Can Chocolate Gourami and Cuban Gar Live Together?
Chocolate Gourami and Cuban Gar are not recommended as tank mates due to incompatible hardness ranges. Housing these species together is likely to result in stress, health problems, or direct harm to one or both fish.
At a Glance
Can your tank handle Chocolate Gourami and Cuban Gar?
Compatibility is only part of the answer. Test both fish with your real tank size, current stock, and maintenance needs to see if you have enough space and a safe stocking level before you add them.
Behaviour & Temperament
Chocolate Gourami is a peaceful species (2/10), while Cuban Gar is moderately assertive (6/10). This notable difference means Cuban Gar may occasionally assert dominance over Chocolate Gourami.
Chocolate Gourami and Cuban Gar both frequent the Top (Surface) and Middle (Open Water) region of the setup. This overlap can increase competition for space, so providing ample room and cover is important to keep both species comfortable.
Worth noting: Cuban Gar is a known jumper, so a tight-fitting lid is essential.
Water Parameters
The safe temperature window for both species falls between 25°C and 30°C. Aim for the midpoint of this range (around 27.5°C) for optimal comfort.
Both fish can tolerate a pH between 6.5 and 6.5. Maintaining a stable value within this band is more important than hitting an exact number.
Hardness requirements are incompatible: Chocolate Gourami needs 0–5 dGH while Cuban Gar requires 8–20 dGH.
Tank Setup
To house Chocolate Gourami and Cuban Gar together, plan for an aquarium of at least 3785 litres with a minimum length of 300 cm. This recommendation combines the stricter species minimums with a community-load allowance so the pairing has realistic long-term space and filtration headroom.
Providing a mix of open swimming space and sheltered areas with rocks, driftwood, or plants will keep both species comfortable and allow natural behaviour.
Specific environmental needs for this combination include: Leaf Litter/Blackwater, Plants - Densely covered, Plants - Floating, Driftwood (Digestion/Hiding), Smooth Gravel (Sensitive Barbels). Meeting these requirements will help both species thrive.
Both species do well with low (still water) water movement, so a standard filtration setup rated for the tank volume should suffice.
Why This Pairing Usually Fails in Practice
Chocolate Gourami and Cuban Gar are the kind of pair that can look acceptable in a shop but become a maintenance problem at home. The main risk is not a single number in the chart; it is the way incompatible behavior, water needs, or pressure on space compounds over time once both fish are established in the same tank.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Chocolate Gourami and Cuban Gar live together?
No. This combination is not recommended. Key incompatibilities — such as critical behavioural conflicts — make cohabitation unsafe.
What size tank do Chocolate Gourami and Cuban Gar need?
A minimum of 3785 litres (tank length at least 300 cm) is recommended. This provides enough space for both species to establish their own areas and reduces the likelihood of territorial disputes.
What water temperature is best for Chocolate Gourami and Cuban Gar together?
Keep the aquarium between 25°C and 30°C. A target of around 27.5°C sits comfortably within both species' preferred ranges.
Are Chocolate Gourami or Cuban Gar aggressive?
Chocolate Gourami is peaceful (2/10) and Cuban Gar is moderately assertive (6/10). The gap in aggression levels means the calmer fish may experience stress from the more assertive one.
What pH do Chocolate Gourami and Cuban Gar need?
Both species overlap in the 6.5–6.5 pH range. Consistency is key — avoid sudden swings, and test regularly to stay within this window.
Shared setup supplies
We may earn from qualifying purchases
Guidarium Editorial Desk
Reviewed against Guidarium care, stocking, and compatibility standards. Read the editorial policy.
- Last reviewed
- May 4, 2026
- Last updated
- May 4, 2026
- Issues or corrections?
- Contact the editorial team
Related Comparisons
Chocolate Gourami & Sparkling Gourami
·
Chocolate Gourami & Banded Gourami
·
Chocolate Gourami & Betta Imbellis
·
Chocolate Gourami & Honey Gourami
·
Chocolate Gourami & Leopard Bushfish (Ctenopoma)
·
Chocolate Gourami & Licorice Gourami
·
Cuban Gar & Alligator Gar
·
Cuban Gar & Florida Gar
·
Cuban Gar & Longnose Gar
·
Cuban Gar & Needlenose Gar
·
Cuban Gar & New Guinea Tigerfish
·
Cuban Gar & Silver Datnoid (Silver Tigerfish)
·



