Water quality guide
Ammonia In Koi Ponds
Ammonia is one of the first water-quality problems koi keepers must understand. It can rise in new ponds, overstocked ponds, overfed ponds, or systems with weak biological filtration.
Why Ammonia Matters
Koi produce waste through their gills and digestion. Uneaten food, decaying material, and immature filters can add more load. A healthy biological filter helps convert ammonia as part of the nitrogen cycle.
Common Causes
New pond syndrome, overfeeding, too many fish, filter damage, dead organic material, or medication disrupting filter bacteria.
Possible Signs
Gasping, lethargy, clamped fins, flashing, reduced appetite, or koi gathering near water returns can all justify testing.
Context Matters
Ammonia risk is influenced by pH and temperature, so isolated numbers are less useful than a full water picture.
First Response Checklist
Avoid sudden, poorly understood changes. The goal is to reduce risk while protecting oxygen and biological filtration.
- Stop or reduce feeding while the pond is unstable.
- Increase aeration if fish show stress or oxygen demand is high.
- Retest ammonia, pH, KH, nitrite, and temperature.
- Review filter function, recent cleaning, new fish, and stocking level.
Related KoiTalk Pages
Ammonia problems connect directly to filter maturity, feeding, stocking, and fish behavior.