Platy
Platy recommends 20 gallons, while Molly is more comfortable from 30 gallons upward.
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Platy recommends 20 gallons, while Molly is more comfortable from 30 gallons upward.
Platy and Molly are both marked beginner friendly, so the decision comes down more to tank style and water fit.
Platy and Molly are similarly positioned for community tanks, so final success depends more on tank size and tank mate selection.
Molly reaches about 4.5 inches, which gives it more visual weight as a focal fish.
| Category | Platy | Molly |
|---|---|---|
| Type | Freshwater | Freshwater |
| Difficulty | Beginner-friendly | Beginner-friendly |
| Temperament | Peaceful | Peaceful |
| Recommended tank | 20 gallons | 30 gallons |
| Temperature | 64-82 F | 75-82 F |
| pH range | 7-8.2 | 7.5-8.5 |
| Max size | 2.5 inches | 4.5 inches |
| Lifespan | 3-5 years | 3-5 years |
| Community safe | Yes | Yes |
Platies and Mollies are two of the most popular livebearers in the hobby. Both are peaceful, beginner-friendly, and easy to mix with other community fish. But they are not identical. Mollies grow larger, prefer warmer and harder water, and need more space. Platies stay smaller, tolerate a broader temperature range, and fit well in mid-sized tanks. If you are choosing between them, the best approach is to match the fish to your tank size and water conditions first, then consider personality and display goals.
Platies list a 20-gallon recommended tank and a 10-gallon minimum. Mollies list a 30-gallon recommended tank and a 20-gallon minimum. The size difference matters because Mollies are larger and produce more waste. In a 20-gallon tank, a small group of Platies can live comfortably. The same tank feels tight for Mollies unless the stocking is very light.
If you want to keep Mollies in a community, plan on 30 gallons or more so the water stays stable and they have enough room to swim. Platies are more flexible and easier to fit into smaller setups. Both fish are active, so open swim space is important.
Platies prefer 64-82 F and pH 7-8.2 with hard water. Mollies prefer 75-82 F and pH 7.5-8.5, also with hard water. Mollies clearly lean warmer and more alkaline. If your water is naturally hard and your heater holds the mid to upper 70s, Mollies can thrive. If your tank runs cooler or your pH is closer to neutral, Platies are the safer choice.
Because both fish are hardy, they tolerate a range, but long-term health depends on stability. Choose a target inside the recommended range and keep it steady. That matters more than chasing a perfect number.
Both fish are peaceful and community-safe. Neither is a schooling fish, but both are social and do best in groups. Platies tend to be calm, steady swimmers. Mollies are more robust and can be more active, especially males. If you plan to keep either species, a ratio of more females than males helps reduce stress.
If you want a calm, colorful group in a mid-sized tank, Platies are excellent. If you want larger livebearers with more presence, Mollies deliver that look but need more space.
The Platy compatibility list includes other livebearers, tetras, rasboras, Corydoras catfish, dwarf gouramis, Mollies, and Swordtails. The Molly list includes other livebearers, tetras, rasboras, Corydoras catfish, Guppies, Platies, and Swordtails. Both lists avoid large aggressive fish, fin nippers, and predators.
That overlap means you can mix Platies and Mollies together if the tank is large enough and the water meets Molly preferences. But if your tank is smaller or your water is closer to neutral, Platies are easier to fit with other community fish.
Platies eat high-quality flake food, algae-based foods, vegetable matter, frozen daphnia, bloodworms, and brine shrimp. Mollies eat vegetable-based flake food, algae wafers, spirulina, blanched vegetables, frozen daphnia, and bloodworms. The diets overlap, but Mollies are more plant-focused. If you keep Mollies, include plenty of vegetable-based foods and algae wafers. Platies are more flexible but still benefit from plant matter.
Feed small amounts, spread across the surface, and watch for overeating. Livebearers tend to eat eagerly and can gain weight if overfed.
Both species are livebearers and will breed readily in community tanks. Platies are known for frequent births, and Mollies are equally prolific. If you are not prepared for fry, plan for ways to manage population: remove fry, separate sexes, or accept that the group will grow.
Because Mollies are larger, their fry can grow faster and increase bioload more quickly. In a small tank, Platy fry are easier to manage. In a larger tank, either can work, but plan your long-term stocking with breeding in mind.
Both Platies and Mollies are beginner-friendly, but Mollies demand more consistent water quality because they are larger and prefer warmer, more alkaline conditions. If you want the easiest possible livebearer, Platies are typically simpler. If you already run a warm, hard-water tank, Mollies are just as approachable.
Both species list a 3-5 year lifespan. That makes them a medium-term commitment. Because they breed often, your population may shift over time even if individual fish live a few years. If you want a stable group with minimal population change, you will need to manage breeding.
Platies are known for extreme color variety and patterning. The profile highlights colors like red, blue, yellow, orange, and patterns such as wagtail, tuxedo, and the popular Mickey Mouse pattern. If you want a tank with a bright, mixed palette, Platies deliver that easily. Mollies also come in striking varieties (black, gold, dalmatian, and lyretail), but their larger size makes each individual more prominent rather than creating a dense mosaic of small fish.
If your goal is a lively, colorful group in a mid-sized tank, Platies create a layered look with lots of movement. If your goal is a few larger livebearers that stand out against plants or hardscape, Mollies provide that presence. Neither is better; it depends on the visual style you want.
If you are setting up a first community tank, Platies are often the easier entry point because they tolerate a broader temperature range and take up less space. If you already run a warm, hard-water tank and want a larger livebearer that can act as a focal fish, Mollies are the more natural choice. For mixed livebearer tanks, base your plan on the Molly requirements because they are less flexible.
Yes. The compatibility lists include each other, and they share similar water preferences, especially in hard water. The main requirement is tank size and stability. If your tank is large enough and warm enough for Mollies, they can coexist with Platies easily. If your tank is smaller or cooler, Platies should be the focus.
Choose Platies if you have a 20-gallon community tank, want smaller livebearers, and prefer a fish that tolerates a wider temperature range. They are colorful, easy, and fit well with many other peaceful species.
Choose Mollies if you have at least a 30-gallon tank, can provide warm, hard, alkaline water, and want a larger, more robust livebearer. Their size and activity make them great focal livebearers in bigger community tanks.
This comparison uses the structured species profiles on this site, focusing on tank size, water parameters, temperament, diet, lifespan, and compatibility lists. We combine those facts with standard aquarium planning principles to help you choose a fish that matches your tank and routine. Use this as a decision framework and confirm with your own observations.
Which is better for a 20-gallon tank? Platies are the safer choice. Mollies recommend 30 gallons.
Do Mollies and Platies need hard water? Yes. Both prefer hard water, but Mollies are more sensitive to low hardness.
Which is more active? Mollies are generally more robust and active, while Platies are calm and steady.
Platy vs Molly is mostly about size and water. If you want a smaller, flexible livebearer for a mid-sized tank, Platies are ideal. If you want a larger livebearer and can provide warmer, harder water in a bigger tank, Mollies are the better fit. Both are peaceful, community-safe, and rewarding when their water needs are met.
Use the comparison to shortlist a fish, then open the individual care guide for stocking details, diet, water targets, and tank mate guidance.
Discover other popular fish pairings to find your perfect aquarium match.