Hermit crabs can live over 30 years in the wild—far longer than most people realize, especially compared to the few months they typically survive as pets.
Hermit Crabs Live Decades—If We Let Them
That hermit crab you bought at the beach boardwalk? It could outlive your dog, your cat, and possibly your marriage—if it were given half a chance.
In the wild, hermit crabs routinely live 30 years or more. Some researchers have documented individuals surviving past 40. Yet most pet hermit crabs die within a few months of purchase, victims of misunderstanding and inadequate care.
The Great Hermit Crab Misconception
Hermit crabs have been marketed as low-maintenance "starter pets" for decades. They're sold in painted shells at boardwalks and mall kiosks, often alongside tiny plastic cages and a few pebbles. The implicit message: these creatures are simple, disposable, temporary.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
Hermit crabs are complex social animals with sophisticated needs. They require:
- Humidity levels of 70-80% to breathe properly (their modified gills need moisture)
- Temperatures between 75-85°F
- Deep substrate for molting (they can spend weeks buried underground)
- Multiple shell options as they grow
- Companions—they're highly social and can become stressed alone
Most pet store setups provide none of these.
Why Wild Crabs Thrive
In their natural coastal habitats, hermit crabs live in large colonies, sometimes numbering in the hundreds. They forage together at night, communicate through chirping sounds (yes, they chirp), and participate in remarkable "shell exchanges" where groups line up by size to swap homes.
The Caribbean hermit crab, the species most commonly sold as pets, can grow to the size of a baseball and live for three decades. The coconut crab, their massive relative, can reach over 40 years old and grow large enough to crack coconuts with their claws.
A Pet Store Tragedy
The hermit crab pet trade is built on a grim foundation. These animals cannot be bred in captivity—every single pet hermit crab was wild-caught. They're harvested from beaches by the thousands, shipped in stressful conditions, and sold to owners who unknowingly sentence them to slow deaths through improper care.
When a pet hermit crab dies after a few months, the owner assumes that's normal. It isn't. It's a 30-year animal dying at less than 1% of its natural lifespan.
The Dedicated Few
A passionate community of hermit crab enthusiasts has emerged online, sharing proper care techniques and advocating for these misunderstood crustaceans. They build elaborate "crabitats" with proper humidity, heat, and enrichment. Their crabs live for years, growing larger and more personable with time.
Some keepers report their hermit crabs recognizing them, responding to voices, and displaying distinct personalities. These aren't the disposable novelty pets of boardwalk fame—they're long-lived companions demanding respect.
Next time you see hermit crabs for sale in painted shells, remember: you're looking at animals that should still be alive when today's toddlers are applying for mortgages.