
Overview
The Blue Ring Angel (Pomacanthus annularis) — also known as the Annularis or Blue King Angelfish — is a true showpiece. Adults carry brilliant sapphire-blue lines curving across a golden-brown body, a whitish tail, and the signature electric-blue ring behind the gill plate that gives the fish its name. Juveniles look completely different — dark blue with vertical white-and-blue bars — and transform slowly into their adult colours over a year or more.
It's a large, bold, long-lived fish with genuine personality, and it becomes an eager, hand-tame feeder that greets its keeper at the glass.
We'll be straight, though: this is a serious commitment and not a coral-tank fish. It grows large, lives for well over a decade, and needs a big system with pristine water. We rate it intermediate — the husbandry is achievable, but the space, diet and (crucially) the fact that it's not reef safe mean it's a fish to plan around carefully rather than buy on impulse.
Compatibility
Semi-aggressive by nature, the Blue Ring is more measured than the big Caribbean angels but still throws its weight around once settled and territorial. It cruises all levels of the tank and can bully more timid species, as well as other angels. Keep one angel per tank as a rule — avoid other Pomacanthus and dwarf angels unless the system is very large — and in a mixed community, add the Blue Ring last so it can't dominate before calmer fish have found their feet.
Good tankmates are robust, similarly sized fish that can hold their own in a large fish-only or FOWLR setup — tangs, larger wrasses, and the like. Steer clear of slow or vulnerable species such as lionfish, seahorses, pipefish and scorpionfish, which it may nip at, and don't crowd it with fin-nippers that will damage its flowing fins.
Health & quarantine
Large angels are sensitive to shipping and handling stress and prone to ich and other parasites, so a proper quarantine period and a slow, patient acclimation are essential and dramatically improve long-term success. New arrivals can be slow to start feeding — sometimes taking a week or more — so tempting live or freshly chopped foods early on helps get them over the line before you broaden the diet. From there, the keys are a large, mature, well-filtered system with pristine, stable water, strong oxygenation and a varied, nutritious diet. Bought healthy, quarantined properly and given space, the Blue Ring is a robust, exceptionally long-lived fish that can reach 15–20 years or more.
Frequently asked questions
Is the Blue Ring Angel reef safe?
How big does it get, and what tank does it need?
My new Blue Ring won't eat — is that normal?
Can I keep it with other angels?
Do the juveniles really look different?
Is it a good fish for beginners?
Care guidance is drawn from our own experience — every fish is an individual, so treat it as a starting point, not a guarantee. Not sure if a species suits your tank? Come ask us in store. New to the terms? Read the care-terms glossary.