Water Intake Calculator

Find your daily water target from weight, activity, climate and status, with an hourly schedule.

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Drink about a day

Baseline (body weight)
~35 ml per kg
Exercise add-on
~350 ml per 30 min
Climate / status
added for conditions

Hourly hydration schedule

Spread across a typical 16-hour waking day (about 7 am – 11 pm):

Personalised guidance

    A general guide for healthy adults based on body weight and activity. Individual needs vary, and some conditions (heart, kidney or liver disease) require fluid restriction — if you have been told to limit fluids, follow your doctor’s advice over this estimate. Thirst and pale-yellow urine are good everyday signals.

    How to use the Water Intake Calculator

    Step 1 — Enter weight

    • Your body weight sets the baseline need.

    Step 2 — Add activity & climate

    • Daily exercise minutes and hot weather increase the target.

    Step 3 — Note status

    • Pregnancy or breastfeeding adds to your needs.

    Step 4 — Follow the plan

    • See your litres, glasses and an hourly schedule; export a PDF.

    Frequently asked questions

    How is my water target calculated?

    It starts from about 35 ml of fluid per kilogram of body weight, then adds for exercise (roughly 350 ml per 30 minutes), hot climate, and pregnancy or breastfeeding. The result is your total daily fluid goal.

    Does this include water from food and other drinks?

    Yes — the figure is total fluid. Around 20% of daily fluid typically comes from food, and tea, milk and juice count too, so the amount of plain water you actually drink can be somewhat lower than the headline number.

    Can I drink too much water?

    Very rarely for healthy people, but drinking extreme amounts in a short time can dangerously dilute blood sodium. Spread intake across the day rather than forcing large volumes at once, and let thirst guide you.

    I have a heart or kidney condition — should I follow this?

    Not necessarily. Some conditions require deliberate fluid restriction. If a doctor has told you to limit fluids, follow that advice over any general calculator.

    How do I know if I am well hydrated?

    Pale-yellow urine and infrequent thirst are reliable everyday signs. Dark-yellow urine, headache or fatigue can indicate you need more. This tool gives general information for education, not medical advice; consult a qualified healthcare professional for guidance about your health.

    About the Water Intake Calculator

    This tool estimates how much fluid you should drink each day and turns it into an easy plan — a litre target, a glass count, and an hour-by-hour schedule — personalised to your body weight, activity level, climate, and whether you are pregnant or breastfeeding.

    How your target is built

    It begins with the widely used guide of roughly 35 ml of fluid per kilogram of body weight, which scales hydration to your size rather than using a one-size-fits-all "eight glasses". It then adds for the things that genuinely raise your needs: exercise (about 350 ml for every 30 minutes, to replace what you lose through sweat and breathing), hot or humid conditions, and the extra demands of pregnancy and breastfeeding. The result is a realistic total daily fluid goal rather than an arbitrary number.

    Total fluid, not just plain water

    The figure is total fluid intake. Importantly, you do not have to drink all of it as plain water — around a fifth of daily fluid comes from food, and other drinks count too — so the water you consciously sip is usually a bit less than the headline number. Spreading intake through the day, as the hourly schedule suggests, is more effective and comfortable than drinking large amounts in a few sittings.

    Listen to your body

    A calculator is a starting point; your body is the better guide. Pale-yellow urine and the absence of persistent thirst are reliable signs you are well hydrated. One important caveat: some medical conditions require limiting fluids, so if you have been advised to restrict intake, follow that advice over this estimate. This tool gives general information for education, not medical advice; consult a qualified healthcare professional for guidance about your health.

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