Test frequently during cycling, after changes, and at least weekly in a stable tank; test immediately if behavior, appetite or gills look unusual.
What it means for keepers
This question is part of cycling, temperature, ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, pH and water changes. For beginners, the practical answer matters more than a cute social-media example. Axolotls can appear calm even when a tank is not safe, so decisions should be based on measured water conditions, the animal’s behavior over time and conservative husbandry.
Quick checklist
- Test ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, pH and temperature before changing care routines.
- Keep ammonia and nitrite at 0 ppm in an occupied tank.
- Use dechlorinated water and avoid sudden chemistry swings.
Common mistakes
The most common mistake is treating one isolated answer as the whole care plan. A safe axolotl setup combines tank size, cycling, temperature, filtration, hides, feeding and ongoing testing. When advice online conflicts, choose the option that gives the animal more water volume, lower stress and cleaner water.