Reptile & Storage Husbandry

Humid Hide & Shed Box Calculator

Size a humid hide and work out exactly how much moist substrate and water it needs to hold the right humidity for healthy, complete sheds — without flooding the box.

Box & Substrate Planner

Enter your animal and container details. Results assume real-world evaporation and substrate behaviour.

Enter a length between 1 and 400.

Enter a humidity between 50 and 100%.

Enter a whole number of days between 1 and 14.

Recommended box footprint

Full breakdown

Minimum internal floor area
Suggested box dimensions (L × W)
Substrate depth
Substrate volume needed
Dry substrate (approx.)
Water to add now
Top-up water each cycle

Overview

A humid hide is a small enclosed box inside a reptile enclosure, packed with moist substrate, that gives an animal a pocket of high humidity to retreat into. It is the single most reliable tool for preventing incomplete or "stuck" sheds in snakes, geckos, and many lizards, and it doubles as a calm, dark refuge that reduces stress.

This calculator is built for keepers who want to get the box right the first time rather than guessing. It sizes the hide to the animal so the box is snug enough to feel secure but large enough to turn around in, then works out how much substrate and water that volume actually needs — accounting for real-world evaporation and how different substrates hold moisture. Whether you keep a single ball python or a rack of geckos, it turns husbandry rules of thumb into concrete numbers.

How It Works

  1. Enter your animal's length (snout to tail tip) and pick the unit. The hide footprint is sized from this so the animal can curl up fully inside.
  2. Choose your substrate. Each option carries a realistic depth and a moisture-retention factor, because sphagnum holds far more water than cypress mulch.
  3. Set your target humidity inside the hide (most species do well at 70–90% during a shed cycle).
  4. Tell it how often you'll re-moisten the box. Longer gaps need more starting water to survive evaporation.
  5. Press Calculate. You get a recommended box size plus a full breakdown of substrate volume and the exact water to add now and at each top-up.

Formula Explanation

The box is sized so the animal can coil inside a circle roughly one-third of its body length across. That diameter sets the footprint:

Box side ≈ animal length × 0.35
Floor area = side × side

Substrate volume is the floor area times a substrate-specific depth. To keep small boxes usable, the depth is capped so it never exceeds about a third of the box side (with a 3 cm floor), leaving air space above the bedding:

Depth = min(ideal depth, max(3 cm, box side ÷ 3))
Substrate volume = floor area × depth

Water is the part most guides skip. We start from the volume of water the damp substrate should hold at your target humidity, then add an evaporation allowance based on how long the box sits between top-ups:

Hold water = volume × retention × 0.18 × (humidity − 50) ÷ 50
Evaporation = floor area × 0.04 mL/cm²/day × days
Water now = Hold water + Evaporation

The 0.18 mL/cm³ figure reflects substrate that is damp like a wrung-out sponge rather than saturated, and the (humidity − 50) ÷ 50 term scales water up only as your target rises above the 50% baseline. The per-cycle top-up equals the evaporation portion alone, since the substrate's held water stays in the box between refreshes.

Practical Benefits

  • Fewer stuck sheds. Correct humidity in a dedicated hide is the most cited fix for retained eye caps and tail-tip shed in keeper communities.
  • No guesswork on water. Knowing the exact mL to add stops the two most common mistakes — a bone-dry box or a swampy one that breeds scale rot and mould.
  • Right-sized boxes. A hide that's too big won't feel secure; too small and the animal can't use it. The footprint math gets it in the goldilocks zone.
  • Cheaper restocking. Buying substrate by calculated volume avoids over-purchasing and waste, useful when running multiple enclosures or a breeding rack.
  • Repeatable routine. A fixed top-up schedule with a known water amount makes care predictable for you, pet-sitters, or a shared collection.

Frequently Asked Questions

For most species a humid hide can stay in permanently as long as it's kept clean and not waterlogged. Some keepers only add it in the days leading up to a shed (cloudy eyes, dull colour) to reduce the risk of constant dampness causing bacterial issues. If your ambient humidity is already very high, offer it as a shed-time accessory rather than a fixture.
Sphagnum moss is the gold standard — it holds many times its weight in water and releases it slowly. Coco fibre is a close, cheaper second. Cypress mulch and paper towel dry out faster, which is why the calculator gives them higher water and shorter realistic intervals. Whatever you use, it should feel damp like a wrung-out sponge, never dripping.
If you can squeeze water out of the substrate, see pooling at the bottom, or smell sourness or mould, it's too wet. Standing water against scales for long periods can cause scale rot. The calculator's "water now" figure aims for evenly damp substrate, not saturation — if it still feels soggy, your substrate may already be retaining moisture from the enclosure, so reduce the next top-up.
Yes. The footprint math uses body length, so it scales naturally for leopard geckos, crested geckos, skinks, and most lizards that benefit from a moist retreat. For very active or arboreal species you may prefer a slightly larger box, and for amphibians or animals needing constant high humidity you should treat this as a starting point and verify with a hygrometer.
Disclaimer: This calculator provides general husbandry estimates based on common keeping practices and simplified evaporation modelling. It is not veterinary advice and does not replace species-specific research or a hygrometer reading inside the enclosure. Substrate behaviour, ambient room conditions, ventilation, and individual animals vary widely, so always observe your animal and adjust accordingly. The authors accept no liability for outcomes arising from use of these figures.
Humid Hide & Shed Box Calculator · estimates only, verify with a hygrometer
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Subrata Das Gupta
Subrata Das Gupta

Subrata Das Gupta is the founder of reptilecalc.com, a specialized platform that provides practical calculators and tools for reptile keepers, breeders, and enthusiasts. He develops data-driven resources covering reptile enclosure design, heating and lighting requirements, feeding schedules, humidity management, breeding, incubation, and overall reptile husbandry to help owners make informed care decisions.

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