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Hydration Worked Examples

Sweat Rate Examples

Understanding your personal sweat rate is a core part of effective hydration, if you are an athlete pushing limits or working in demanding conditions. It helps prevent dehydration, optimize performance, and safeguard health by informing how much fluid you need to replace, and when.

By AI Fit Hub · AI Fit Hub Team
Best Next MoveRecovery

Sweat Rate Calculator

Calculate your personal sweat rate from pre/post-exercise weigh-ins and estimate fluid and sodium losses using ACSM guidelines.

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Education · Not medical advice. Output is deterministic math from your inputs.Editorial standardsSponsor disclosureCorrections

Worked Examples

See the inputs and outcome together

Each scenario keeps the starting point, the outcome, and the actual lesson in one place so the page reads like a decision notebook, not a data dump.

  1. 1

    Baseline 60-minute run

    A 70 kg runner finishes a one-hour session, weighs in at 69.2 kg, and sipped 500 mL on the way.

    Sweat rate works out to 1.3 L/h with 1.3 L of total fluid lost, a 1.1% body-weight drop that flags mild dehydration.

    Pre Weight Kg

    70

    Post Weight Kg

    69.2

    Duration Minutes

    60

    Fluid Consumed Ml

    500

    Even a comfortable one-hour run drops you past the 1% threshold here, so a single 500 mL bottle is not quite keeping pace. Carry closer to 800 mL for the next hour.

  2. 2

    Longer, harder effort

    The same runner pushes a 90-minute tempo session, ending at 70.4 kg from a 72 kg start while drinking 600 mL.

    Sweat rate climbs to 1.47 L/h with 2.2 L lost overall, a 2.2% body-weight drop that crosses into moderate dehydration.

    Pre Weight Kg

    72

    Post Weight Kg

    70.4

    Duration Minutes

    90

    Fluid Consumed Ml

    600

    Stretching the session to 90 minutes pushed losses past the 2% mark where endurance noticeably suffers. Plan roughly 1.1 L per hour and add sodium for any effort over an hour.

  3. 3

    Hot-weather session

    A 70 kg athlete trains for an hour in the heat, finishing at 68.5 kg with only 300 mL consumed.

    Sweat rate jumps to 1.8 L/h with 1.8 L lost, a 2.1% body-weight drop landing in moderate dehydration.

    Pre Weight Kg

    70

    Post Weight Kg

    68.5

    Duration Minutes

    60

    Fluid Consumed Ml

    300

    Heat alone can lift the hourly rate by half a litre versus a temperate run. The 300 mL sipped covered barely a sixth of the loss, so heat sessions need a deliberate drinking schedule, not thirst cues.

  4. 4

    Short, cool session

    A 70 kg lifter does a 30-minute easy treadmill walk in a cool gym, ending at 69.7 kg after 250 mL.

    Sweat rate reads 1.1 L/h but only 0.55 L total is lost, a 0.4% drop that registers as well hydrated.

    Pre Weight Kg

    70

    Post Weight Kg

    69.7

    Duration Minutes

    30

    Fluid Consumed Ml

    250

    Hourly rate and actual deficit tell different stories. A high per-hour figure over a short, cool bout still leaves you well hydrated, so judge replacement by total loss and session length, not the rate alone.

Patterns

Sweat rates are highly individual and vary significantly based on activity, environmental conditions, and clothing.
Fluid intake during activity often falls short of actual fluid loss, making post-activity rehydration.
Even non-traditional physical activities or high-stress environments can lead to measurable dehydration, impacting performance and cognitive function.
Understanding personal sweat rate is the foundation for creating truly effective, personalized hydration strategies that prevent performance decline and health risks.

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General fitness estimates — not medical advice. Consult a healthcare professional for medical decisions.