You don’t need to spend thousands of dollars to start aquaponics — a fully functional, productive system can be built with basic materials for as little as $200–$500, and it works.
The internet is full of elaborate aquaponics setups with custom tanks, automated systems, and professional-grade equipment. That’s all wonderful, but it can make beginners feel they need to spend big before they start. They don’t. Here’s the minimum viable aquaponics system — what you genuinely need, what you can skip, and where to find cheap materials without compromising performance.
What Are the Absolute Minimum Components for Aquaponics?
A functional aquaponics system needs just five things:
- A fish tank (holds fish and water)
- A grow bed (holds media and plants)
- Grow media (supports plants, hosts bacteria)
- A pump (moves water from tank to grow bed)
- An air pump (oxygenates fish tank)
That’s it. Every other element — sumps, filtration units, UV sterilisers, automatic feeders, pH controllers — is an enhancement, not a requirement.
Budget Options for Each Component
1. Fish Tank — from $0 to $150
The fish tank needs to be:
- Food-safe (no treated timber, galvanised metal, or non-food-grade plastic)
- At least 200 litres for a starter system (smaller works but gives less margin for error)
- Dark-coloured (reduces algae growth in the tank)
Budget options:
- IBC tote (1,000 L): $80–$150 secondhand — cut down to 300–400 L and use the top as a grow bed frame. One IBC gives you both tank and grow bed material.
- Food-grade plastic barrel (200–220 L): $30–$80 from soft drink manufacturers, food processors, or Gumtree
- Old bathtub: Often free on Gumtree or Facebook Marketplace — porcelain is food-safe and fish-safe
- Stock water troughs: $100–$200 new from rural supply stores, often available secondhand
2. Grow Bed — from $0 to $100
The grow bed needs to be:
- Food-safe liner or material
- At least 20–30 cm deep (for flood-and-drain systems)
- Sized at roughly 1:1 or 2:1 ratio to fish tank volume
Budget options:
- IBC tote top section: The upper quarter of a cut IBC makes an excellent, already-framed grow bed for free
- Wooden crate lined with EPDM or heavy-duty pond liner: $20–$50 in materials
- Secondhand bathtub or laundry trough: Free to $30 on Gumtree
- Corrugated iron raised bed: $40–$80 for materials — attractive, durable, and Australian-made
3. Grow Media — from $20 to $80
Grow media must be:
- pH neutral (won’t raise or lower water pH)
- Porous (provides surface area for bacteria)
- Inert (won’t leach chemicals)
Budget options:
- River gravel (10–15 mm): $15–$30 per 20 kg bag from landscaping suppliers — excellent performance, lowest cost
- Crushed granite or scoria: $20–$40 per bag — lightweight, good bacterial surface area
- Avoid: Crushed limestone (raises pH), pea gravel (too small, clogs), beach sand (saltwater contamination risk), standard potting mix (breaks down, blocks pipes)
4. Water Pump — $20 to $60
You need a submersible pump that can lift water from your fish tank up to your grow bed and move the full tank volume every 1–2 hours. For a 300 L system:
- Flow rate: 600–1,000 L/hour
- Head height: at least 1 m above tank water level
Budget options:
- Generic submersible pond pump (600–1,200 L/hr): $20–$40 on eBay or Bunnings — adequate for small systems
- Quality brands (Aqua Nova, Jebao, Eheim): $40–$80 — longer lasting, more energy-efficient
- Avoid the cheapest no-brand options — they tend to fail within months
5. Air Pump — $15 to $40
An air pump with a simple air stone keeps dissolved oxygen above 5 mg/L, which is critical for fish health. For a 300 L tank:
- Single-outlet air pump 2–5 W: $15–$25 from aquarium shops or eBay
- Add a check valve ($3–$5) to prevent backflow if the pump stops
Simple Flood-and-Drain Plumbing — Under $30
The simplest aquaponics plumbing is a flood-and-drain system using a bell siphon or timer-controlled pump:
- Bell siphon kit: $15–$25 from aquaponics suppliers or DIY from 50 mm and 90 mm PVC pipe
- Inlet pipe: 20 mm agricultural poly pipe with fittings, $5–$10
- Overflow/standpipe: 40 mm PVC, $5
Total plumbing cost: $25–$40 for a fully functional flood-and-drain system.
Minimum Starter System Cost Summary
- Fish tank (IBC tote): $100
- Grow bed (IBC top or crate with liner): $0–$50
- Grow media (river gravel): $30
- Water pump: $30
- Air pump + air stone: $20
- Plumbing: $30
- Total: $210–$260
Add fish (6–10 fingerlings at $3–$8 each = $20–$80) and seedlings ($0 if grown from seed or cuttings) and you have a fully functional aquaponics system for under $350.
Frequently Asked Questions
What fish can I start with on a tight budget?
Goldfish are free or very cheap, hardy, and produce sufficient nutrients for a starter system. Once you’re comfortable with system management, upgrade to silver perch, tilapia, or your preferred edible species.
Can I use tap water for a budget aquaponics system?
Yes. Dechlorinate tap water with a cheap sodium thiosulphate dechlorinator ($5 from aquarium shops) or by leaving it to stand for 24 hours. Chloramine-treated water (used in many Australian cities) requires chemical dechlorination — standing alone won’t remove it.
Do I need a pH meter or test kit?
Yes — this is the one area not to skip. An API Freshwater Master Test Kit ($40–$50) is essential for knowing when your system is cycled and for diagnosing problems. Skipping water testing is the fastest route to fish death.
Can I skip the grow bed and just grow plants in the fish tank?
You can float rafts directly on a large fish tank (the DWC/raft method) without a separate grow bed. This is an even simpler and cheaper setup — foam sheets ($10–$20), net pots ($5 for a bag), and clay pebbles or gravel support, and your plants grow directly on the fish tank surface.
Ready to go beyond the basics and build a fully optimised aquaponics system? Our complete aquaponics training takes you from first principles through to a productive, well-managed system — start building today.

Am in Tanzania and a have a fish pond which is not movable will it be uswefull for this
Yes you can definitely transform your existing water pond into aquaponics. You simply need to build a growbed aside.
I will publish a video on this topic just for you my friend 🙂
Awesome post! Keep up the great work! 🙂
Thanks my friend, I hope it’s useful and you put it in practice 🙂
Great content! Super high-quality! Keep it up! 🙂
Thanks my friend, have you gathered the material to start your first aquaponics system yet?