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Favites Coral Care Guide: How to Keep War and Brain Corals Healthy in a Reef Tank
Learn how to care for Favites coral in a reef tank, including lighting, flow, placement, feeding, water parameters, sweeper tentacles, fragging and common stress signs.
Learn Favites coral care for reef tanks, including lighting, flow, feeding, placement, water parameters, aggression, fragging and common War Coral problems.
by Scott Shiles • May 05, 2026
Favites coral, commonly called War Coral, Pineapple Coral, or Brain Coral, is a colorful large polyp stony coral known for tight maze-like corallites, bold patterns, and strong fluorescence under reef lighting. Reds, oranges, greens, blues, purples, and mixed color forms make Favites a strong choice for reef keepers who want a hardy LPS coral with real visual impact.
Favites is often grouped with other brain-style LPS corals, but it deserves its own care approach. It can be durable and adaptable in a stable reef tank, yet it is also semi-aggressive and may extend sweeper tentacles that sting nearby corals. That means placement and spacing are just as important as lighting and water chemistry.
At Extreme Corals, Favites is a classic reef tank coral for hobbyists who want color, structure, and manageable growth. This guide explains Favites coral care, including lighting, flow, placement, feeding, water parameters, aggression, fragging, common problems, and signs of a healthy coral. For broader reef husbandry help, you can also browse our coral care guide library.
What Is Favites Coral?
Favites is a large polyp stony coral with a hard calcium carbonate skeleton and shared corallite walls that create a compact brain-like or pineapple-like pattern. It may grow as an encrusting, dome-shaped, or plating colony depending on the piece and reef tank conditions.
Favites corals are popular because they offer:
- Hardy LPS coral care in stable reef tanks
- Bright color and strong fluorescence
- Attractive brain-style or maze-like patterns
- Moderate growth without becoming invasive
- Good beginner-to-intermediate coral potential
- Strong compatibility with mixed reefs when spaced correctly
Although Favites is usually more forgiving than many delicate corals, it still needs stable water, moderate light, indirect flow, and space from neighboring corals.
Natural Habitat and Reef Tank Behavior
Favites corals are found throughout Indo-Pacific reef environments, including lagoonal reefs, reef slopes, rocky substrates, and deeper reef zones. In the wild, they often grow in moderate lighting with gentle to moderate water movement.
In reef aquariums, Favites usually does well on lower to middle rockwork, stable sandbed areas, or LPS zones with enough room around the colony. A healthy Favites should hold color, keep tissue attached to the skeleton, and show feeding or sweeper tentacles when conditions trigger them.
Best Water Parameters for Favites Coral
Stable water chemistry is one of the most important parts of Favites coral care. Favites can tolerate normal reef ranges, but repeated swings in alkalinity, salinity, temperature, nitrate, or phosphate can lead to recession, fading, or poor growth.
| Parameter | Recommended Range |
|---|---|
| Temperature | 76-80°F |
| Salinity | 1.024-1.026 specific gravity |
| pH | 8.1-8.4 |
| Alkalinity | 8-10 dKH |
| Calcium | 400-450 ppm |
| Magnesium | 1250-1350 ppm |
| Nitrate | 5-10 ppm |
| Phosphate | 0.03-0.07 ppm |
Favites usually does best in clean but not stripped reef water. Ultra-low nutrients can leave LPS corals pale or thin, while excess nutrients can fuel algae around the skeleton and irritate tissue.
Lighting Requirements for Favites Coral
Favites usually thrives under moderate reef lighting. A practical starting range for many Favites corals is around 80-150 PAR, depending on the coral’s previous lighting, tank depth, color, and current health.
Too much light can cause bleaching, fading, or tissue recession. Too little light can reduce color and slow growth. New Favites corals should be started in moderate or slightly lower light and adjusted gradually. For more detail on PAR, spectrum, and light acclimation, review our reef tank lighting guide.
Signs Favites may be getting too much light include:
- Faded or washed-out coloration
- Bleaching or paling
- Tissue pulling tight against the skeleton
- Recession on exposed ridges
- Better appearance in shaded periods
Blue-heavy reef lighting can bring out strong Favites fluorescence, but healthy tissue and stable color matter more than maximum brightness.
Water Flow for Favites Coral
Favites prefers gentle to moderate indirect flow. Flow should keep the coral clean, help remove waste, and prevent detritus from settling in the corallites without blasting the tissue.
Good Favites flow should:
- Move gently across the colony
- Prevent detritus from collecting in the pattern
- Allow normal polyp and tissue expansion
- Avoid direct powerhead blasts
- Support feeding response and waste removal
Strong direct flow can cause tissue recession or keep the coral from expanding normally. If recession appears on the side facing a pump, redirect the flow or move the coral to a calmer location.
Best Placement for Favites in a Reef Tank
Favites is usually best placed on lower to middle rockwork or a stable sandbed area where it receives moderate light and indirect flow. Placement should also account for sweeper tentacles, which can extend after dark and sting nearby corals.
Good placement options include:
- Lower rock ledges
- Middle rockwork with moderate lighting
- Stable sandbed areas
- LPS zones with open space around the colony
- Areas away from direct pump output
Avoid placing Favites directly against zoanthids, mushrooms, peaceful LPS corals, or fast-growing corals that may crowd its tissue. If you are planning an LPS-focused reef, browse our LPS coral selection with spacing and aggression in mind.
Favites Aggression and Sweeper Tentacles
Favites can be moderately aggressive. At night or when food is present, many Favites corals extend sweeper tentacles that can sting nearby corals. This is one of the biggest differences between a healthy Favites placement and a future coral fight.
To reduce aggression problems:
- Leave 4-6 inches of space around the coral when possible.
- Do not place Favites directly against peaceful corals.
- Watch after lights out for sweeper tentacles.
- Consider flow direction because sweepers can reach downstream neighbors.
- Plan for future growth, not just current frag size.
A small Favites frag may look easy to tuck into a tight spot, but a settled colony can reach farther than expected once it begins defending space.
Feeding Favites Coral
Favites is photosynthetic, but it can benefit from occasional target feeding. Feeding may support tissue fullness, growth, color, and recovery after shipping or stress.
Good foods for Favites include:
- Mysis shrimp
- Finely chopped marine seafood
- Small LPS coral pellets
- Zooplankton-based coral foods
- Fine powdered coral foods used lightly
Feed small portions one to two times per week as a safer starting point. The source article suggests heavier feeding, but in many reef tanks, lighter controlled feeding is better because overfeeding can raise nutrients, fuel algae, and increase bacterial risk.
Tank Mates and Compatibility
Favites can be kept with many peaceful reef fish and invertebrates, but it should be protected from coral-nipping animals and from neighboring corals that can sting it.
Good tank mates often include:
- Clownfish
- Gobies
- Blennies
- Peaceful wrasses
- Reef-safe snails
- Cleaner shrimp with caution during feeding
Use caution with some angelfish, butterflyfish, large hermit crabs, and fish that may nip fleshy coral tissue. Keep Favites away from torches, galaxea, chalices, and other strong stinging corals.
Growth Rate and Long-Term Development
Favites has a moderate growth rate in stable reef tanks. Depending on the piece, it may encrust, dome, plate, or spread gradually across rockwork.
Healthy growth depends on:
- Stable alkalinity, calcium, and magnesium
- Moderate reef lighting
- Gentle to moderate indirect flow
- Balanced nutrients
- Occasional careful feeding
- Enough space from neighboring corals
- Protection from tissue damage and stings
A healthy Favites should hold color, maintain tissue over the skeleton, and show gradual growth without spreading recession.
Fragging Favites Coral
Favites can be fragged, but it should be cut carefully because rough tools can tear tissue or crush skeleton. A coral bandsaw is usually the cleanest option, while bone cutters may work on some structures when used carefully.
Fragging tips include:
- Frag only healthy, established colonies.
- Use a clean coral bandsaw when possible.
- Cut in a way that minimizes tissue tearing.
- Place frags in gentle flow while healing.
- Watch for brown jelly or recession after cutting.
- Avoid fragging newly shipped or stressed corals.
New Favites frags should be allowed to heal in stable conditions before being moved into brighter light or stronger flow.
Common Favites Coral Problems
Most Favites problems come from unstable water, excessive light, strong direct flow, coral aggression, tissue injury, pests, or detritus buildup. Because Favites has fleshy tissue over a hard skeleton, early signs of recession should be taken seriously.
Tissue Recession
Tissue recession may be caused by alkalinity swings, direct flow, excessive light, nearby stinging corals, poor water quality, or physical damage. Test water, review recent changes, and inspect nearby coral aggression first.
Brown Jelly Disease
Brown jelly disease can appear as brown, slimy tissue decay and may spread quickly through fleshy LPS corals. If suspected, isolate the coral if possible, improve water quality, increase appropriate flow, and use a coral dip when needed.
Bleaching or Faded Color
Bleaching or fading is often connected to excessive light, sudden lighting changes, low nutrients, or general stress. Move the coral lower or reduce light intensity gradually if light stress is likely.
Pests and Irritation
Flatworms, nuisance algae, detritus, and hitchhikers can irritate Favites tissue. Inspect new corals carefully, and review our coral pests and predators guide if tissue damage appears without an obvious water quality issue.
Handling and Acclimation
Favites should be handled carefully because tissue can be damaged against the skeleton or rockwork. Handle the coral by the plug, base, or skeleton whenever possible, and avoid touching fleshy tissue directly.
Good acclimation practices include:
- Temperature acclimate the coral.
- Inspect for pests, tissue damage, and algae.
- Dip when appropriate and follow product directions.
- Start in moderate or slightly lower light.
- Use gentle to moderate indirect flow.
- Avoid repeated moves after placement.
A new Favites may take time to settle after shipping, dipping, or handling. Stable placement is usually better than constant repositioning.
Signs of a Healthy Favites Coral
A healthy Favites should show stable color, attached tissue, and gradual growth. It may look different during the day and night, but it should not show spreading tissue loss, bleaching, or brown jelly.
Healthy signs include:
- Stable bright color
- Tissue attached to the skeleton
- No spreading recession
- No brown jelly or tissue decay
- Normal feeding or sweeper response
- No algae smothering exposed areas
- Gradual encrusting, plating, or dome-shaped growth
Watch trends over several days or weeks. A Favites that holds color and keeps tissue attached is usually adapting well.
Related Corals You May Also Like
If you like Favites corals, these related coral categories and care guides can help you build a colorful LPS reef tank:
- LPS Corals - Browse colorful large polyp stony corals for reef aquariums.
- New Arrival Corals - See recently added WYSIWYG corals for your reef tank.
- Scott's Handpicked Corals - Explore standout corals selected for color and quality.
- Favia Coral Care Guide - Compare another brain-style LPS coral with similar placement needs.
- Goniastrea Coral Care Guide - Learn care for another honeycomb-style stony coral.
- LPS vs SPS Corals - Compare care needs across major stony coral groups.
- Reef Tank Lighting Guide - Understand lighting, PAR, and coral placement.
- Coral Care Guides - Browse care resources for LPS, SPS, soft corals, mushrooms, and zoanthids.
Shop Favites and LPS Corals
Favites coral is a strong choice for reef keepers who want a hardy, colorful LPS coral with classic War Coral, Pineapple Coral, or Brain Coral texture. With moderate lighting, indirect flow, stable water chemistry, proper spacing, and occasional feeding, Favites can become a long-term showpiece in a reef aquarium.
Browse LPS corals, new arrival corals, and featured corals at ExtremeCorals.com to find healthy corals that match your reef tank.
Frequently Asked Questions About Favites Coral Care
Is Favites coral beginner friendly?
Yes, Favites can be beginner friendly in a stable reef tank. It still needs moderate lighting, indirect flow, stable water parameters, and enough space from other corals.
How much light does Favites need?
Favites usually does best under moderate lighting. Many pieces are comfortable around 80-150 PAR, but exact needs depend on the coral and tank conditions.
What flow is best for Favites coral?
Favites prefers gentle to moderate indirect flow. Strong direct flow can irritate tissue and may cause recession.
Does Favites need feeding?
Favites is photosynthetic but can benefit from occasional target feeding with small meaty foods or LPS coral foods, especially after the lights begin to dim.
Does Favites have sweeper tentacles?
Yes, Favites can extend sweeper tentacles and sting nearby corals. Leave 4-6 inches of space when possible and watch for nighttime extension.
Why is my Favites receding?
Recession may be caused by alkalinity swings, excessive light, direct flow, coral aggression, tissue injury, pests, poor water quality, or bacterial infection.
Can Favites be placed on the sandbed?
Yes, Favites can be placed on a stable sandbed area if it receives appropriate light and flow and is not buried by sand or irritated by debris.
Can Favites coral be fragged?
Yes, Favites can be fragged with clean tools such as a coral bandsaw or bone cutter. Frag only healthy, established corals and allow frags to heal in gentle flow.
About the Author
Scott Shiles is the owner of ExtremeCorals.com, which he has operated for over 25 years and is recognized as one of the early dedicated live coral websites on the internet. A lifelong reef keeper since 1984, Scott has decades of hands-on experience maintaining marine aquariums and previously owned and operated a brick and mortar aquarium retail store for 10 years, including five years alongside Extreme Corals. He holds a degree in Marine Biology and has personally selected and sold hundreds of thousands of live corals. An avid scuba diver who has explored reef systems around the world, Scott shares practical coral care and husbandry knowledge based on real world reef experience.