← Waterbox Cube 10 (AIO) · All nano return pumps
Best pumps for the Waterbox Cube 10 (AIO)
Target a return pump that turns over the display volume roughly 5 times per hour, with 4 to 8 times per hour being acceptable. If the pump has no published flow-vs-head curve, derate the rated flow by about 25% to account for head loss from the return line. DC pumps are worth considering on nano tanks because they're throttleable, letting you dial back flow if the rated output is higher than needed.
The Waterbox Cube 10 holds 10.9 gallons in a nearly square 13.8 × 14.2 in footprint and ships without a light. Its rear chamber is 4.9 in wide × 3.1 in deep × 13.8 in tall per manufacturer specs — the widest chamber in its size class, which broadens in-sump skimmer and pump options, though the 3.1 in depth remains the limiting dimension. The stock return pump runs 158 GPH (included with the full AIO kit, not the tank-only SKU).
Sicce Syncra Nano $34.99
- ~83 gph at the tank ≈ 7.6× display turnover
- 2.3×1.7" footprint fits the 4.9×3.1" rear chamber
All pumps compared
| Pump | Max flow | Type | Price | Verdict |
| Sicce Syncra Nano Sicce | 110 gph | AC | $34.99 | Top pick |
| MightyJet Desktop DC (326 GPH) Innovative Marine | 326 gph | DC | $146.00 | Works, oversized |
| MightyJet Midsize DC (538 GPH) Innovative Marine | 538 gph | DC | $159.00 | Works, oversized |
| EHEIM compactON 600 EHEIM | 159 gph | AC | — | Too strong (AC) |
| Tunze Silence 1073.008 Tunze | 210 gph | AC | $54.99 | Too strong (AC) |
| Sicce Syncra Silent 1.0 Sicce | 251 gph | AC | $69.99 | Too strong (AC) |
| IceCap EVO 1000 IceCap | 315 gph | AC | $40.01 | Doesn't fit chamber |
| VarioS-2 Controllable DC Reef Octopus | 792 gph | DC | $311.84 | Doesn't fit chamber |
FAQ
How big a return pump do I need for a 10-gallon AIO?
Aim for roughly 50 GPH of actual flow at head, which is 5× the 10-gallon display volume. If the pump has no head curve, take the rated GPH and reduce it by about 25% to estimate real-world output, then pick a pump whose derated flow lands in the 40-80 GPH range.
What does 'derating for head loss' mean and why does it matter?
Head loss is the flow reduction caused by the pump pushing water upward and through tubing back to the display. A pump rated at 200 GPH in open water may only deliver 150 GPH or less at your actual return height. Without a published flow-vs-head curve, a 25% derating is a reasonable approximation.
Is a DC return pump worth it on a small tank?
Often yes. DC pumps let you throttle flow down if the rated output is too strong for your nano, and they typically run quieter and cooler than AC pumps. The tradeoff is higher upfront cost, but the controllability is genuinely useful on tanks where a few GPH can make a noticeable difference.