start simple.

🌿 No‑CO₂ plant checklist: Anubias, Java fern, Cryptocoryne, Amazon sword (with root tabs), Java moss, Marimo ball, Salvinia, Hornwort, Water wisteria.

What Substrate Do You Have?

Inert sand or gravel is fine for rhizome plants (Anubias, Java fern) and water‑column feeders. For root feeders (Cryptocoryne, Amazon sword, Vallisneria), you need root tabs or nutrient‑rich aquasoil.

If you have plain gravel or sand, do not despair. Rhizome plants attach to hardscape and do not need substrate nutrients. Root feeders can still thrive if you insert root tabs (Seachem Flourish Tabs) every 3‑4 months. For a low‑tech tank, root tabs + inert substrate work well. Aquasoil is optional. For more on substrates, see our substrate guide.

🪨 Inert gravel/sand+ root tabs = fine for most root feeders. Anubias/Java fern attach to wood.
🌱 AquasoilNutrient‑rich, lowers pH, ideal for high‑tech but expensive. Not required for beginners.

How Big Is Your Tank?

For nano tanks (under 10 gallons), choose small plants: Anubias nana, Java fern “Windelov”, Bucephalandra, Marimo ball, and small Cryptocoryne. Avoid large swords or stem plants that outgrow the tank.

Amazon swords can grow 20 inches tall – unsuitable for a 5‑gallon tank. 2Hr Aquarist recommends matching plant size to tank dimensions. For a 10‑gallon tank, use Cryptocoryne wendtii (midground) and Anubias nana (foreground). For a 20‑gallon, you can add Amazon sword as a background. For large tanks (40+ gallons), you can use multiple swords, Vallisneria, and large Crypts. For more on plant sizing, see our beginner plants hub.

📏 Plant size by tank volume – 5‑10g: Anubias nana, Java fern (small), Buce, Marimo, Crypt parva
– 15‑20g: Crypt wendtii, Amazon sword (1), Java fern, Anubias
– 30g+: Multiple swords, Vallisneria, large Crypts

Do You Have Fish That Eat Plants?

Goldfish, silver dollars, and some cichlids eat soft‑leaved plants. For these tanks, choose tough plants: Anubias, Java fern, Java moss, Marimo balls, and floating plants (protected by fish).

Many fish are plant‑eaters. The Merck Veterinary Manual notes that goldfish will devour most stem plants. However, they usually leave Anubias and Java fern alone because of their tough leaves. Java moss may be eaten but grows fast enough to recover. Floating plants (Salvinia, Frogbit) are often safe because fish cannot reach them from below. For more on plant‑safe fish, see our main plant guide.

🐟 Herbivorous fish alert: Avoid soft‑leaved plants like Cabomba, Water sprite, and Hornwort if you keep goldfish or large cichlids.

Beginner’s Starter Pack – The Safest Combo

For a foolproof start, buy one Anubias nana (attach to rock), one Java fern (attach to wood), one Cryptocoryne wendtii (plant in substrate with root tab), and a handful of Salvinia (floating).

This combination covers all zones (foreground, midground, background, surface). Light: Any standard LED works. CO₂: None needed. Fertilizer: One root tab under the Crypt and a low dose of liquid fertilizer weekly. Maintenance: Remove excess Salvinia weekly, trim old leaves of the Crypt and Java fern as needed. Within a month, you will have a healthy, algae‑resistant planted tank. For more inspiration, see our low‑tech setup guide.

🌟 Starter pack shopping list: 1 Anubias nana, 1 Java fern, 1 Cryptocoryne wendtii, 1 portion Salvinia minima, 2 root tabs, 1 bottle all‑in‑one liquid fertilizer.

Where to Buy Your First Aquarium Plants

Buy from reputable online stores (Aquarium Co‑Op, BucePlant, Tropica) or local fish stores. Avoid chain‑store plants that are grown emersed (they may melt). Look for submerged‑grown plants or tissue cultures.

Tissue culture plants are sterile and pest‑free, but more expensive. Submerged‑grown plants (already grown underwater) adapt faster. Aquarium Co‑Op sells low‑tech plant bundles. BucePlant has a wide selection. Local fish stores often sell Anubias and Java fern attached to wood. Always quarantine new plants for 2‑3 weeks to avoid snails or algae. For quarantine methods, see our plant quarantine guide.

⚠️ Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes. Start with a few plants and observe how they adapt to your water conditions. You can always add more later.
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