Aquarium airline tubing comes in a few core material types, clear PVC, black PVC, and silicone. Each with different strengths in flexibility, durability, and visibility. Most tubing is standardized at 3/16-inch inner diameter, which fits nearly all hobbyist air pumps and accessories.
How to Size an Air Pump for Multiple Aquariums
Main Types of Airline Tubing
Clear PVC Airline Tubing
- Most common and inexpensive
- Semi-rigid; holds shape well
- Can become stiff or yellow over time
- Easy to see air bubbles and blockages
- Compatible with all standard 3/16″ fittings
- Examples: Penn-Plax, Pawfly clear tubing
Best for: General use, beginners, simple setups.

Black PVC Airline Tubing
- More flexible than clear PVC
- Blocks light → reduces algae growth inside the line
- Blends into dark backgrounds
- Good for display tanks where visibility matters
- Example: JIH black airline tubing
Best for: Display aquariums, tanks with algae issues.

Silicone Airline Tubing
- Softest and most flexible option
- Highly kink-resistant
- Stays flexible longer than PVC
- Can stretch slightly, may slip off fittings if not secured
- Often preferred for complex routing or tight bends
- Example: Penn-Plax silicone tubing (noted for crack resistance)
Best for: Tight spaces, long-term durability, quiet air pump setups.
Standard Size
3/16-inch (4.7 mm) inner diameter
This fits standard air pumps, check valves, T-connectors, and air stones.
Specialty Tubing (Less Common)
While not as widely used, you may also encounter:
Rigid Airline Tubing
- Hard plastic
- Used for under-gravel filters, bubble walls, or precise vertical runs
- Often paired with flexible tubing at each end
Weighted Airline Tubing
- Flexible tubing with built-in weight
- Sinks without clips
- Ideal for ponds or deep tanks

CO₂‑Rated Tubing (for Pressurized CO₂ Systems)
CO₂ tubing is specifically engineered to prevent gas loss under pressure. Standard airline tubing will slowly leak CO₂ through the material itself, even if the line looks intact. That’s why CO₂ systems require their own tubing type.
What Makes CO₂ Tubing Different
- Made from polyurethane (or sometimes polyethylene)
- Much denser than PVC or silicone – dramatically reduces CO₂ permeation
- Stiffer than silicone and most PVC
- Designed for pressurized systems (bottles, regulators, diffusers
Pros
- Prevents CO₂ loss through the tubing walls
- Handles higher pressure safely
- Long-lasting and chemically stable
- Usually available in black, clear, or green (ADA‑style)
Cons
- Less flexible than silicone
- Can be harder to route around tight corners
- Slightly more expensive
Best For
- Any pressurized CO₂ injection system
- High-tech planted tanks
- Situations where tubing runs are long and gas loss would be costly
Not Ideal For
- Low-pressure air pumps
- Tight bends or complex routing (silicone is better there)
Quick Comparison: CO₂ Tubing vs. Standard Airline Tubing
| Feature | CO₂ Tubing | Silicone Airline | PVC Airline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gas permeability | Very low | High | Medium |
| Flexibility | Low–medium | Very high | Medium |
| Pressure rating | High | Low | Low |
| Best use | CO₂ injection | Air pumps, tight bends | General air use |
| Cost | Higher | Low | Low |