Filtration for Planted Tanks: Canister, Sponge, and CO2
By Maya Thornton . 9 min read . Updated June 2026
Filter selection in a planted aquarium involves trade-offs that do not apply to fish-only tanks. Surface agitation is the main concern: any filter that creates a strong surface disturbance will degas dissolved CO2 from the water faster than your injection system can replace it. The key options are the Oase BioMaster Thermo 250 Canister Filter and EHEIM Classic 250 Canister Filter for canister-filtered tanks, the Fluval 307 Performance Canister Filter as a widely available mid-range option, and the Aquarium Co-Op Coarse Sponge Filter for shrimp and nano setups. Add an Hydor In-Line External Heater (200W) to eliminate the heater from the aquascape interior.
The short answer
For mid to large planted tanks with CO2 injection, choose a canister filter with a submerged return outlet aimed horizontally to preserve dissolved CO2. The Oase BioMaster 250 is the top pick with its integrated heater and pre-filter chamber. For shrimp tanks and planted nano aquariums, a sponge filter powered by an air pump is the safest, most reliable choice that poses zero risk to shrimp.
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Why surface agitation matters in a CO2-injected planted tank
CO2 is a gas that dissolves into aquarium water and can also leave it at the water surface. The more turbulence at the surface, the faster dissolved CO2 escapes back into the room air. In a high-tech planted tank running pressurized CO2 via the CO2Art Pro-SE Dual Stage CO2 Regulator , surface agitation is your CO2 budget's enemy.
A canister filter returns water via a spray bar or lily pipe. If the spray bar is positioned below the surface and aimed horizontally, it creates circular water movement without breaking the surface.
Sponge filters and air-driven filters bubble air through the water column, which actually helps gas off CO2. For tanks with CO2 injection, sponge filters are not the right choice unless the tank is very small and you accept some CO2 inefficiency.
The Oase BioMaster: why it leads for planted tanks
The Oase BioMaster Thermo 250 Canister Filter earns its top ranking for planted tanks by solving two problems at once. Its integrated heater eliminates the need for a separate heater inside the aquarium, keeping the planted tank interior clean. Its pre-filter chamber opens independently so you can clean mechanical media without shutting down the biological media chamber.
The BioMaster operates quietly and the return can be configured with either a spray bar or a lily pipe attachment to route water along the back glass horizontally with minimal surface disturbance.
Oase BioMaster Thermo 250 Canister Filter
German-engineered canister filter with an integrated heater, a pre-filter chamber that opens without shutting down the main canister, and low surface-agitation output ideal for CO2-injected planted tanks.
$200-$280 premium
EHEIM Classic and Fluval 307: proven mid-range options
The EHEIM Classic 250 Canister Filter is the long-running benchmark for quiet, reliable canister filtration at a mid-range price. Its open media basket accepts any combination of mechanical, biological, and chemical media you prefer.
For owners who want widely available brand support, the Fluval 307 Performance Canister Filter delivers reliable multi-stage filtration with an instant-prime lever that simplifies restarts after maintenance.
EHEIM Classic 250 Canister Filter
German no-frills canister filter known for near-silent operation and decades-long reliability, a favorite in the planted tank hobby for its proven performance and media flexibility.
$90-$130 mid
Fluval 307 Performance Canister Filter
Widely available mid-range canister filter with multi-stage media baskets, an instant-prime lever, and reliable performance for planted tanks from 40 to 70 gallons.
$130-$170 mid
Sponge filters for shrimp and nano planted tanks
The Aquarium Co-Op Coarse Sponge Filter is the standard recommendation for any shrimp tank and for planted nano aquariums where canister filtration is unnecessary. Baby shrimp are tiny enough to be pulled into any open-intake powered filter. A sponge filter has no impeller and no intake that can injure or trap shrimp.
The foam surface of a sponge filter develops a rich biofilm colony over weeks. Shrimp graze this surface actively, so the sponge filter doubles as a feeding station for neocaridina and caridina shrimp.
Aquarium Co-Op Coarse Sponge Filter
Double-sided coarse sponge filter designed for shrimp tanks and planted nano aquariums, providing safe biological filtration with zero risk to baby shrimp and gentle water movement.
$8-$18 budget
Inline heaters: removing equipment from the aquascape
A traditional submersible heater is a visual intrusion in a planted aquascape, especially in minimalist styles like Iwagumi. The Hydor In-Line External Heater (200W) solves this by heating water outside the tank. It installs between the canister filter return hose and the tank fitting.
Inline heaters distribute heat more evenly than submersible units because the entire water volume passes through the heating element with every filter cycle. Temperature calibration on some units can run one to two degrees off from the dial setting; verify with a separate digital thermometer.
Hydor In-Line External Heater (200W)
External heater that installs inline on the canister filter return hose, keeping heating hardware out of the aquarium for a completely clean planted tank interior.
$40-$60 budget
Oase BioMaster Thermo 250 Canister Filter
German-engineered canister filter with an integrated heater, a pre-filter chamber that opens without shutting down the main canister, and low surface-agitation output ideal for CO2-injected planted tanks.
$200-$280 premium
EHEIM Classic 250 Canister Filter
German no-frills canister filter known for near-silent operation and decades-long reliability, a favorite in the planted tank hobby for its proven performance and media flexibility.
$90-$130 mid
Fluval 307 Performance Canister Filter
Widely available mid-range canister filter with multi-stage media baskets, an instant-prime lever, and reliable performance for planted tanks from 40 to 70 gallons.
$130-$170 mid
Featured in this guide
Oase BioMaster Thermo 250 Canister Filter
German-engineered canister filter with an integrated heater, a pre-filter chamber that opens without shutting down the main canister, and low surface-agitation output ideal for CO2-injected planted tanks.
$200-$280 premium
EHEIM Classic 250 Canister Filter
German no-frills canister filter known for near-silent operation and decades-long reliability, a favorite in the planted tank hobby for its proven performance and media flexibility.
$90-$130 mid
Fluval 307 Performance Canister Filter
Widely available mid-range canister filter with multi-stage media baskets, an instant-prime lever, and reliable performance for planted tanks from 40 to 70 gallons.
$130-$170 mid
Aquarium Co-Op Coarse Sponge Filter
Double-sided coarse sponge filter designed for shrimp tanks and planted nano aquariums, providing safe biological filtration with zero risk to baby shrimp and gentle water movement.
$8-$18 budget
Hydor In-Line External Heater (200W)
External heater that installs inline on the canister filter return hose, keeping heating hardware out of the aquarium for a completely clean planted tank interior.
$40-$60 budget
CO2Art Pro-SE Dual Stage CO2 Regulator
The planted tank community's benchmark dual-stage regulator with integrated solenoid, precision needle valve, and bubble counter, preventing end-of-tank dump across the cylinder's lifespan.
$150-$180 mid
UNS Pro Inline CO2 Diffuser
Inline diffuser plumbed directly into the canister filter return hose for invisible CO2 delivery and maximum dissolution efficiency, no visible equipment inside the tank.
$30-$50 budget
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
What flow rate should I target for a planted aquarium?+
A common guideline for planted tanks is four to six times the tank volume per hour in filter turnover. A 40-gallon planted tank would want a canister rated for 160 to 240 gallons per hour. Planted tanks do not need the high turnover of other tank types, and excessive flow disturbs the substrate and stresses delicate stem plants.
Can I use a HOB filter on a CO2-injected planted tank?+
You can, with a modification. A standard hang-on-back filter creates a waterfall return that disturbs the surface and degases CO2. If you extend the HOB return pipe so it exits below the water surface and flows horizontally, the surface disturbance is greatly reduced. For a serious high-tech setup, invest in a canister from the start.