Water Intake Calculator
Find out exactly how much water you should drink every day for optimal hydration.
📖 What is a Water Intake Calculator?
A water intake calculator estimates how much fluid you should drink daily, personalised to your age, gender, body weight, physical activity, and the climate you live in. While generic advice says "drink 8 glasses a day," actual hydration needs vary considerably from person to person, and simple body-weight formulas miss important factors like hormonal differences between men and women, increased needs during pregnancy or breastfeeding, and how much water your food already provides.
Water is essential to virtually every body function. It regulates body temperature through sweating and respiration, transports nutrients and oxygen to cells, lubricates joints, cushions organs, and enables the kidneys to excrete waste products. Even mild dehydration - as little as 1–2% of body weight - can impair cognitive performance, cause headaches, reduce physical endurance, and increase perceived effort during exercise.
Our calculator uses a gender-adjusted base: 40 ml/kg for men and 35 ml/kg for women, reflecting well-established differences in lean body mass and total body water. Age adjustments account for the reduced thirst sensation that develops in older adults, increasing target intake slightly for those over 55. On top of the base, we add activity increments (which reflect average sweat loss at each exercise tier), climate scaling (hot environments raise baseline sweat rate significantly), and special conditions like pregnancy and breastfeeding which create additional fluid demands of 300–700 ml per day.
The calculator also factors in water already delivered by your diet. Fruits and vegetables are 80–95% water; even bread is about 35% water. On an average mixed diet, roughly 20% of daily fluid intake comes from food - so the plain-water target from the calculator is lower than total body water need. If your diet is high in fruits and vegetables, this food contribution rises to about 35%, meaning you need meaningfully less to drink to hit the same hydration level.
📐 Formula
📖 How to Use This Calculator
💡 Example Calculations
Example 1 - 30-year-old male, 75 kg, office worker, temperate city, average diet
Example 2 - 28-year-old female, 60 kg, breastfeeding, hot climate, high-fruit diet, drinks tea daily
Example 3 - 68-year-old male, 80 kg, tropical climate, moderately active, no beverages, average diet
Frequently Asked Questions
🔗 Related Calculators
How much water should I drink per day?
General guidelines: about 35 ml per kg of body weight for adults. A 70 kg person needs roughly 2.45 litres daily just from weight. Add more for activity, hot climate, and personal factors like age and gender. The US National Academy of Medicine suggests 3.7 litres total for men and 2.7 litres for women (including water from food, which contributes ~20%).
Does the '8 glasses per day' rule work?
The 8×8 rule (eight 8-oz glasses ≈ 1.9 litres) is a convenient starting point but not scientifically precise. Actual needs depend on body weight, age, gender, activity level, climate, and diet. A larger, active person in a hot climate needs significantly more than a sedentary person in a cool office.
How much extra water do pregnant or breastfeeding women need?
Pregnant women need about 300 ml extra per day above their normal requirement. Breastfeeding women need approximately 700 ml extra per day to compensate for fluid lost in breast milk. Both increases are reflected in our calculator when the appropriate option is selected.
Can you drink too much water?
Yes - hyponatremia (water intoxication) occurs when excess water dilutes sodium in the blood. It is rare in healthy people but can occur in endurance athletes who drink far more than they sweat. Drinking beyond thirst is unnecessary for most people and the calculator's output is a target, not a ceiling.
Does coffee count toward water intake?
Yes. Despite its mild diuretic effect, caffeinated drinks like coffee and tea still provide net fluid. Studies show regular coffee drinkers are not at greater risk of dehydration. However, alcohol is a meaningful diuretic and does not count the same way - for every alcoholic drink, add an extra glass of water.
How does exercise affect water needs?
You lose roughly 0.5–2 litres per hour of intense exercise through sweat. Drink 400–600 ml of water 2 hours before exercise, 150–250 ml every 15–20 minutes during, and rehydrate after by drinking 1.5× the volume of fluid lost (weigh yourself before and after - 1 kg loss ≈ 1 litre of fluid).
Is 2 litres of water per day enough?
The 8x8 rule (8 glasses of 8 oz = approximately 2 litres per day) is a rough guideline, not a scientific recommendation. Actual needs vary: a 90 kg person exercising in a hot climate may need 3.5-4+ litres, while a 55 kg sedentary person in a cool climate may be fine with 1.5-2 litres. A personalised estimate based on weight and activity level is more accurate than a fixed daily target.
What are the signs of dehydration?
Early signs include thirst (a delayed indicator - you are already mildly dehydrated when you feel thirsty), dark yellow urine (target pale straw colour), dry mouth, mild headache, and fatigue. Even 1-2% dehydration measurably impairs cognitive and physical performance. A practical daily indicator: check your urine colour - pale yellow means well-hydrated, dark amber means drink more water.