Troubleshooting community setups: see the compatibility result using temperature, pH, GH/KH, adult size, behavior, schooling needs, and predator/prey rules.
Likely compatible
Dwarf Gourami and Guppy compatibility verdict
Short answer: Likely, when tank size, group needs, and water parameters are handled. Plan for at least 20 gallons before adjusting for group size, filtration, and aquascape layout.
compatibleDwarf Gourami and Guppy appear to have compatible basic freshwater ranges and behavior requirements when normal husbandry needs are met.
green
Likely compatible with conditions
Data confidence: medium
compatibleDwarf Gourami and Guppy appear to have compatible basic freshwater ranges and behavior requirements when normal husbandry needs are met.
This verdict assumes normal social groups, not one stressed specimen. Guppy should be planned at 3+ before judging long-term compatibility.
Fry safety
If livebearer fry matter, assume most community fish will eat newborn fry unless the tank has dense plants, floating cover, and a separate grow-out plan.
Real-World Experience
Textbook score vs observed behavior
A compatibility score checks adult size, temperature, pH, hardness, temperament, and tank volume. Real tanks add variables the score cannot see directly: feeding aggression, cave ownership, plant cover, and whether fish can constantly see each other.
Line-of-sight and swim-zone pressure
Dwarf Gourami and Guppy may compete for the same swimming lane, food path, or line-of-sight territory. Start with at least 20 gallons, then use hardscape, tall plants, and separated feeding zones to reduce chasing before it becomes a pattern.
Water parameter comparison
Dwarf Gourami temperature76-82F
Guppy temperature72-82F
Dwarf Gourami pH6-7.8
Guppy pH7-8.2
Dwarf Gourami GH2-15 dGH
Guppy GH8-20 dGH
Minimum tank20 gal
Last updated2026-05-13
Confidence: medium. Aggression, predator/prey, shrimp risk, schooling, and tank size rules are evaluated from curated freshwater attributes.
Conditions for success with Dwarf Gourami and Guppy
Problems can happen even when the gallon number is technically adequate. Check feeding order, repeated access to the same cave or plant mass, school size, and whether the aquascape gives either fish a direct line of sight across the whole tank.
How to break line-of-sight to reduce aggression
Use tall plants, rock piles, driftwood, and separate feeding stations so a dominant fish cannot patrol one open lane from end to end.