Diet & Nutrition

Hydration on GLP-1: Why You're Dehydrated and How to Fix It

April 1, 2026 · 3 min read · By the Sharpy team
TL;DR

GLP-1 reduces thirst signals and food-water intake. Aim for 80+ oz of fluids daily, salt your food (½–1 tsp/day added), and use an electrolyte mix during the first month and on workout days. Mild headache, fatigue, and constipation are usually under-hydration before they're anything else.

Thirst is one of the things GLP-1 medications quietly suppress alongside hunger. Most patients arrive at month 2 mildly dehydrated without realizing it — and many of the "GLP-1 side effects" they're experiencing are actually dehydration.

Why GLP-1 dehydrates you

Three contributors:

  1. Reduced thirst signals. Same hypothalamic dampening that reduces hunger also reduces thirst.
  2. Less water from food. A normal stomach gets 20–30% of daily fluid from the water in food. With food intake cut in half, that's a meaningful loss.
  3. Diarrhea + nausea. Some patients have outright fluid losses from GI side effects.

The result: patients who drank 60 oz before the medication often drop to 30–40 oz without trying.

Symptoms of GLP-1 dehydration

  • Headaches, especially mid-afternoon
  • Fatigue that doesn't track to sleep
  • Constipation that won't budge
  • Dark yellow urine
  • Dizziness when standing up
  • Muscle cramps, especially leg cramps at night
  • Sticky-feeling mouth
  • Reduced sweating during exercise
  • "Brain fog"

If you're checking off three or more, you're dehydrated.

The daily target

80+ oz of total fluids per day (≈2.4 liters), more if you're exercising or in a hot climate.

Counts toward your fluid target:

  • Plain water (the bulk)
  • Coffee and tea (yes, despite myths — caffeine in normal amounts doesn't cause net dehydration)
  • Sparkling water
  • Herbal tea
  • Broth
  • Electrolyte drinks
  • The water in fruits and yogurt

Doesn't count:

  • Alcohol (net negative; counts as anti-hydration)
  • Sugar-sweetened beverages (more harm than help)

Electrolytes matter more than you think

Plain water without electrolytes can actually worsen things — it dilutes the sodium you have without adding more. Most GLP-1 patients are mildly low in sodium specifically, because:

  • They're eating less processed food (where sodium hides)
  • They may have GI losses
  • Their thirst is suppressed (so they're not pushing intake)

The fix: salt your food (½–1 tsp added daily) and use an electrolyte mix at least once a day for the first month and on workout days.

Electrolyte targets per day:

  • Sodium: 2,000–3,000 mg
  • Potassium: 3,000–4,000 mg
  • Magnesium: 300–400 mg

Brands:

  • LMNT: 1,000 mg sodium per packet, no sugar. Best for active people; intense flavor.
  • Liquid IV: 500 mg sodium, with sugar (calories matter on a GLP-1).
  • Pedialyte: Reliable, classic, lower sodium.
  • Generic electrolyte tabs (Nuun, etc.): Lower sodium. Fine for daily use.
  • DIY: ½ tsp salt + ¼ tsp lite salt (potassium chloride) + lemon juice in 32 oz water.

A practical hydration schedule

On waking: 16 oz water with electrolyte mix

Mid-morning: Coffee or tea (8–12 oz)

With lunch: 8 oz water (don't drown the meal)

Mid-afternoon: 16 oz water

Pre-dinner: 8 oz water with lemon

Evening: Herbal tea (8–12 oz)

Total: ~80 oz, distributed.

What to avoid

  • Chugging large volumes at meals. Adds to stomach distension; worsens nausea.
  • Going hours without anything. Thirst won't remind you on a GLP-1.
  • Relying on coffee alone. Caffeine isn't a net diuretic but it isn't a substitute for water either.
  • Sugar-sweetened sports drinks. Calorie load you don't need.
  • Sugar-free sodas in volume. Carbonation worsens reflux and burps; some patients get GI distress from sweeteners.

Special situations

Hot weather / travel. Add a second electrolyte serving. Aim for 100+ oz.

Workout days. 16–24 oz before, 8–16 oz during, 16+ oz after. With electrolytes if the workout is over 45 minutes or you sweat a lot.

Diarrhea episodes. Replace fluid + electrolytes aggressively. A bottle of Pedialyte is more useful than another glass of water.

Hangover days. GLP-1 + alcohol = severe dehydration. Two electrolyte servings, plus 100 oz water target.

Bottom line

If you're on a GLP-1 and feeling crummy, the answer is hydration before it's anything else. 80+ oz daily, salt your food, use an electrolyte mix at least once a day for the first month. Most "this drug makes me feel terrible" complaints resolve when fluids and sodium come up.