Jason Derulo comes under fire over $1m living room shark aquarium display in California home

The display has drawn criticism for being a ‘damaging message’ from the International Fund for Animal Welfare
Jason Derulo has faced criticism after showcasing a shark aquarium built beneath the living room floor of his $15 million Tarzana, California home, with conservation groups warning that the display risks normalising the keeping of marine animals in domestic settings.
The pop singer revealed the circular glass tank during recent home tours with streamer N3ON and journalist Graham Bensinger.
The installation allows guests to walk directly over the aquarium, which is maintained by a specialist team attending to it every two days.
N3on was left in complete SHOCK after finding out Jason Derulo has a shark tank as the floor in the middle of his living room đłđ¤Ż
âno way you got real sharks in your living roomâ pic.twitter.com/IF0rXc34jD
â novara (@AdinUpdate) April 28, 2026
Derulo said during the tour that constructing the feature âtook a lotâ of time and financial investment, highlighting it as one of the centrepieces of the property.
However, the display has drawn criticism from the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW), which argued that such installations present marine life as decorative luxury items, The Mirror reports.
Christian Plowman, Program Manager for Wildlife Cybercrime at IFAW, said sharks are âfacing severe pressures â threatened by overfishing, pollution and habitat destruction, with many species now considered endangeredâ.
He added that marine animals play a âcritical role in maintaining healthy ocean ecosystemsâ but are increasingly exploited as âillegal ‘exotic’ petsâ.
Plowman further criticised the portrayal of sharks as âthe ultimate status symbolâ and warned that treating them as âinterior design featuresâ sends a harmful message to audiences.
He stated, âNormalizing the ownership of sharks in a domestic tank sends a damaging message to audiences around the world. If Derulo genuinely cares about these animals, he could use his platform as a powerful force for good.â
While California restricts ownership of certain species, some smaller non-endangered sharks can still legally be kept in private aquariums under specific conditions.



