What we liked
- 36 by 18 by 18 inch footprint is the recommended adult size for bearded dragons and ball pythons
- Dual sliding front doors with a key lock allow easy access without lifting the screen top
- Stainless steel screen top supports overhead UVB and basking fixtures
- Price lands below the equivalent Exo Terra at the same dimensions
What we didn't like
- Sliding doors can stick if the track collects substrate or debris
- Glass is heavy at approximately 60 pounds empty, plan placement carefully
- Screen top loses humidity quickly without partial covering for tropical species
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedThe footprint and what it actually fitsFront access and the sliding doorsVentilation, humidity, and the screen topBuild quality and cleaningWho should buy the REPTI ZOO terrarium?The verdict Versus the alternatives Specs at a glance FAQsQuick verdict
The REPTI ZOO 36x18x18 50-gallon glass terrarium is the front-opening tank I point most adult bearded dragon, ball python, and corn snake keepers toward once they outgrow a 20 long. It nails the recommended adult footprint, the sliding doors make daily servicing painless, and the build comes in well under the equivalent Exo Terra.
Why you should trust this review
I bought this tank with my own money to rehouse an adult bearded dragon who had completely outgrown a starter 20 long. No one at REPTI ZOO knows I exist, the box arrived from a normal retail order, and I have lived with this enclosure through a full setup, a teardown, and a deep clean cycle. Everything below comes from running the tank as a daily home, not from staging it for a photo.
I keep reptiles because I genuinely enjoy them, which means I care a lot about the boring details that decide whether an enclosure is a joy or a chore: how the doors track, whether the screen holds a heavy fixture, how the glass clears after a substrate spill. Those are the things I watched for, and they are the things I report on here.
How we evaluated
I assembled the tank from the box, timed the setup, and then loaded it with about three inches of substrate, a basking platform, branches, and an overhead UVB and basking fixture. From there it became the animal’s permanent home. I serviced it daily through the front doors, misted and spot-cleaned, and did one full strip-and-sanitize so I could judge how the doors and tracks behaved when they were dirty as well as clean. I also weighed the empty enclosure and moved it solo to understand the real-world handling.
The footprint and what it actually fits
The 36 by 18 by 18 inch footprint is the part that matters most, and it is the reason I recommend this tank. That is the modern recommended adult size for a single bearded dragon or a typical adult ball python, and it gives a corn snake or blue tongue skink room to actually move. The extra vertical height over a breeder tank lets you mount branches and a hammock without crowding the basking zone. Setup took me roughly forty minutes including hardware fiddling, which is fair for a glass enclosure of this size.
It is not a small object. Empty, it weighs around sixty pounds, and the glass concentrates that weight in a way that makes a single-handed move awkward. Decide where it lives before you fill it, put it on furniture rated for the load, and you will never think about the weight again.
Front access and the sliding doors
The dual sliding front doors are the daily-life feature. Instead of lifting a heavy screen top every time you feed or spot-clean, you slide a door open and reach straight in at the animal’s level, which is far less stressful for a skittish dragon or snake. The key lock at the top center genuinely holds the doors shut, and for most species it is overkill, but I appreciated it on the nights I wanted certainty before walking away. The one honest caveat is that the tracks collect substrate. When grit builds up, the doors start to stick and grind. A quick brush of the channel during cleaning keeps them gliding, and once I made that a habit the stickiness disappeared.
Ventilation, humidity, and the screen top
The stainless steel mesh top is rigid enough to carry an overhead UVB tube and a dome basking lamp without sagging, which is exactly what you want for a desert species. For a bearded dragon or a corn snake the open screen is a feature, because those animals want airflow and a dry ambient. For a ball python or any tropical species it is the tank’s weak point: a fully open screen sheds humidity fast. The fix is standard and cheap, cover fifty to seventy percent of the screen with a cut sheet of acrylic or foil and leave a vented strip. With that mod my humidity held steady in the right band without me misting around the clock. Knowing this going in turns a complaint into a five-minute adjustment.
Build quality and cleaning
The glass is clear, the plastic frame is solid, and after a full strip-and-sanitize the panels wiped down without streaking. The raised bottom frame leaves room for an under-tank heater, and the closable wire and tubing inlets at the top let you route cords cleanly instead of pinching them in the doors. Nothing here feels premium the way the Exo Terra does, the corners and finish are a notch less refined, but everything is square, the doors seat properly, and after my testing nothing has loosened or cracked. For a tank that costs meaningfully less than the equivalent Exo Terra, the quality-to-price ratio is the strongest argument in its favor.
Who should buy the REPTI ZOO terrarium?
Buy it if you are upgrading an adult bearded dragon, ball python, corn snake, or blue tongue skink to the correct adult footprint and you want easy front access without paying the premium-brand markup. Buy it if you value the sliding-door servicing workflow and you are comfortable doing a simple humidity mod for a tropical species.
Skip it if you keep a high-humidity tropical animal and do not want to modify the screen at all, if you need a stackable rack enclosure (this is a stand-alone tank, not rack-rated), or if you want the most refined fit and finish on the market regardless of cost, in which case the Exo Terra is the more polished choice at a higher price.
The verdict
The REPTI ZOO 36x18x18 is the large front-opening glass terrarium I would buy again. It delivers the correct adult footprint for the most common pet reptiles, the sliding doors make daily care genuinely easier, and the build is honest and square for the money. The two things to plan around are its sixty-pound weight, so place it once and place it right, and the open screen top, which needs a quick partial cover for any tropical species. Keep the door tracks clean and neither becomes a real problem. For most keepers graduating from a starter tank to a true adult enclosure, this is the sensible, well-priced choice, and it is the one I keep recommending.
Versus the alternatives
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| REPTI ZOO 36x18x18 50 Gallon | Top Pick Large Snake Tank | 4.4 | Check price |
| Exo Terra Glass Terrarium 36x18x18 | Editor's Choice Premium | 4.5 | Check price |
| REPTI ZOO 36x18x24 | Top Pick Tall Variant | 4.4 | Check price |
| Zilla 40 Breeder Aquarium | Best Budget | 4.2 | Check price |
Specs at a glance
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
REPTI ZOO 36x18x18 Glass Reptile Terrarium 50-Gallon FAQs
Yes per modern ball python care guides. The recommended minimum for an adult ball python is 36 by 18 by 12 inches (40 gallons), and the 36 by 18 by 18 inch (50 gallons) variant adds vertical height for branches and climbing furniture. For particularly large ball pythons over 6 feet, the 4 by 2 by 2 foot enclosure is the next step up, but the 36 by 18 by 18 covers most adult ball pythons.
Yes. The dual sliding front doors include a key lock at the top center that prevents the doors from sliding apart when the lock is engaged. For most snakes, the key lock is unnecessary because the doors do not slide open under snake weight, but for strong escape artists (large monitors, retics) the lock provides an extra layer of security. Always verify the lock is engaged before walking away from a snake enclosure.
Not without modification. Ball pythons need 50 to 60 percent ambient humidity and 70 to 80 percent during shed, and the screen top loses humidity quickly. The standard mod is to cover 50 to 70 percent of the screen with plexiglass or aluminum foil, leaving a strip uncovered for ventilation. With that mod, humidity holds in the right range without daily misting.
The two enclosures share the same dimensions and intended use. The Exo Terra ships with swinging front doors that open outward, the REPTI ZOO ships with sliding front doors that slide apart. The Exo Terra is the slightly more refined product with better fit and finish, and the REPTI ZOO ships at a lower price point. Both work for the same species. The choice comes down to door preference and budget.
REPTI ZOO does not market the 36 by 18 by 18 as stackable. The plastic frame is not rated to support a 60 pound enclosure on top. For stacked rack systems, plan for purpose built reptile racks (Animal Plastics, Boaphile) or PVC enclosures with stacking rated frames. Glass terrariums are designed to stand alone.
Update log
- Jun 21, 2026: Review published.
- Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.
Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.


