You drink tap water. It’s safe for you.
So why does it kill your fish?
Because you have lungs. Your Betta has gills.
To a fish, tap water is not water—it is Bleach.
1. What is Chlorine?
Chlorine is a chemical added by the water company (Indah Water / PBA / Syabas) to kill bacteria in the pipes so you don’t get diarrhea.
- For Humans: It is safe in small amounts.
- For Fish: It is a deadly poison.
2. Why Does It Kill? (The Chemical Burn)
When a Betta swims in untreated tap water, the Chlorine attacks two things:
- The Gills: It physically burns the delicate gill tissue. Imagine breathing in a room full of smoke and bleach fumes. Your fish gasps at the surface because his gills are burned and can’t absorb oxygen.
- The Slime Coat: Fish have a slimy layer on their skin that protects them from disease. Chlorine strips this off, leaving them raw and open to bacteria.
How fast does it kill?
- High Concentration: The fish can die in 30 minutes to a few hours.
- Low Concentration: He might survive a few days, but his gills are permanently damaged, and he will die of stress or infection later.
3. The Big Question: Before or After?
Question: “Can I add the fish first, then pour the Anti-Chlorine in?”
Answer: NO.
Think of it like a gas chamber.
Would you put on a gas mask before you walk in, or walk in, take a few deep breaths of poison, and then put the mask on?
The “Premix” Rule:
- Fill your bucket with tap water.
- Add the Anti-Chlorine drops.
- Swirl it around for 1 minute.
- NOW pour it into the tank with the fish.
“Oops, I already added the fish!”
If you made a mistake, add the Anti-Chlorine immediately. Pour it near the filter flow so it mixes fast. Your fish might suffer some burn, but it is better than doing nothing.
4. The “24-Hour” Myth (Why Aging Water Fails)
Your grandfather probably told you: “Just leave the water in a bucket for 24 hours, the Chlorine will evaporate.”
This is outdated advice.
Modern water companies (especially in Malaysia) now use Chloramine.
- Chlorine: Evaporates in 24 hours.
- Chloramine: Is Chlorine bonded with Ammonia. It does NOT evaporate. You can leave that bucket for a month, and it will still be toxic.
Verdict: You cannot cheat. You MUST use a chemical Water Conditioner.
5. What Should You Buy?
- The Gold Standard: Seachem Prime.
- Why: It removes Chlorine, Chloramine, and detoxifies Ammonia for 24 hours. It is concentrated (1 drop treats 1 gallon). Expensive bottle, but cheapest per use.
- The Budget Choice: Generic “Anti-Chlorine” (The RM 5 Bottle).
- Why: It works for Chlorine, but sometimes fails on Chloramine. It does nothing for Ammonia. Better than nothing, but not the best.
Summary: The Safe Water Protocol
| Step | Action | Why? |
| 1 | Fill Bucket | Never use hot water. |
| 2 | ADD DROPS | Do this BEFORE the water touches the fish. |
| 3 | Stir | Ensure it mixes well. |
| 4 | Pour | Gently add to the tank. |
The Shop Guy’s Verdict
A bottle of Anti-Chlorine costs RM 5 to RM 30.
A dead Betta costs you sadness.
Don’t be cheap. Treat every drop of water that goes into your tank. Even if you are just “topping up” a little bit.




