Fish tank surface area determines how much background film you need, how quickly heat escapes through the glass, and how much oxygen the water surface can absorb. Most aquariums are open-top rectangular prisms — five glass panels instead of six.
Fish Tank Surface Area Formula (Open-Top Box)
SA = lw + 2lh + 2wh
Where l = length, w = width, h = height (omits the top face)
Example: 55-gallon tank (48″ × 13″ × 21″) → SA = 624 + 2,016 + 546 = 3,186 in² ≈ 2.055 m²
Common Aquarium Sizes and Glass Area
| Tank Size | Dimensions (L×W×H) | Glass Area (in²) | Glass Area (m²) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 gal | 20×10×12″ | 1,080 | 0.697 |
| 20 gal long | 30×12×12″ | 1,584 | 1.022 |
| 29 gal | 30×12×18″ | 1,872 | 1.208 |
| 55 gal | 48×13×21″ | 3,186 | 2.055 |
| 75 gal | 48×18×21″ | 3,636 | 2.346 |
Gas Exchange and Water Surface Area
Gas exchange happens at the water surface — the top face area l × w. A larger water surface means more dissolved oxygen. This is why long, shallow tanks support more fish per gallon than tall, narrow ones.
Background Film and Heater Sizing
Background film covers the rear panel: l × h. Add 2 × (w × h) for side coverage.
Calculate Fish Tank Surface Area
Use our Rectangular Prism Calculator — then subtract one face (l × w) for the open top. For cube nano tanks, the Cube Calculator gives SA = 5a².
Related Reading
See composite 3D shapes for tanks with sumps, and unit conversion to switch between in² and cm².