AquaSnap is where your tank lives — freshwater, planted, saltwater, or reef. Auto-build stocking lists, log equipment and notes, keep a photo timeline, set maintenance reminders, and identify what's in the frame. Deep Analysis handles the tricky cases — ich, fin rot, coral issues, and stocking conflicts before they happen.
Available in English · Deutsch · 日本語 · Português · Español
Camera with color-correction filters, auto-built stocking lists, equipment log, free-form notes, photo & video timeline, recurring maintenance reminders with push notifications, and on-device species ID for quick checks. Everything most hobbyists need.
When something looks off, Deep Analysis IDs multiple species in one shot, catches early disease, and flags stocking conflicts before they become a problem.
Aquarium lighting throws off photos — blue actinics wash out reef shots, plant LEDs cast everything magenta, and tinted glass dulls the rest. AquaSnap's color filters fix the cast after you capture, so your fish, plants, and corals look the way you see them. Preview, adjust the intensity, and save.
Skip the messy spreadsheet. Snap a photo, confirm the species, and your stocking list and tank timeline update automatically. Log heaters, filters, and lights once and they stay tied to the tank. Jot a note when something changes. Recurring reminders for water changes, feedings, and dosing send a push when each one's due — tap to mark it done. And when someone asks "what fish is that?", share any photo or video straight to Instagram, Reddit, or Messages.
Snap a photo at the LFS or at your tank. Quick on-device ID handles common species offline — fish, corals, plants, and inverts. For the tough stuff — mislabeled juveniles, weird morphs, fry, or reef hitchhikers — Deep Analysis takes a closer look.
Deep Analysis spots ich, velvet, fin rot, HLLE, and other stress signs early. Get severity ratings, compatibility checks (so that new cichlid doesn't bully your tetras, or that wrasse doesn't pick on your shrimp), and care recommendations tailored to each species.
Color filters built in for reef, planted, and freshwater. See your tank the way it really looks.
Shoot a video and AquaSnap samples multiple frames so darting fish don't get missed.
Confirm the ID and it's added to your stocking list. Your tank's photo diary builds itself over time.
AquaSnap is free to download. Most of it — tank management, photo timeline, on-device species ID, color filters, and maintenance reminders — is free. Deep Analysis is offered as an optional subscription. See the app for current pricing.
Yes — that's the whole point. AquaSnap handles freshwater community fish, planted tanks, saltwater (tangs, clownfish, wrasses), and reef (LPS, SPS, soft corals, anemones, invertebrates). The camera has a built-in reef color correction filter so blue-lit tanks photograph naturally, and Deep Analysis flags reef-specific issues like coral bleaching, tissue recession, and stocking conflicts.
Yes. Deep Analysis flags signs of ich, velvet, fin rot, HLLE, swim bladder issues, ammonia stress, and coral problems like bleaching, recession, or tissue loss — with severity ratings and care recommendations specific to the species. It's not a substitute for an aquatic vet, but it catches things early, when they're still fixable.
Yes — multiple tanks, each with its own stocking list, equipment log, photo timeline, notes, and reminders. AquaSnap remembers the last tank you used and assigns new captures to it by default. The free tier covers a single tank; a paid subscription unlocks unlimited tanks.
Yes. Set recurring reminders for water changes, feedings, filter cleanings, dosing, testing — anything on your maintenance schedule. AquaSnap sends a local push notification when each one is due, and tapping it jumps straight to the tank's Care tab so you can mark it done.
Yes. Capture up to 15 seconds of video and AquaSnap analyzes multiple frames — so a fish that darts past or hides in the rocks still gets identified, and it'll flag multiple species in one shot. Deep Analysis goes further by reading behavior cues from the video (swimming patterns, fin movement, stress signs) to refine both the ID and the health read.
You can edit it. Every identification screen has an override — change the species, scientific name, or category by hand. When AquaSnap isn't confident (low certainty, unfamiliar tank scene), it won't pretend — it'll tell you it couldn't recognize the photo and let you pick manually or run Deep Analysis for a closer look.
Yes. The on-device model runs entirely on your phone — identify species, manage tanks, capture photos, log everything. Only Deep Analysis needs internet.
Between the on-device model and Deep Analysis, AquaSnap covers most of what aquarium hobbyists actually keep — freshwater community fish, cichlids, bettas, planted-tank plants, saltwater fish, reef corals (LPS, SPS, soft), anemones, and invertebrates. The on-device model handles common species instantly and offline; Deep Analysis picks up the long tail like uncommon morphs, juveniles that don't look like adults yet, mislabeled imports, and reef hitchhikers.
Yes — AquaSnap is available now on both the App Store and Google Play.
AquaSnap is fully localized into five languages: English, Deutsch, 日本語 (Japanese), Português (Brazilian Portuguese), and Español. The app interface, species names, care information, AI species identification, and Deep Analysis responses are all available in your language — set automatically from your device, and switchable any time from Settings.
I got tired of posting blurry photos to Reddit asking "is this aiptasia or a harmless feather duster?" and waiting hours for a reply. I wanted an app that just told me what I was looking at — instantly, offline, without a subscription wall. AquaSnap started as the tool I needed for my own reef tank.
If you're the kind of person who stares at their tank for 20 minutes a day, this is for you.
Free on the App Store and Google Play.
English · Deutsch · 日本語 · Português · Español