Leopard gecko · Setup checklist

What supplies do I need for a leopard gecko?

Leopard gecko care begins with a tested adult habitat. The checklist below covers what you need to measure, maintain, and transport safely.

Every item should support the measured adult routine. Decorations cannot replace reliable controls or adequate space.

Use the practical checks
Adult leopard gecko in a finished enclosure beside organized blank-screen climate controls, lighting, feeding tools, a scale, and a carrier.

The short answer

Spend first on the home, controls, and backup plan for leopard geckos

Leopard gecko care begins with a tested adult habitat. The checklist below covers what you need to measure, maintain, and transport safely.

Adult home
RVC minimum 36 × 18 × 18 in; the RSPCA lists 60 × 30 × 40 cm as a minimum and encourages larger housing
Warm zone
RSPCA basking area 28–30°C (82–86°F); RVC guidance is about 32°C (90°F)
Cool and night
Cool area about 24–26°C (75–79°F); Lights and daytime heat off; controlled non-light heat only if the room falls below about 18–20°C (64–68°F)
Humidity
Dry ambient air around 30–40%, plus one clean contained humid hide
UVB
Low-output UVB with a measured gradient near UVI 0.7 to zero shade
Food
Varied appropriately sized live invertebrates, gut-loaded and supplemented to a reviewed plan

The honest fit

Would the adult routine work in your home?

Do this

  • Buy and test the adult enclosure before adoption.
  • Keep backup batteries, replacement dates, a carrier, and vet details.
  • Keep fresh water and monitor leopard gecko behavior every day.
  • Record changes so a reptile veterinarian receives useful evidence.

Avoid this

  • Do not rely on an undersized all-in-one starter kit.
  • Do not spend the safety budget on decorative extras first.
  • Do not copy another reptile species' setup.
  • Do not treat a persistent health change as a shopping problem.
01

Build the adult home first

Start with the species adult minimum shown above. Add secure doors, ventilation, stable cover, and usable routes before choosing decorative plants or substrate.

The enclosure should be fully assembled and running before adoption. That week of testing reveals weak locks, unstable branches, unreachable cleaning areas, and climate equipment that cannot hold the target range.

Adult leopard gecko walking across a low stone ledge between several secure hides at dusk.
02

Measure every life-support system

Use the correct thermostat for each heater, separate warm and cool thermometers, a hygrometer, plug timers, guarded heat, and measured low-output UVB.

Keep spare batteries and the lamp's replacement date with your records. A handheld infrared thermometer can help spot-check surfaces, but it does not replace fixed air-temperature probes.

Adult leopard gecko in a wide naturalistic habitat with warm and cool cover, a humid hide, low ledges, and fresh water.
03

Prepare food, cleaning, and transport

Set aside species-appropriate food tools, supplement storage, a gram scale, reptile-safe disinfectant, paper towel, a secure ventilated carrier, and the reptile veterinarian's contact details.

Keep reptile bowls, tongs, cloths, and waste equipment separate from human kitchen items. A complete setup includes money and a plan for replacement lamps, failed controls, veterinary visits, and safe transport.

Keep deciding

See the complete care picture

Sources and further reading