Health

Why Drinking More Water Is the Most Underrated Health Advice

By Dr. Lisa Wang — Not a real doctor. Just someone who felt tired all the time until she started drinking enough water.

Last updated: June 2026


You have heard the advice. Drink eight glasses of water a day. Stay hydrated. It sounds simple. It sounds boring. Most people ignore it.

This is a mistake.

Drinking enough water is not just about avoiding thirst. It affects your energy, your brain, your digestion, your skin, and your mood. Most people walk around mildly dehydrated and do not know it.


How Much Water Do You Actually Need?

The old “eight glasses a day” rule is not bad. But it is not precise. The right amount depends on your body, activity level, and climate.

FactorIncreases Water Need
ExerciseYou sweat. You need more.
Hot weatherYou sweat more.
Body sizeLarger bodies need more water.
PregnancyNeed more.
Illness (fever, vomiting, diarrhea)Need more.

A simple rule: Drink when you are thirsty. Drink enough that your urine is pale yellow. If it is dark yellow, drink more.

Urine ColorMeaning
Pale yellow, clearWell hydrated
Dark yellowDehydrated. Drink water.
Brown or orangeVery dehydrated. See a doctor if it continues.

What Happens When You Are Dehydrated

Even mild dehydration (losing 1-2% of your body’s water) causes problems.

EffectWhat Happens
Energy dropsBlood volume decreases. Heart works harder. You feel tired.
Brain fogReaction time slows. Memory worsens. Concentration drops.
Mood worsensIrritability increases. Anxiety can increase.
HeadachesBrain tissue loses water. It shrinks slightly. Pulls on membranes. Hurts.
Digestion slowsIntestines need water to move waste. Without it, constipation.
Skin looks dullSkin is an organ. It needs water to look plump and healthy.
Exercise performance dropsMuscles cramp. Endurance falls. Strength decreases.

You do not need to be severely dehydrated to feel these effects. Losing just 1-2% of your body’s water is enough.


How Dehydration Masquerades as Other Problems

SymptomCould Actually Be
Tired all afternoonYou are dehydrated, not sleep-deprived.
HeadacheYou need water, not painkillers.
HungryThirst feels like hunger. Drink water first.
Trouble focusingDehydrated brain works slower.
Bad moodDehydration increases irritability.

Before you reach for coffee, a snack, or an aspirin, drink a glass of water. Wait 15 minutes. See how you feel.


How to Drink More Water Without Thinking About It

Keep water visible.

Put a water bottle on your desk. If you see it, you will drink it. Out of sight, out of mind.

Drink a glass at every transition.

TransitionAction
Wake upDrink water before coffee
Before each mealOne glass
After each bathroom breakOne glass
Before bedSmall glass (not too much, or you will wake up)

Use a straw.

People drink more when using a straw. It is faster. It feels easier.

Flavor it.

Add lemon, cucumber, mint, or berries. Not enough to add calories. Enough to make water taste like something.

Eat your water.

FoodWater Content
Cucumber96%
Lettuce95%
Celery95%
Zucchini94%
Watermelon92%
Strawberries91%
Cantaloupe90%

Not a replacement for drinking water. But it helps.


Common Myths About Hydration

Myth: You need 8 glasses exactly.

Not precise. Drink when thirsty. Check urine color.

Myth: Coffee dehydrates you.

Caffeine is a mild diuretic. The water in coffee offsets it. Moderate coffee counts toward hydration.

Myth: You cannot drink too much water.

You can. It is rare. Drinking extreme amounts in a short time can dilute sodium levels. This is dangerous. Drink when thirsty. Do not force it.

Myth: Thirst means you are already dehydrated.

Thirst is a late sign. By the time you feel thirsty, you are already mildly dehydrated. Drink before you feel thirsty.


A Simple Hydration Routine

TimeAction
Morning (wake up)1-2 glasses of water
With breakfast1 glass
Mid-morning1 glass (refill bottle)
With lunch1 glass
AfternoonSip from bottle throughout
With dinner1 glass
EveningSmall glass if thirsty

This routine gets you to 8-10 glasses without effort.


When You Need More Water

SituationWhat to Do
ExercisingDrink before, during, and after. Water is fine for less than 1 hour. Sports drinks are for longer sessions.
Hot weatherDrink more than usual. Do not wait for thirst.
Fever, vomiting, diarrheaDrink small amounts frequently. See a doctor if severe.
Pregnancy or breastfeedingTalk to your doctor. Needs increase.

The Bottom Line

Water is not exciting. It is not expensive. It does not come in a pretty bottle with a fancy label.

But drinking enough water is one of the simplest things you can do for your health. More energy. Better focus. Better mood. Better digestion. Better skin.

Try it for one week. Drink water when you wake up. Keep a bottle at your desk. Drink before meals. Notice how you feel.

You might be surprised.


About the author: Lisa Wang used to feel tired every afternoon. She thought she needed more sleep. She needed more water.

This article is for informational purposes. If you are chronically thirsty or have other symptoms, see a doctor.