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Water Intake Calculator

Find your personalized daily hydration goal based on weight and activity

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Sedentary
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Moderate
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Active
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Temperate
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Hot / Humid
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Cold / Dry

About Water Intake Calculator

Tracking health metrics shouldn't require doctor visits for every quick estimate. Water Intake Calculator lets you find your personalized daily hydration goal based on weight and activity instantly with science-backed formulas. All calculations run in your browser, and no personal health data is stored or transmitted anywhere.

How to Use

1
Enter your measurements Fill in the required fields such as age, height, weight, or other health metrics.
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Choose your unit system Select metric (kg, cm) or imperial (lbs, ft/in) depending on your preference.
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View your results See your calculated results with color-coded categories, ranges, and clear explanations.
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Understand the context Read the category descriptions and healthy ranges to understand what your results mean.
🔒 Privacy note: All processing happens locally in your browser. Your data is never sent to any server.

Why Use Water Intake Calculator?

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Evidence-Based Formulas Water Intake Calculator uses clinically recognized formulas and guidelines from organizations like the WHO, CDC, and peer-reviewed medical research.
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Health Data Privacy Your body measurements, health metrics, and personal data are processed entirely in your browser. Nothing is stored, shared, or transmitted.
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Visual Results Clear charts, color-coded ranges, and contextual explanations help you understand your results at a glance — not just a raw number.
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Educational Tool This calculator provides estimates for educational purposes. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions and diagnoses.

Frequently Asked Questions

General guidelines suggest 8 cups (64 oz / 1.9L) per day, but individual needs vary significantly based on weight, activity, climate, and health status. The formula used here — 0.5 oz per pound of body weight — is a commonly recommended starting point. Adjust based on thirst and urine color (pale yellow = well hydrated).

Yes, beverages like coffee, tea, juice, and milk all contribute to your daily fluid intake. While caffeinated drinks have a mild diuretic effect, moderate coffee and tea consumption (up to 3–4 cups/day) still results in net positive hydration. Plain water is best, but don't exclude other beverages from your count.

Common signs include dark urine (amber to dark yellow), infrequent urination (less than 4 times/day), dry mouth, fatigue, headache, and dizziness. Even mild dehydration (1–2% of body weight in fluids) can impair physical and cognitive performance. Don't wait until you're thirsty — thirst is already a mild dehydration signal.