How to Calculate Your Daily Water Intake
Proper hydration affects energy levels, cognitive performance, digestion, temperature regulation, and joint health. Despite the popular "8 glasses a day" rule, actual needs vary significantly by body weight, activity, and climate.
The Main Calculation Methods
Method 1: Body Weight Rule
For most adults:
Daily Water (oz) = Body weight (lbs) × 0.5
Daily Water (mL) = Body weight (kg) × 30–35
Example: 160 lb person → 160 × 0.5 = 80 oz/day (about 10 cups or 2.4 liters)
Method 2: Activity-Adjusted
Base intake + 16–24 oz per hour of moderate exercise.
160 lb person who exercises 1 hour daily: 80 oz + 20 oz = 100 oz/day
Method 3: TDEE-Based
For active individuals: 1 mL per calorie burned
Person with TDEE of 2,500 kcal → 2,500 mL (2.5 liters) per day
Why "8 Glasses" Is an Oversimplification
The "8 × 8" rule (eight 8-oz glasses = 64 oz) has no rigorous scientific basis. It underestimates needs for heavy people, active individuals, and those in hot climates, while overestimating needs for small, sedentary people.
Signs of Dehydration
- Urine color darker than pale yellow
- Dry mouth, headache, fatigue
- Decreased cognitive performance (even 1–2% dehydration affects focus)
Hydration Sources
About 20% of daily fluid needs come from food (fruits, vegetables, soups). You don't need to drink all your water—it all counts.
Use our water intake calculator for a personalized daily target.