Free Shipping on All Orders — Ships Within 1 Business Day - We ship Worldwide!

Reptile Fogger & Terrarium Humidifier

← All DIY Tutorials

A reptile fogger adds cool, ultrasonic mist to a terrarium to hold the humidity tropical reptiles and amphibians need — typically 60–80% for crested geckos, tree frogs, and rainforest species. Run on a humidistat or timer, it keeps levels steady without overheating the enclosure. Desert species don't need one.

↓ Jump to the interactive build & add-to-cart diagram

What humidity do reptiles need? (by species)

A fogger is the right tool only for species that want a humid enclosure. Tropical reptiles and amphibians thrive in it; arid species are harmed by chronic damp air, which causes respiratory infections, scale rot, and mold. Match the tool to the animal:

Species Target RH
A fogger helps — humidity-loving species
Dart frogs & most amphibians 80–100%
Crested & gargoyle geckos 60–80%
Tree frogs 60–80%
Rainforest snakes (rainbow boa, green tree python) 60–90%
Chameleons (veiled, panther) 50–70%
Ball python 50–60% (raise during shed)
Skip the fogger — arid/desert species
Bearded dragon 30–40%
Leopard gecko 30–40% (humid hide only)
Other arid species (uromastyx, etc.) 30–50%

Why ultrasonic foggers suit reptile terrariums

Ultrasonic foggers are the standard for terrariums and bioactive vivariums. A vibrating disc turns water into a dense, room-temperature fog that raises humidity fast without heating the enclosure or soaking the animal the way hand-misting does. Fed through tubing and run on a humidistat or timer, it holds the target on its own and adds a naturalistic rolling-fog effect. Use clean dechlorinated or distilled water, keep a vent or screen so the air exchanges, and aim the output so it doesn't waterlog one spot of substrate.

Sizing a reptile fogger by enclosure

  • Standard terrariums (up to roughly 18×18×24"): a 1-disc unit (500 mL/hr) fed through tubing is plenty.
  • Large bioactive vivariums and paludariums: a 1-disc covers most; step up if a tall, well-ventilated build won't hold the level.
  • Multiple enclosures or a reptile room: a higher-output unit (3–9 disc, 1,500–2,500 mL/hr) on a manifold can feed several enclosures or humidify the room.

Fill with water no hotter than 115°F, and automate it with a humidistat humidity controller.


What does a reptile fogger do?

It produces cool ultrasonic fog that raises and holds the ambient humidity in a terrarium, without heating the enclosure or spraying the animal directly. It also creates a naturalistic rolling mist that many keepers run on a night cycle.

Reptile fogger vs. humidifier vs. mister — what's the difference?

A mister sprays droplets onto surfaces for hydration and shedding; a fogger produces fine airborne fog that lifts ambient humidity without wetting the animal. "Humidifier" is the umbrella term — an ultrasonic fogger is the humidifier type best suited to terrariums because it runs cool and automates cleanly.

What's the best fogger for a reptile enclosure?

The best reptile fogger is an ultrasonic unit sized to your enclosure and run on a humidistat or timer. A 1-disc unit covers most single terrariums; choose more output only for large bioactive builds or multiple enclosures.

What size fogger do I need for my terrarium?

For a standard terrarium up to about 18×18×24", a 1-disc fogger at 500 mL/hr is plenty. Large paludariums or several enclosures call for a higher-output unit on a manifold.

Is a reptile fogger safe? Can I use distilled or purified water?

Yes — it's safe when you run it to a target level with ventilation rather than leaving the enclosure saturated. Distilled or purified water is ideal: it keeps the disc clean and prevents the white mineral dust hard water leaves behind.

How do I make a DIY reptile fogger?

An ultrasonic mist maker on a float in a small reservoir, with tubing run into the enclosure, makes a capable build. See our DIY reptile fogger guide, or our DIY ultrasonic humidifier guide for the general build.

Do I need a humidity controller or timer?

It's strongly recommended. A humidistat holds a set humidity automatically, while a timer cycles the fog — useful for species like crested geckos that want a humid night and a drier day.

What humidity does a ball python need?

50–60%, rising higher during a shed. A fogger helps hold that range and gives a controlled boost when shedding.

Do leopard geckos need a fogger?

No. Leopard geckos are an arid species that wants 30–40% humidity. They only need a small humid hide for shedding — a fogger on the enclosure would cause health problems.

What humidity do dart frogs need?

80–100%. Dart frogs and most amphibians want a consistently saturated environment, which a fogger on a humidistat is ideal for holding.


Build your reptile fogger

Match a unit to your enclosure, add a humidistat, and you have a self-regulating terrarium. Use the diagram above to add parts to your cart, or browse ultrasonic mist maker kits.

Cutaway view · hover or tap any part for details — add items straight to your cart
water Reservoir (your tote) Auto Fill Valve mounts inside or outside (optional) Reservoir Lid Hole 3.75″ — cut with jigsaw or hole saw UV Light zap! Mist Maker Float (included in mist maker kit) Mist Maker Transducer (included in mist maker kit) 4″ Duct Adapter bolts to lid 4″ is most common (fits standard 4″ flex duct) humid air out → to tent / grow space Dry air in Waterproof Fan Kit mounts blowing down cord port (above water) Wrap cords in soft foam to seal. UV light plug (or cheap timer, 3 hrs/day min.) Mist Maker Power Supply (included in mist maker kit) Fan Speed (incl. in fan kit) fan GFCI Power Strip 94% Humidistat 120V Wall Outlet

Search

Shopping Cart

Your cart is currently empty.
Shop now