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Hydration and Electrolytes: How Much Water Do You Really Need?

Nutrition5 min read Jul 4, 2026Updated Jul 3, 2026
A graduated urine colour scale from pale (well hydrated) to dark amber (drink more).

Hydration is the health topic that manages to be both universally agreed-upon and mostly wrong in the details. Everyone "knows" you should drink eight glasses of water a day and top up with electrolytes — and almost none of that survives contact with the evidence. The real picture is looser, more individual, and far less demanding than the water-bottle industry would prefer you believe.

The eight-glasses myth

The famous "eight glasses a day" rule has no solid scientific origin — it's a number that got repeated until it felt official. There's no fixed daily volume that's right for everyone, because water needs vary enormously with your body size, how much you move and sweat, the climate you're in, and even what you eat. Just as importantly, a large share of your water comes from food — fruit, vegetables, soups, and the like — and from other drinks, not only from plain water. Counting glasses is measuring the wrong thing.

How much you actually need

For most healthy people, the body's own thirst mechanism is a genuinely good guide — it's a finely tuned system that evolved for exactly this job, and drinking to thirst keeps the great majority of people well hydrated without any counting. The practical check that beats a number is simply the colour of your urine: pale straw suggests you're well hydrated; consistently dark yellow suggests you could use more. That's it. The exceptions — where thirst can lag behind need — are worth knowing: older adults (whose thirst signal weakens with age), hot climates, illness with fever or fluid loss, and prolonged hard exercise. In those cases, drink a little proactively rather than waiting.

Skip the counting, read this instead

The hydration colour check

well hydrated fine · sip drink up A rough guide, not a lab test — vitamins and some foods can tint the colour.
Pale straw on the left, deeper amber on the right. It's an honest, zero-effort signal you already produce several times a day — more useful than any target number of glasses.

Electrolytes: when they matter, and when they don't

Electrolytes — sodium, potassium, magnesium and others — are minerals that carry the electrical signals behind muscle and nerve function, and you lose them in sweat. That's the whole basis of the electrolyte-drink industry, and it contains a real truth wrapped in a lot of overselling. For someone sitting at a desk drinking water and eating normal food, a daily electrolyte sachet is almost entirely unnecessary — you replace what little you lose through your diet without thinking about it. Where electrolytes genuinely earn their place is in the situations that actually deplete them: prolonged or intense exercise (especially over an hour), heavy sweating in heat, and illness with vomiting or diarrhoea. In those cases, replacing sodium in particular helps. The rule of thumb: match the tool to the situation. Sweating buckets or ill? Useful. Sedentary and well-fed? Mostly marketing.

What to reach for when you do need them

On the occasions electrolytes genuinely help, you don't need a designer sachet with a marketing story. The active ingredients are mundane: mostly sodium, some potassium, sometimes a little magnesium, often with a bit of carbohydrate to aid absorption during long efforts. A pinch of salt in water with a splash of juice does much of the job; so does a proper oral rehydration solution when you've been ill. Ordinary food helps too — a salty snack and some fruit after a sweaty session covers the bases. The main thing to sidestep is reaching for sugary sports drinks as an everyday beverage when you haven't earned them: that's how a hydration tool quietly becomes a source of surplus sugar. Match the drink to the demand.

Can you overdo it?

Yes — and this is the part the "drink more!" messaging ignores. Drinking far more water than you need, especially quickly and without replacing sodium, can dilute the sodium in your blood to dangerous levels, a condition called hyponatremia. It's rare, but it's a genuine risk in endurance events where anxious athletes over-drink plain water for hours. The takeaway isn't to fear water; it's that more is not automatically better. Hydration is a target to hit, not a number to maximise — both dehydration and overhydration are problems, and thirst plus common sense keeps most people comfortably between them.

A simple approach

Strip away the noise and it's easy: drink to thirst, keep water within reach so it's the default when you are thirsty, and glance at urine colour as your check. Eat plenty of water-rich fruit and vegetables, which hydrate while doing other good work. Reach for electrolytes when you've genuinely sweated a lot, trained hard for over an hour, or been unwell — not as a daily ritual. And don't over-worry about coffee or tea: they're mild diuretics but still count as net fluid for regular drinkers. That's the entire system; you can put the counting app away.

The bottom line

The eight-glasses rule is a myth; there's no universal number, and much of your water comes from food. For healthy people, thirst is a reliable guide and urine colour is a better check than any target — pale is the goal. Electrolytes matter when you've actually lost them (long or intense exercise, heat, illness) and are mostly redundant otherwise, while drinking far too much carries its own real risk. Aim for the target, don't maximise. For how the fundamentals fit together, see building a longevity protocol. Educational only, not medical advice.