---
type: species
title: "Fancy Guppy Care Guide: Strains, Tank Setup & Expert Tips"
slug: "fancy-guppy"
category: "freshwater"
scientificName: "Poecilia reticulata"
subcategory: "Livebearer"
lastUpdated: "2026-04-24"
readingTime: 9
url: https://www.fishstores.org/species/fancy-guppy
---

# Fancy Guppy Care Guide: Strains, Tank Setup & Expert Tips

*Poecilia reticulata*

Learn how to keep fancy guppies thriving — water params, best tank mates, top strains, and what to look for when buying at your local fish store.

## Species Overview

The fancy guppy is the umbrella label for hundreds of selectively bred lines of *Poecilia reticulata* — a small Caribbean and northeastern South American livebearer that became the hobby's most-bred ornamental fish in the 20th century. Wild guppies are drab olive specks under an inch long. Everything you see in a store tank — the koi patches, the metallic snakeskin, the ribboned tails twice as long as the body — is the result of roughly 100 years of human selection.

This page is a strain-and-grading companion to our [full Fancy Guppies guide](/guides/fancy-guppies-guide), which covers cycling, water chemistry, breeding ratios, and tank-mate compatibility in depth. **Read the full Fancy Guppies guide** for the foundational care setup. The sections below focus on what the long-form guide doesn't: how to identify tail shapes by name, how to read a strain label, how to grade a fish on the LFS shelf, and what's actually changed in the global fancy-guppy supply over the last few years.

| Field       | Value                                |
| ----------- | ------------------------------------ |
| Adult size  | 1.5–2.5 in (depends on strain)       |
| Lifespan    | 2–3 years                            |
| Min tank    | 10 gallons                           |
| Temperament | Peaceful                             |
| Difficulty  | Beginner                             |
| Water       | Hard, alkaline (GH 8–12, pH 7.0–8.2) |

### Natural Origin & Wild vs. Fancy Strains

Wild *Poecilia reticulata* live in slow streams, ditches, and brackish margins across Trinidad, Tobago, Venezuela, Guyana, and the Caribbean coastal zone. Wild males rarely exceed 1 inch and carry only modest spots of color — usually a few orange or iridescent markings on the flank. Wild females are silver-grey and unornamented. Predation pressure in their native streams keeps colorful fish from surviving long enough to breed, which is why color stays muted in nature.

Captive fancy strains began diverging from wild stock in the early 1900s, when European and Japanese hobbyists started selecting for color and tail extension. By the 1960s the International Fancy Guppy Association (IFGA) had codified strain standards. Today's show-quality fish are essentially a different animal — larger, dramatically finned, intensely pigmented, and dependent on the controlled conditions of a tank to survive at all.

> **Selectively bred for tails — short on lifespan**
>
> Decades of inbreeding to fix color and fin traits have stacked a real genetic load on commercial fancy guppies. Wild-type guppies routinely live 3–5 years; modern fancies average 2–3 and many big-box-store fish die inside a year. If lifespan matters to you, source from a hobbyist breeder running line refreshes (outcrossing every 3–4 generations) rather than a mass commercial farm.

### Popular Fancy Guppy Strains

Strain names in the guppy world combine three independent traits: **color**, **pattern**, and **tail shape**. Once you decode that grammar, a name like "Blue Moscow Delta" stops being random. Blue is the body color, Moscow is the pattern (a deep solid pigmentation across the entire body), and Delta is the tail shape.

The strains you'll see most often in US stores: Moscow Blue, Moscow Green, Moscow Purple, Dumbo Ear (any base color, oversized pectorals), Tuxedo (light front half, dark rear half), Mosaic (irregular patches across the tail), Cobra (snakeskin reticulation — see our [cobra guppy](/species/cobra-guppy) entry), Koi (red, white, and black patches mimicking koi carp), Albino (pink eyes with translucent body), German Yellow, and Half-Black AOC ("any other color"). High-end specialty strains include Full Platinum, Magenta, and Galaxy — these almost never appear at chain stores.

Tail shape is judged independently. The IFGA recognizes named tail classes, and learning these terms is the single biggest unlock for buying intelligently. The next H3 covers them.

### Size & Lifespan

Adult size depends heavily on strain. Standard fancy males reach 1.5 inches in body length plus another half-inch to inch of tail, depending on the cut. Females stay larger and chunkier — 2 to 2.5 inches with shorter, drabber finnage. Dumbo Ear strains and some show lines push males close to 2 inches in body length. Endlers crossed into a fancy line shrink everything down by about 25%.

Lifespan is 2–3 years for well-kept fish from solid genetics. Big-box-store fish often fall short of two years because the supply chain stresses them and the underlying genetic line is tired. A clean tank, stable parameters, and a varied diet are the three levers you control to push toward the upper end of that range.

## Tail-Shape Vocabulary & Strain Identification

This is where the existing long-form guide stops short. Knowing the named tail shapes by sight is what separates a shopper who picks "the pretty one" from a buyer who can ask the LFS for a specific show-grade fish.

### The Five Named Tail Shapes (Delta, Fan, Veiltail, Halfmoon, Rosetail)

**Delta** is the most common show tail — a wide triangular caudal with straight upper and lower edges and a flat trailing margin. The widest commercial standard. Spread angle at full display: 70 degrees minimum for a show fish.

**Fan** is similar to a delta but slightly narrower and more rounded at the trailing edge. The distinction is subtle, and many stores conflate the two. Look at the trailing edge: straight = delta, curved = fan.

**Veiltail** is the long, drooping tail you'll see on cheap pet-store fish. The caudal trails behind the body in a single sheet, often longer than the body itself. Veiltails are easy to breed and sell, hard to keep in good condition because the fins tear constantly.

**Halfmoon** (or "Round Tail") spreads to a full 180-degree semicircle when the fish flares. Distinct from a delta because the angle is wider and the trailing edge is convex. Show standard.

**Rosetail** is a halfmoon with extra ray branching that gives the trailing edge a ruffled, frilled look — like a rose petal. Stunning at rest, fragile in current. Also called "feathertail" in some lines.

You'll also encounter **lyretail** (forked, elongated upper and lower rays), **swordtail** (top, bottom, or double sword extensions), **scarftail** (long and pointed), and **roundtail** (compact and rounded close to the body, the hardiest). The first five above cover 90% of what's actually for sale.

### How to Read a Strain Label

A complete strain label reads as **\[Pattern/Color] + \[Color] + \[Tail Shape]** in store catalogs. Examples:

- **Blue Moscow Delta** — solid Moscow Blue body, delta tail
- **Red Tuxedo Lyretail** — front half pale, rear half red-black, forked tail
- **Albino Full Red Halfmoon** — pink-eyed albino, full red body and tail, halfmoon caudal
- **Green Cobra Rosetail** — green body with cobra snakeskin, ruffled rosetail
- **Yellow Dumbo Ear AOC Delta** — yellow base, oversized pectorals, mixed pattern, delta tail

If a store posts only "Fancy Guppy" with no strain breakdown, you're looking at unsorted stock — fine for a community tank, useless if you want to maintain a specific line.

### Grading: Show Quality, Pet Quality, Cull

Hobbyist breeders sort each generation into three buckets. Knowing the difference helps when you're paying $5 versus $25 for "the same fish."

**Show quality** fish meet the IFGA standard for their class — uniform color saturation, clean pattern edges, symmetric finnage, balanced body proportion, and the correct tail spread angle. These ship with documentation in some lines, sell for $15–$75+ per pair from breeders.

**Pet quality** fish carry the strain genetics but miss one or more standards: a lighter pattern, slightly off color balance, a small tear in the dorsal, asymmetric tail. Perfectly healthy and beautiful in a home tank, but a judge would mark them down. This is what most LFS stock is, priced $5–$15.

**Cull quality** fish are sold off cheap because they don't reproduce the strain reliably — washed-out color, deformed finnage, or hybrid features. Big-box pet stores often sell culls under generic "Fancy Guppy" labels. Fine pets, but don't expect their fry to resemble the parent.

> **Long fins + sharp décor or strong flow = torn tails**
>
> Veiltails and rosetails tear on jagged resin ornaments, sharp slate edges, and the intake strainers of high-flow filters. Once a tail tears, fin rot moves in fast. Stick to smooth-edged hardscape, baffle any HOB filter output, and prefer a sponge filter on tanks with show-finned strains. This is the single biggest cause of "my new guppy lost its tail in a week."

## Strain-Specific Care Notes

The basics in the [full Fancy Guppies guide](/guides/fancy-guppies-guide) apply to every strain — moderately hard alkaline water, stable temperature, varied diet, sponge filter. A few strains have additional quirks worth flagging.

### Long-Finned Strains (Veiltail, Rosetail, Halfmoon)

These need the gentlest flow setup of any guppy. A sponge filter is mandatory. If you're running a HOB, baffle the output with a piece of filter floss in the spillway or a pre-filter sponge over the intake. Watch the fish at rest — if the long-finned males are constantly being pushed by current, the flow is too high regardless of what the manufacturer rates the filter for.

Keep the substrate smooth (sand or rounded gravel) and skip any décor with rough edges. A clean 20-long with smooth river rock, driftwood, and dense plants is the ideal habitat for a rosetail tank.

### Albino and Platinum Strains

Albinos lack the protective pigmentation that absorbs UV and bright light. They're not blind, but they're more sensitive to high-intensity LED setups. Use floating plants like dwarf water lettuce or hornwort to break up overhead light, and avoid the brightest "high-intensity reef" LEDs.

Albinos and full platinums also tend to have slightly smaller broods and slightly higher fry mortality. Plan for a separate fry tank if you want to maintain the line — the standard "let them hide in the moss" approach loses too many.

### Dumbo Ear Strains

Dumbo Ears swim with a slightly different posture because their oversized pectorals create more drag. They tire faster in current and are even more flow-sensitive than veiltails. Sponge filter only. Keep them with calm tank mates — small tetras, dwarf cories, and shrimp — and avoid any species that out-races them at feeding time.

## Population Control

Fancy guppies are biology on autopilot. A single gravid female purchased from a tank with males will keep producing fry every 28–35 days for months without a male present, because she stores sperm. A trio (1 male, 2 females) in a planted 10-gallon will produce 50–100 surviving fry per quarter if the tank has any plant cover at all.

> **Breeding is automatic — population control isn't**
>
> Don't put mixed sexes in a tank unless you have a plan for the fry. The default outcome is exponential growth followed by a tank crash six months later when nitrate or stocking density spikes. Options: keep an all-male display tank (most colorful, no fry), let adults predate fry in a sparsely planted setup (some still survive), give fry to the LFS as feeders or trade stock, or commit to a separate grow-out tank and rehome regularly.

Most experienced keepers run all-male tanks for the simple reason that only males show the strain coloration anyway. A 10-gallon with 5–6 males of the same strain is a stable, low-drama display that you can ignore for weeks at a time. Mixed-sex tanks are a project — they require active management or they become a problem.

## Modern Disease Concerns: 2020s Viral Outbreaks

This is the section that's missing from older guppy guides because the threats are recent. The fancy guppy supply chain has changed dramatically in the last few years, and the diseases riding along with imported stock have changed with it.

### Guppy Iridovirus and Recent Farm Outbreaks

Through the 2020s, multiple outbreaks of viral diseases — particularly guppy iridovirus and several novel megalocytivirus strains — have swept through commercial guppy farms in Southeast Asia, where the bulk of US supply originates. Symptoms include sudden mass mortality, abdominal swelling, color loss, and resistance to standard antibiotic and antiparasitic treatments because the underlying pathogen is viral, not bacterial.

There is no effective treatment once a tank is infected. The only defense is sourcing carefully (domestic breeders or LFSes that quarantine in-house), running your own 14–21 day quarantine on every new fish, and never adding water from a transport bag to your display tank. If you lose a tank to what looks like viral disease — multiple fish dead in 48 hours with no parameter problem — bleach the entire setup before restocking.

### Why the Quarantine Tank is Non-Negotiable Now

Pre-2020, a 7-day quarantine was overkill for guppies. Today it's the minimum. Set up a bare-bottom 5- or 10-gallon with a sponge filter and a heater, and run every new fish through it for at least 14 days before introducing them to your main tank. Watch for behavior changes, color loss, and any white or fuzzy growths. A single infected fish can wipe out an established tank inside a week.

The economics are simple: a $20 quarantine setup pays for itself the first time it stops a viral outbreak from reaching your main display, which has months of investment in livestock, plants, and stable bacteria.

## Buying Fancy Guppies Today

The strain you want is unlikely to be at PetSmart. Quality fancies — clean pattern, full tails, stable genetics, healthy stock — come from specialty LFSes, IFGA-affiliated breeders, and direct-from-hobbyist sales through guppy clubs and Facebook groups. Browse our [freshwater fish overview](/guides/freshwater-fish) for context on how guppies fit alongside other beginner-friendly community species.

For tank planning, our [20-gallon fish tank guide](/guides/20-gallon-fish-tank) covers the most common upgrade path from a starter 10. A 20-long is what most fancy guppy keepers settle on within a year — more swimming length, more buffer, room for a real plant scape.

If you're cross-shopping with related species, see our [cobra guppy](/species/cobra-guppy) entry for the snakeskin sister strain and (forthcoming) [endler's livebearer](/species/endlers-livebearer) entry for the smaller, hardier wild-type cousin that crossbreeds freely with fancies. If you want to maintain a strain, never house endlers and fancies together — the offspring will be unpredictable hybrids that dilute both lines within a generation.

## Quick Reference

- **Scientific name:** *Poecilia reticulata*
- **Adult size:** 1.5–2.5 in (strain-dependent)
- **Lifespan:** 2–3 years
- **Min tank:** 10 gallons (20-long preferred)
- **Temperature:** 72–82°F (76°F sweet spot)
- **pH:** 7.0–8.2
- **Hardness:** GH 8–12 dGH (moderately hard, slightly alkaline)
- **Diet:** Color-enhancing micro-pellets + frozen brine shrimp/daphnia 2–3x/week
- **Tail shapes to learn:** Delta, fan, veiltail, halfmoon, rosetail
- **Strain label format:** \[Pattern] + \[Color] + \[Tail Shape] (e.g., Blue Moscow Delta)
- **Grading tiers:** Show quality, pet quality, cull
- **Sex ratio:** 1 male per 2–3 females, or all-male display
- **Tank mates:** Pygmy corydoras, ember tetras, harlequin rasboras, otocinclus, Amano shrimp
- **Avoid:** Tiger barbs, serpae tetras, bettas, large cichlids, goldfish, sharp décor, strong flow
- **Quarantine:** 14–21 days minimum on every new fish (viral disease risk)
- **Difficulty:** Beginner — but show strains need stable parameters and clean water
- **Canonical reference:** [Read the full Fancy Guppies guide](/guides/fancy-guppies-guide)

## Frequently Asked Questions

### How many fancy guppies can I keep in a 10-gallon tank?

A 10-gallon tank comfortably holds 6–8 fancy guppies. Maintain a 1:2 male-to-female ratio to reduce female stress from constant male pursuit. Add a sponge filter and live plants to keep water quality stable at that stocking level.

### Do fancy guppies need a heater?

Yes. Fancy guppies thrive at 72–82°F and become lethargic or disease-prone below 68°F. A small adjustable heater (25–50W for a 10-gallon) keeps temperatures stable, which is especially important during winter months in most US homes.

### How often do fancy guppies breed?

Female fancy guppies can drop fry every 28–35 days after a single mating, since they store sperm. Expect 20–60 fry per drop. Without a separate fry tank or dense plant cover, adults will eat most newborns within hours.

### What is the rarest fancy guppy strain?

Full Platinum and Purple Moscow strains are among the hardest to source in the US. Availability varies widely between local fish stores and specialty breeders. Check regional guppy clubs or reputable online breeders if your LFS doesn't carry show-quality strains.

### Why is my fancy guppy's tail clamped or fraying?

Clamped or fraying fins usually signal poor water quality, fin rot (bacterial), or physical damage from fin-nipping tank mates. Test ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate first. If parameters are off, perform a water change; if bacterial infection is suspected, treat with a livebearer-safe antibiotic.

---
*Source: [FishStores.org](https://www.fishstores.org/species/fancy-guppy)*
*Last updated: April 24, 2026*