Why Gradients Matter More Than Single Numbers
The single biggest mistake new chameleon keepers make is trying to maintain one consistent temperature or humidity throughout the enclosure. Chameleons are ectotherms — they regulate body temperature by moving between warmer and cooler areas. They need a range of temperatures to thermoregulate, choose how quickly to digest food, manage immune responses, and reproduce. A chameleon that cannot find the right temperature at any given moment is physiologically compromised 24 hours a day.
Similarly, humidity should cycle, not stay constant. See our complete humidity guide for the full breakdown of why the cycle matters more than peak numbers.
Temperature & Humidity by Species
| Species | Basking Spot | Ambient High | Cool Zone | Night Drop | Humidity Baseline |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Veiled chameleon | 85–95°F | 80–85°F | 70–75°F | 60–68°F | 40–50% |
| Panther chameleon | 85–90°F | 80–84°F | 72–76°F | 62–70°F | 50–60% |
| Jackson's chameleon | 78–85°F | 74–78°F | 65–72°F | 55–65°F | 50–60% |
| Yemen chameleon | 85–95°F | 80–85°F | 70–75°F | 60–68°F | 40–50% |
| Pygmy chameleon | 72–78°F | 68–74°F | 65–70°F | 60–68°F | 60–75% |
| Senegal chameleon | 85–90°F | 78–84°F | 70–75°F | 62–68°F | 40–55% |
Setting Up the Basking Zone
The basking spot is created by a single incandescent or halogen bulb positioned above the enclosure screen, directed at a horizontal branch 6–8 inches below the lights. The branch surface temperature — not the air temperature — is what matters. Always measure the branch surface with an infrared temp gun.
- Bulb type: Standard incandescent, halogen PAR bulb, or household flood light. Never use red or blue night bulbs during the day.
- Wattage: Start with 75W for most setups; adjust up or down based on actual surface temperature readings.
- Distance: The closer the bulb, the hotter the spot. Use distance to fine-tune temperature if changing wattage doesn't provide enough control.
- Timer: Basking lights should run 10–12 hours per day on a timer synchronized with UVB.
Etekcity Infrared Temperature Gun
Point-and-click surface temperature measurement. Essential for verifying basking spot temperature accurately — the only way to know what your chameleon's branch surface actually reads.
Check Price on AmazonCreating a Cool Zone
The cool zone is the bottom third of the enclosure — typically the floor level. In a well-ventilated screen enclosure, the cool zone forms naturally: heat rises from the basking lamp and the ambient room temperature provides the lower end. You don't need to actively cool the bottom of the enclosure. The key is ensuring the room ambient temperature stays below 80°F, especially in summer.
Night Temperature Drops
Turning off all heat sources at night (including the basking bulb) is correct and beneficial. The night temperature drop mimics the highland habitats most chameleons come from, where temperatures fall significantly after sunset. This drop:
- Promotes metabolic rest and recovery
- Supports natural circadian rhythms
- Reduces the risk of chronic heat stress
- May stimulate breeding behavior when combined with seasonal temperature cycles
Do not add a nighttime heat source unless your room genuinely drops below 55°F. If supplemental nighttime heat is needed, use a ceramic heat emitter (produces heat but no light) on a thermostat set to 60°F.
Humidity Cycling
The humidity requirement is not a flat number — it's a daily cycle. After misting, humidity spikes to 70–100%, then drops back to the ambient baseline over 30–60 minutes in a screen enclosure. This cycle prevents respiratory infections while providing adequate hydration windows for drinking.
| Time | Humidity Action | Target After |
|---|---|---|
| Lights on (morning) | Mist 2–3 minutes | 70–90% spike, drops to 40–50% |
| Midday | Optional light mist | 50–60%, then drops |
| Afternoon | Mist 2 minutes | 70–80% spike, drops to 40–50% |
| Lights off (evening) | Final mist | 60–70% overnight |
Measurement Tools
| Tool | What It Measures | Must Have? |
|---|---|---|
| Infrared temp gun | Surface temperature (basking spot) | Yes — essential |
| Digital probe thermometer | Ambient air temperature at enclosure levels | Yes — essential |
| Digital hygrometer (with min/max) | Relative humidity, peak and baseline | Yes — essential |
| Analog dial thermometer | Temperature | No — inaccurate, avoid |
| Combo temp/humidity meter | Both ambient temperature and humidity | Convenient option |
Common Temperature & Humidity Mistakes
- Using only one thermometer: You need to know the gradient, not just one spot.
- Measuring air temperature at the basking spot: The branch surface is always hotter than the air. Use a temp gun on the branch surface.
- Keeping humidity constantly high: A humid enclosure that never dries out is a respiratory infection waiting to happen.
- Using analog dial hygrometers: These can be off by 20%+ and are not reliable for chameleon care.
- Not adjusting for seasons: Room temperature changes seasonally. Check your enclosure temperatures at least monthly.
- Heating at night: Night drops are beneficial. Don't try to maintain basking temperatures overnight.
