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Fish Tank & Aquarium Relocations in Brisbane

Aquarium Relocation services for tanks of all sizes are available for clients in Brisbane, the Sunshine Coast, and the Gold Coast.

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  • Highest level of care to ensure your aquarium arrives safely
  • Relocation preparation included to reduce risk of bacteria outbreak

Moving your aquarium? Don’t risk it.

Fish tank relocations are one of the most complex and high-risk tasks in the hobby. One wrong move, literally, can crack a tank, crash your biological cycle, or cost you an ecosystem you’ve spent years building. Our professional relocation service takes that risk off your plate entirely.

aquarium solutions brisbane, gold coast and sunshine coast | maintenance, custom design, rentals | commercial and residential

The Weight Problem

Water weighs approximately one kilogram per litre. A 400-litre tank, before you factor in the substrate, rockwork, and cabinetry, can easily exceed 500 kilograms when full. Even after draining, the tank itself (particularly glass tanks) remains extremely heavy and fragile. Glass panels are under constant stress from the silicone bonds holding them together, and any uneven pressure during a lift can cause a catastrophic crack.

Large acrylic tanks are lighter but flex under load, which can distort the seams if lifted incorrectly.

Proper Lifting Technique Matters

Tanks must be lifted from the base, never from the rim or the top edge. The top rim of most glass tanks is not designed to bear the full weight of the structure and will bow, crack, or separate if used as a carry point. For large tanks, this is a two-person minimum job, and can require more.

Protecting Your Floors & Doorways

Professional movers use furniture dollies, tank sleds, and protective sheeting to avoid damage to flooring and door frames during a relocation. Without these, hardwood floors, tiles, and skirting boards are all at serious risk from a tank that weighs several hundred kilograms even when drained.

Preserving Your Biological Cycle

This is the most biologically critical aspect of any aquarium relocation, and the area where most DIY moves go wrong.

Understanding the Nitrogen Cycle

Your aquarium’s water quality depends on a colony of beneficial bacteria (primarily Nitrosomonas and Nitrospira) that convert toxic ammonia (produced by fish waste and decomposing organic matter) into nitrite, and then into the far less harmful nitrate. This colony lives almost entirely on surfaces: filter media, substrate, rockwork, and the walls of the tank itself. It does not live in the water.

This bacterial colony is sensitive to oxygen deprivation. If your filter is switched off and left in a dry or stagnant state for more than a few hours, a significant portion of the colony will die. The result is a mini-cycle crash after the move, a period of elevated ammonia and nitrite that can be lethal to fish.

Bacteria Outbreaks and White Cloudy Water

A bacterial bloom, characterised by sudden white or milky cloudiness, is a common occurrence in the days following a relocation. This happens as heterotrophic bacteria respond to the influx of organic material disturbed during the move. It is usually self-limiting and will clear within a few days without intervention, but it is important not to panic and perform large water changes, which can make things worse by destabilising parameters further.

Post-move Testing Protocol

Test ammonia and nitrite daily for a minimum of one week after re-establishing the tank. If ammonia climbs above 0.25 ppm, perform a 25 to 30 percent water change using temperature-matched, dechlorinated water. Do not feed your fish for the first 24 to 48 hours after the move, fish can tolerate a short fast, and reducing the ammonia load during this vulnerable period gives the bacterial colony time to re-establish.

aquarium solutions brisbane, gold coast and sunshine coast | maintenance, custom design, rentals | commercial and residential

How We Handle Your Relocation

At Aquarium Solutions, we manage every aspect of your relocation from start to finish:

Full pre-move assessment of the tank, livestock, and destination space
Structural suitability check for the new location
Safe drainage, livestock collection, and equipment breakdown
Professional transport with appropriate padding and securing
Destination setup, filter restart, and parameter testing
Post-move monitoring visit to confirm everything is stable

We take the guesswork out of what is genuinely a complex process, and give you the confidence that your tank, and the life inside it, is in safe hands.

Planning to move house or office?
Call us to discuss the best way to relocate your aquarium safely.

Whether it’s a small freshwater tank or a large reef system, we’ll make sure your relocation goes smoothly. Get in touch for a free consultation and quote.
Call us on 0401 319 575 or contact our friendly team today for a quote

Aquarium Relocation FAQs

How far in advance should I plan an aquarium relocation?

For a large or complex system, we recommend getting in touch at least two to three weeks before your planned move date. This gives us time to assess the tank, plan the logistics, prepare any materials, and schedule the right team size.

Can I move my aquarium myself?

Small tanks under 100 litres can generally be moved with care by an experienced hobbyist. Anything larger, particularly marine or reef systems, carries significant risk if not handled correctly. The cost of a professional relocation is considerably less than replacing cracked glass, lost creatures, or a crashed biological cycle.

Will my fish survive the move?

In the vast majority of cases, yes, provided the move is planned properly and executed quickly. The key risks are temperature fluctuation, oxygen deprivation, and ammonia spikes after the move. We manage all of these as part of our service.

My tank has been in the same spot for years. Is that a problem?

Long-established tanks often have deep sand beds and mature live rock, both of which require careful handling to avoid hydrogen sulphide release and bacterial die-off. We’ll assess this during the pre-move consultation and plan the safest approach.

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