Pond Aeration Pumps vs. Submersible Pumps: Which One Does Your Pond Need?

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Pond Aeration Pumps vs. Submersible Pumps: Which One Does Your Pond Need?
Pond Aeration Pumps vs. Submersible Pumps: Which One Does Your Pond Need? | Fountain Depot
Complete Guide · Pond Pumps & Aeration

Pond Aeration Pumps vs. Submersible Pumps: Which One Does Your Pond Need?

Two pumps, two very different jobs. One pushes water through a nozzle, a filter, or up a waterfall. The other pushes air down to the bottom of your pond. Most healthy ponds eventually want both — here's how to tell what you need first.

Quick answer

A submersible pump moves water — it drives fountains, waterfalls, filters, and general circulation. A pond aeration pump moves air — it sits on dry land and pushes air through tubing to a diffuser on the pond floor, adding dissolved oxygen from the bottom up. They solve different problems: submersible pumps make water move and look good; aeration pumps keep water healthy, especially in summer heat and under winter ice. Small decorative ponds usually start with a submersible pump alone. Fish ponds, deeper ponds, and anything over roughly 1,000 gallons benefit from adding aeration alongside it.

1×/hr
Minimum water turnover target for a healthy pond
4 ft+
Depth where bottom water starts losing oxygen fast
26
Submersible pump models in the Fountain Depot lineup
4
Aeration kits and diffusers built for Canadian ponds

Every pond owner eventually asks the same question in one form or another: "why does my pond look fine on top but smell off underneath?" or "why did my fish struggle during that August heatwave?" The answer is almost always oxygen, and the fix is almost always aeration — a completely different piece of equipment from the pump running your fountain or waterfall. This guide breaks down what each pump actually does, how to size one, and which Fountain Depot products fit your setup.

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The core difference

Moving water vs. moving air

It's easy to lump every pump in a pond together, but submersible water pumps and aeration pumps aren't competing products — they're built for opposite jobs, and a lot of ponds eventually run both side by side.

Submersible Water Pumps

Best for: fountains, waterfalls, filtration, general circulation

Moves water

These sit underwater and push water through tubing to a spray head, over a spillway, or into a filter. They're rated by GPH (gallons per hour) and head height — how far up they can lift water before flow drops off. Brands in this collection include Little Giant, Danner Pondmaster, and PROLINE, ranging from small statuary pumps to heavy-duty solids-handling models.

Flow range270 GPH – several thousand GPH
PlacementFully submerged in the pond
JobFountains, waterfalls, filters

Pond Aeration Pumps

Best for: dissolved oxygen, fish health, reducing muck and odour

Moves air

These live on dry ground beside the pond — never underwater — and push air through weighted tubing down to a rubber membrane diffuser resting on the bottom. Rising bubbles create a column of circulation that pulls low-oxygen water up from the depths and pushes oxygen down where fish, beneficial bacteria, and rooted plants actually need it. Aeration is what keeps a pond from stratifying into a warm, oxygenated top layer and a stagnant, oxygen-starved bottom layer.

Output rangeCompact single-outlet to multi-zone kits
PlacementCompressor on land, diffuser on the bottom
JobOxygen, circulation, winter ice management
Rule of thumb: if the water needs to go somewhere — up, out, or through a filter — you need a submersible pump. If the water just needs more oxygen in it, you need aeration. A fountain jet looks like circulation, but a surface spray barely touches the deep water in a pond more than a few feet down. That's aeration's job.
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Submersible pumps

Choosing the right submersible pump for the job

"Submersible pump" is a category, not a single product — the right one depends on what it's actually driving. Here's how the main types in the Submersible Water Pumps collection break down.

01 · Statuary & Small Fountain Pumps

Compact

Best for: spitters, urns, container ponds, tabletop features

Low-flow, quiet, and inexpensive — designed to feed a gentle bubbler or a small spray head rather than move serious volume. The Little Giant PES-40-PW and PES-80-PW statuary pumps are built exactly for this scale.

02 · Magnetic Drive Pumps

Efficient

Best for: small-to-mid ponds, energy-efficient circulation

Danner's Pond-Mag and Pondmaster Eco lines use a sealless magnetic-drive motor, which means no mechanical seal to wear out and lower running costs for pumps that operate around the clock.

03 · High-Flow & Solids-Handling Pumps

Workhorse

Best for: waterfalls, streams, larger ponds, debris-heavy water

PROLINE, PL, PN, and Aquascape AquaForce pumps are built to pass leaves and debris without clogging, and to move enough volume to drive a real waterfall sheet or a full-size biological filter.

04 · Heavy-Duty & Commercial Pumps

High volume

Best for: large koi ponds, estate ponds, commercial water features

Models like the Little Giant 1-42 and 1-AT series step up in horsepower for larger installations that need continuous, heavy-duty flow at higher head heights.

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Aeration pumps

How to size a pond aeration system

Aeration is sized by pond volume and depth, not by the feature you want to run. The goal is enough air movement to keep the whole water column circulating, from surface to bottom.

Pond Size Recommended Aeration Fountain Depot Option
Small / mid-size garden pond Single-outlet, moderate output Aquascape Pro Air 20 Pond Aeration Kit
Larger pond or deeper water Higher-output single system Aquascape Pro Air 60 Pond Aeration Kit
Irregular shape or multiple zones Distributed, multi-outlet airflow 4-Outlet Pond Aeration Kit
Any diffuser replacement / add-on Fine-bubble membrane diffuser Aquascape 10" Rubber Membrane Aeration Diffuser
Why the diffuser matters: a rubber membrane diffuser breaks the airflow into fine bubbles rather than large ones. Fine bubbles have far more surface area for oxygen to transfer into the water on their way up, so a good diffuser gets more oxygen into your pond per litre of air than a coarse one — even from the same compressor.

Why aeration matters for fish ponds specifically: in summer, warm surface water and cooler bottom water can stop mixing on their own, leaving the bottom starved of oxygen right when bacteria and fish need it most. In winter, an aeration system placed at the right depth (not directly under the ice surface) keeps a small area of open water and gas exchange going, which matters for ponds that overwinter fish.

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Putting it together

Do you need one pump, or both?

Your Setup What You Need
Small container or patio water feature Submersible statuary pump only
Decorative pond, no fish, under ~500 gal Submersible fountain/waterfall pump only
Fish pond, any size Submersible pump for filtration + aeration system
Pond deeper than 3–4 ft Aeration recommended even without fish
Pond that overwinters fish under ice Aeration system, positioned for winter operation
Large or irregularly shaped pond Submersible pump + multi-outlet aeration kit

Running both isn't redundant — a submersible pump moving surface water through a fountain or filter and an aeration system working the bottom of the pond cover two different zones of the water column. In fish ponds especially, that combination is usually what separates a pond that struggles every August from one that doesn't.

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Installation basics

Getting either pump set up correctly

  • Submersible pumps must be fully underwater before they're switched on — never run one dry, even briefly.
  • Elevate submersible pumps on a brick or pump base, off the bottom sediment, to protect the intake.
  • Aeration compressors stay on dry land, ideally sheltered and above any potential flooding.
  • Run weighted aeration tubing to the diffuser and anchor the diffuser so it doesn't drift or get buried in silt.
  • Every outdoor pump — submersible or aeration — plugs into a GFCI-protected outlet, per the Canadian Electrical Code.
  • Keep aeration diffusers off the pond's absolute deepest point in winter, so open water forms without disturbing an overwintering fish zone.
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Shop Pond Pumps & Aeration Systems

Submersible pumps for fountains, waterfalls, and filtration, plus aeration kits and diffusers — sized for every pond and shipped Canada-wide.

Common questions answered

Pond Aeration & Submersible Pump FAQs

Can an aeration pump replace my submersible pump, or the other way around?

No. They do different jobs. An aeration pump adds oxygen and circulates the water column but won't drive a fountain, waterfall, or filter. A submersible pump moves water for a feature but doesn't meaningfully aerate deep water on its own. Most fish ponds eventually run both.

Will my fountain or waterfall pump aerate the pond enough on its own?

Only near the surface. A fountain spray or waterfall does add some oxygen where the water splashes, but it does little for water sitting several feet down, especially in a stratified summer pond. That's the gap a dedicated aeration system fills.

Which aeration kit should I choose — the Pro Air 20 or Pro Air 60?

The Pro Air 20 fits smaller and mid-size ponds, while the Pro Air 60 is built for larger water volumes that need more air output. If your pond has multiple zones or an irregular layout, the 4-Outlet Pond Aeration Kit lets you distribute airflow across several diffusers instead of one.

Do aeration pumps run through the winter?

For ponds overwintering fish, yes — a properly positioned aeration system can help maintain an area of open water and gas exchange under the ice. Decorative submersible pumps, by contrast, are usually pulled and stored before a hard freeze.

How do I know what GPH submersible pump I need?

Start with your pond volume and aim to turn it over at least once per hour, then add flow for your specific feature — roughly 100 GPH per inch of waterfall spillway, your filter's rated flow, or your nozzle's recommended GPH for a fountain. Always check the pump's flow chart at your actual head height, not the number on the box.

Do you ship pond pumps and aeration kits across Canada?

Yes. Fountain Depot ships both submersible pumps and pond aeration kits Canada-wide.

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