Why Chasing pH is a Trap for Beginner Reefkeepers

mattgsa

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Among the many distractions that lead beginners astray in reef keeping, pH ranks high on the list. New hobbyists often become obsessed with it, thinking that low pH is a ticking time bomb. They dump additives, buy overpriced gear, and tweak endlessly in pursuit of a perfect number. The reality? Chasing pH is one of the fastest ways for beginners to derail a stable tank.

Understanding What pH Really Is
pH isn't a standalone number to target. It reflects other chemical dynamics in your tank: CO2 levels, alkalinity, and biological processes. Trying to "fix" pH directly is like treating a fever with ice packs instead of addressing the underlying infection. If your alkalinity and gas exchange are in check, pH will settle where it needs to be.

Yes, Higher pH Has Benefits — But...
There’s no denying that higher pH (8.3–8.5) can accelerate coral growth and improve calcification. However, here's the catch: these benefits are only available in tanks that are already stable and well-managed. For beginners still learning the basics, trying to force a higher pH without understanding the system usually causes more damage than progress. It’s a bonus, not a requirement.

The CO2 Problem Beginners Overlook
Most new hobbyists run tanks in sealed homes with poor ventilation. That means CO2 builds up in the room, and your tank absorbs it, dropping the pH. Unless you're opening windows or improving gas exchange, you’re fighting a losing battle. Adding chemicals won’t improve the air quality in your living room.

Why Stable Beats Ideal
Beginner tanks fail due to instability, not because the pH didn’t reach 8.3. Plenty of thriving reefs sit at 7.8 every day. Chasing numbers leads to overcorrection: sudden swings, dead corals, stressed fish. Focus on consistency, not perfection. Stability is what keeps life alive in your tank.

Gadgets and Additives Aren’t a Shortcut
New reefers see Kaltwasser, pH buffers, and CO2 scrubbers as solutions. But these are tools for advanced users who already understand their tank’s chemistry. Using them prematurely usually causes imbalance, overdosing, and confusion. These tools can help—but only if you first understand the problem.

What Beginners Should Really Focus On
If you're new, spend your energy here:
  • Alkalinity: Maintain a stable level between 7.5–8.5 dKH. This is your pH buffer.
  • Calcium & Magnesium: Maintain proper levels to support alk stability.
  • Nutrients: Avoid zeroing out nitrates and phosphates. Coral needs them.
  • Gas Exchange: Point powerheads at the surface, use a good skimmer, and ventilate the room.
Conclusion
For beginners, chasing pH is like trying to drive by staring at the speedometer instead of the road. Don’t fall into that trap. If your livestock appears healthy and your tank is stable, stop searching for phantom problems. Let pH land where it wants to, as long as your fundamentals are solid. Focus on what matters, and your reef will reward you with growth and stability.
 
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Randy Holmes-Farley

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FWIW, I don’t agree with some the opinions expressed. There’s no evidence to support claims such as instability being the issue as opposed to pH.
 
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mattgsa

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Thanks for the reply, Randy. I genuinely appreciate your input.

To clarify, I'm not claiming that low pH is somehow irrelevant or that pH stability isn't valuable. My point is more behavioral than chemical: new hobbyists often overreact to pH numbers without understanding the underlying causes (usually CO₂), and that leads them down a rabbit hole of additives, gear, and dosing routines that create instability in other, more critical parameters, like alkalinity, salinity, and nutrient levels.

When I say "instability is the issue," I'm referring to the overcompensation cycle that beginners often fall into when they chase pH as a standalone goal. It's less about disputing the science of pH and more about flagging a pattern of behavior in the hobby that often ends with stressed corals, fluctuating parameters, and worse outcomes than if they had allowed their tank to settle at 7.8, focusing on alkalinity and gas exchange.

You're absolutely right, there may not be formal studies showing pH chasing causes tank crashes. However, I'd argue that the anecdotal evidence from forums, local clubs, and even vendor support calls paints a fairly consistent picture.

Appreciate you chiming in, your work has shaped how most of us even think about reef chemistry.
 

Pat's Reef

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This thread is for the general discussion of the Article Why Chasing pH is a Trap for Beginner Reefkeepers. Please add to the discussion here.
PH can be stabilized at 8.3 by drip introducing kalkwasser at a rate that matches daily evaporation fairly easily. But if you are not doing anything to stabilize your pH, it is crucial to test at the same time of day every time to get a usable reading. PH naturally swings with carbon dioxide levels in the water. So all day, pH rises as algae uses carbon dioxide. But at night, algae switches to respiration, using oxygen and producing CO2, and pH drops overnight. So, the reading varies with the timing of your lights. Kalkwasser can also raise and lower pH when introduced once a day, but it creates a natural buffer with aragonite that will lock it in at a stable 8.3 when drip introduced 24/7.
 

Randy Holmes-Farley

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PH can be stabilized at 8.3 by drip introducing kalkwasser at a rate that matches daily evaporation fairly easily.

That is not true. The implication is that no matter how high the air CO2, the dosed kalk will resolve it, and for many, many reefs that just does not happen.


Kalkwasser can also raise and lower pH when introduced once a day, but it creates a natural buffer with aragonite that will lock it in at a stable 8.3 when drip introduced 24/7.
The comment about aragonite is also simply untrue. Aragonite will not dissolve into seawater and do any buffering until the pH is well below pH 7.8. At pH 7.9 is does nothing to help pH.
 
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mattgsa

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I probably did it all wrong because my tank was nearly impossible to keep at a decent PH. I had to do so much Kalk, my sump would overflow, then I tried to use your solution ( @Randy Holmes-Farley ) using sodium hydroxide, and could never get the dosing and sump flow right to where it didn't take all the calcium out of solution. But like I said, I most likely did it wrong.
 

painter1982

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I just build a co2 scrubber for my tank. Similar to brs double jumbo, but half the price. I’m amazed. My ph climbed to 8.36 today. Was topping at 8.2 max. I just installed it last night. I’m curious to see the averages over the next week. It would drop to 7.76 at night. Last night low was 7.99
 

rtparty

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The general scope of the article and the ideas presented are fantastic IMO. If one is a regular on forums and in other groups you will see the trend discussed in the article.

So many new reefers get a one off pH reading from either a “master kit” or their LFS and all the sudden they’re dosing “pH Balance 2000” trying to get that elusive 8.4 number they’ve heard about. The majority of them have no idea they’re just boosting alkalinity sky high and then they deal with the fallout.

I love pH. I think it is a fantastic parameter that has real merit. I do absolutely nothing to boost mine or even care what it is these days. It’s more headache and tail chasing than it’s worth IMO
 

Sean Clark

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I am running kalkwasser to replace calcium and alkalinity; which does affect my pH. I don't use kalkwasser for pH. I would be chasing a mythical dragon and throwing my tank parameters out of balance. I think lots of reefers get caught up in the pH trap.
 

FisheRare

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Among the many distractions that lead beginners astray in reef keeping, pH ranks high on the list. New hobbyists often become obsessed with it, thinking that low pH is a ticking time bomb. They dump additives, buy overpriced gear, and tweak endlessly in pursuit of a perfect number. The reality? Chasing pH is one of the fastest ways for beginners to derail a stable tank.

Understanding What pH Really Is
pH isn't a standalone number to target. It reflects other chemical dynamics in your tank: CO2 levels, alkalinity, and biological processes. Trying to "fix" pH directly is like treating a fever with ice packs instead of addressing the underlying infection. If your alkalinity and gas exchange are in check, pH will settle where it needs to be.

Yes, Higher pH Has Benefits — But...
There’s no denying that higher pH (8.3–8.5) can accelerate coral growth and improve calcification. However, here's the catch: these benefits are only available in tanks that are already stable and well-managed. For beginners still learning the basics, trying to force a higher pH without understanding the system usually causes more damage than progress. It’s a bonus, not a requirement.

The CO2 Problem Beginners Overlook
Most new hobbyists run tanks in sealed homes with poor ventilation. That means CO2 builds up in the room, and your tank absorbs it, dropping the pH. Unless you're opening windows or improving gas exchange, you’re fighting a losing battle. Adding chemicals won’t improve the air quality in your living room.

Why Stable Beats Ideal
Beginner tanks fail due to instability, not because the pH didn’t reach 8.3. Plenty of thriving reefs sit at 7.8 every day. Chasing numbers leads to overcorrection: sudden swings, dead corals, stressed fish. Focus on consistency, not perfection. Stability is what keeps life alive in your tank.

Gadgets and Additives Aren’t a Shortcut
New reefers see Kaltwasser, pH buffers, and CO2 scrubbers as solutions. But these are tools for advanced users who already understand their tank’s chemistry. Using them prematurely usually causes imbalance, overdosing, and confusion. These tools can help—but only if you first understand the problem.

What Beginners Should Really Focus On
If you're new, spend your energy here:
  • Alkalinity: Maintain a stable level between 7.5–8.5 dKH. This is your pH buffer.
  • Calcium & Magnesium: Maintain proper levels to support alk stability.
  • Nutrients: Avoid zeroing out nitrates and phosphates. Coral needs them.
  • Gas Exchange: Point powerheads at the surface, use a good skimmer, and ventilate the room.
Conclusion
For beginners, chasing pH is like trying to drive by staring at the speedometer instead of the road. Don’t fall into that trap. If your livestock appears healthy and your tank is stable, stop searching for phantom problems. Let pH land where it wants to, as long as your fundamentals are solid. Focus on what matters, and your reef will reward you with growth and stability.
I will admit that was me 5 plus years ago. Thinking a higher ph would make everything in the tank better . I dumped all types of supplements into my 40 gallon starter tank looking to get the ph yo 8.3 .
I did algae scrubbers ,kalkwasswer, soda ash , sometimes all in a weeks time ,on several occasions I spiked ph to 8.7 thinking this was awesome and i achieved my goal .but everything else in the tank was messed up.
Here I am 5 years into the hobby and my ph reaches 8.15 to 8.5 daily on a consistent basis. Corals and fish are thriving
So my point reefers is take your time and learn first before experimenting ,it will save you stress and a lot of money 💰. We all know this hobby is expensive
 

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