Few pets are as misunderstood as the goldfish. Generations of myths have led to fish kept in tiny bowls, living a fraction of their potential lifespan. Clearing up a few persistent misconceptions can dramatically improve a goldfish's life.
Myth: goldfish can live in a bowl
This is the most harmful myth of all. Goldfish are messy, grow large, and need a lot of well-filtered water. A bowl has no filtration and far too little volume, leading to a slow death from poor water quality. A single fancy goldfish needs a sizeable filtered tank, and common goldfish need much more.
Myth: goldfish only live a few years
- In proper conditions goldfish commonly live 10 to 20 years.
- The short lifespans people expect are the result of poor housing, not the fish's nature.
Myth: a goldfish only grows to its tank size
Stunting from a small tank is a sign of poor health, not natural sizing — it shortens life and harms organs. Goldfish keep growing and need space to do so.
Give them what they need
A large, well-filtered tank, the nitrogen cycle respected, regular water changes and a balanced diet are all it takes. Treated properly, a goldfish is a long-lived, characterful companion — not a disposable fairground prize.