Tank reference
110 gallon tall
48 × 18 × 30 in
Key stats
Dimensions (L × W × H)
48 × 18 × 30 in
122 × 46 × 76 cm
Volume (raw, outside)
112 US gal
424.8 L · 25920 in³
Water volume (with glass inset)
100 US gal
379.7 L
Manufacturer nominal
110 gal
Differs from raw — manufacturer rounds down for shipping
Footprint
6.00 ft²
864 in²
Filled saltwater weight
1238 lb
562 kg · 206 lb/ft² floor
Filled freshwater weight
1087 lb
493 kg
Recommended glass (annealed)
25 mm
0.984 in · safety factor 3.8
Heater size (78°F target)
301 W
Redundant pair: 2× 175 W heaters
Substrate (2" sand bed)
85 lb
CaribSea Special Grade · 5 × 20-lb bags
How many gallons is a 48 × 18 × 30 in tank?
A 48 × 18 × 30 in aquarium contains 112 US gallons by outside dimensions. The math:
48 × 18 × 30 = 25920 in³ 25920 ÷ 231 in³/gal = 112.21 US gal 112.21 × 3.785 = 424.8 L
In practice, actual water capacity is 100 gallons after subtracting 0.5" of glass thickness on each side. Manufacturers typically market this as a 110-gallon tank for round-number simplicity.
For a different shape (cylinder, hex, bow-front) or to enter custom dimensions, use the full aquarium volume calculator.
How much does a filled 48 × 18 × 30 in tank weigh?
- Saltwater reef (with ~100 lb live rock + 1" sand bed): 1238 lb (562 kg)
- Freshwater (with 20 lb gravel, no rock): 1087 lb (493 kg)
- Empty glass only: approximately 215 lb
- Floor load: 206 lb/ft² (saltwater filled)
Floor-load warning: at 206 lb/ft², this tank exceeds the 40 lb/ft² typical residential live-load rating. Place over a load-bearing wall or get a structural assessment before installing upstairs.
Full breakdown including equipment, sump, and custom rock weight: aquarium weight calculator.
Glass thickness for a 48 × 18 × 30 in tank
Using the Wisner hobby formula with a 3.8 safety factor, this tank requires:
- Annealed (regular float) glass: 25 mm minimum (0.984")
- Tempered glass: 12 mm minimum (tempered is ~4× stronger than annealed)
Most commercial tanks at this size ship one thickness step up for additional safety. See the glass thickness calculator for the full formula and Starphire (low-iron) options.
Heater wattage for a 48 × 18 × 30 in tank
In a warm room (~70 °F ambient) targeting 78 °F, this size tank needs about 301 W of heating. The conservative reefkeeping practice is to run two heaters at 175 W each: if one fails stuck-on, the other isn't powerful enough to cook the tank alone; if one fails stuck-off, the remaining one slows the temperature drop while you replace it.
For cold-room or cool-basement adjustments: heater wattage calculator.
How much sand or gravel for a 48 × 18 × 30 in tank?
- 2" sand bed: ~85 lb of CaribSea Special Grade aragonite (5 × 20-lb bags)
- 4" deep sand bed (DSB): ~170 lb
- 1" shallow / aesthetic: ~43 lb
Other substrate brands (Nature's Ocean, Tahitian Moon, Eco-Complete): substrate calculator.
Equipment for this tank
Salt, sand, heater, and light picks sized for a 112-gallon tank. All on Amazon — prices and stock change daily.
Red Sea Coral Pro Salt — 22 kg bucket (175 gal mix)
Best per-gallon value for SPS tanks.
View on Amazon →
AI Hydra 32HD
Standard SPS-grade fixture. 24×24 in footprint at SPS PAR.
View on Amazon →
Reef Octopus Classic 110-INT skimmer
Mid-range workhorse. In-sump, 80–150 gal.
View on Amazon →
Cobalt Aquatics Neotherm heater
Most-recommended reef heater. Shatter-resistant.
View on Amazon →
EcoTech VorTech MP40
External-motor wavemaker. 60–250 gal.
View on Amazon →
CaribSea Arag-Alive Special Grade reef sand
Live aragonite, no rinse, 2-inch grain. Reef default.
View on Amazon →
Mag-Float aquarium glass cleaner
The hobby standard magnetic algae scraper. Sizes for any tank.
View on Amazon →
Refractometer for saltwater + calibration fluid
Calibrate with 35 ppt fluid monthly. Replaces hydrometers.
View on Amazon →
Salifert KH/Alkalinity test kit
The hobbyist standard for alkalinity testing.
View on Amazon →
Affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate, reefcalcs earns from qualifying purchases.
FAQ
- How many gallons is a 48 × 18 × 30 in tank?
- A 48 × 18 × 30 in aquarium holds approximately 112 US gallons by outside dimensions (424.8 L). After subtracting a standard 0.5" glass thickness on each interior wall, the actual water capacity is about 100 US gallons. Manufacturers commonly market this as a "110-gallon" tank.
- How much does a filled 48 × 18 × 30 in tank weigh?
- A 48 × 18 × 30 in saltwater reef tank with ~100 lb of live rock and a 1" sand bed weighs about 1238 lb (562 kg) filled. Freshwater with no rock comes in lighter, around 1087 lb. Floor load is roughly 206 lb per square foot — most residential floors are rated for 40 lb/ft² live load, so confirm before placing upstairs.
- What glass thickness do I need for a 48 × 18 × 30 in tank?
- Using the Wisner hobby formula with a 3.8 safety factor, a 48 × 18 × 30 in tank needs at least 25 mm annealed (regular float) glass. Tempered glass can be 12 mm and still meet the same safety margin. This is the calculated minimum — most commercial tanks at this size ship with one step up for safety. See the glass thickness calculator for the full math.
- What size heater for a 48 × 18 × 30 in tank?
- For a tank in a warm room (~70 °F ambient), this size needs roughly 301 W of heating. For redundancy, run two heaters at 175 W each — heaters fail, and a single point of failure on tropical fish or coral is expensive.
- How much sand or substrate for a 48 × 18 × 30 in tank?
- A 2-inch sand bed in this footprint (48" × 18") needs approximately 85 lb of CaribSea Special Grade aragonite, or about 5 20-lb bags. For a deep sand bed at 4 inches, double that.
- Is a 48 × 18 × 30 in tank good for a reef?
- It can work as a reef, but the 48 × 18 × 30 in footprint is more commonly used for freshwater. The tall profile makes lighting more expensive — you need higher-output fixtures. Most reefers in this size range pick a wider, shallower alternative.
Run your own numbers
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