MS,
Speaking from my own experience, there are different types of low maintenance tanks - but realistically you are not likely to get the kind of lush growth you see in high light high CO2 tanks if you stick to low light no CO2.
I maintain a 20x10x10 cm shrimp and boraras maculata tank with a 15W light (11 hours daily), no filer, no CO2, no aeration. With a small bioload and conservative feeding, it requires just a 40% water change every two weeks. Plants are mosses, pelia, anubias and java fern - loose or tied to driftwood as i see no point in a thick gravel layer or base fert. I just add a little Lushgrow liquid fert at each water change. The plants grow (slowly), there is no algae (it also doen't get any sunlight), but the fish/shrimp are healthy and the shrimp breed. This is as low maintenance as you can get, i think. But the effect is certainly not as "wow" as those tanks you see in books and on the web.
If you already have experience with conventional high maintenance setups, moving to a low-maintenace tank (as one with low-to-mid lighting, some CO2 and mostly slow-growing plants) isn't really a big gap. You still need base fert, a good substrate, good filtration, CO2, no overcrowding, and careful selection of plants. I would also advise having at least one plant that is relatively fast-growing (in my 3ft tank with 1.5 wpg and mostly crypts, blyxa, ferns and mosses, i use hornwort and hygrophila stricta as these are fast growing, easy to maintain and thrive in low light) as "buffers" for nutrient control.
You will still need to make sure your plants get adequate macronutrients (NPK) and micros. These will visibly improve growth and help in algae control. I change about 30-40% of the water every two weeks (with fert dosing) and I dose fert about 2-3 times in between water changes. The only major difference in effort is that I don't have to bother pruning and replanting rampant stem plants.
but because every low-maintenance tank is unique, you should have a better idea of exactly what you want (type of plants, mood, effect, maintenance schedule etc) so that the discussion here can provide more useful information.









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