The 30-second summary
- GLP-1s blunt the thirst signal nearly as much as the hunger signal. Many women slowly dehydrate without noticing.
- Mild chronic dehydration drives much of the nausea, headache, fatigue, and constipation that get blamed on the drug itself.
- The simple rule: 2 to 2.5 litres of water per day, measured. Plus a pinch of electrolytes, especially in the first three months.
Why your thirst is wrong
The thirst signal is regulated in the hypothalamus, the same general area where appetite is regulated. GLP-1 receptors influence multiple hypothalamic systems. When the drug quiets the hunger signal, it tends to quiet the thirst signal alongside it.
The effect is not as dramatic as the appetite change. Most women still feel thirsty sometimes. But the baseline level of thirst, the small reminders throughout the day to take a sip, is dampened. A woman who used to drink water unconsciously now needs to drink it deliberately.
The consequence is mild chronic dehydration, which contributes to:
- Nausea: dehydration amplifies the nausea threshold
- Headaches: classic dehydration symptom
- Fatigue: low plasma volume reduces oxygen delivery
- Constipation: water in the gut is the lubricant for everything
- Dizziness on standing: orthostatic symptoms from low volume
If you have any of these and your fluid intake is below 1.5 litres a day, hydration is the first place to look.
The simple rule
2 to 2.5 litres of water per day, every day, measured.
That is the working target for most women on a GLP-1. It is more than the casual "eight glasses" recommendation, deliberately, to compensate for the dampened thirst signal.
This is total water from drinks. Tea and coffee count. Water in food counts a bit (fruits, soups). Diet soft drinks count if you drink them. Alcohol does not count.
How to actually drink it
The intervention that works for most women is purely behavioural:
- A 750 ml water bottle on your desk or in your kitchen. Visible. The same one every day.
- Refill three times. Once before mid-morning, once before lunch, once after dinner.
- Track for two weeks. A simple notes app or a tick on a calendar. The point is to confirm the target is being hit, not to obsess.
After two weeks, the habit is mostly automatic. The bottle becomes the cue.
For women who travel or are in meetings most of the day, the variation is: a smaller (500 ml) bottle, refilled five times, with one of those refills always tied to a specific moment (the morning coffee, the after-lunch walk).
Electrolytes
Plain water is fine for most women most of the time. But on a GLP-1, especially in the first three months when caloric intake is dropping fast, electrolyte loss matters.
Sodium
Most women on a GLP-1 reduce their sodium intake significantly without trying. Less food, less sodium. For many, this is fine, daily sodium intake remains above the floor. For some, it produces light-headedness, fatigue, and the brain-fog that gets blamed on the drug.
A working intervention: a pinch of table salt in one glass of water, once a day, especially in the morning. Approximately 1–2 grams of added sodium. Adjust down or skip entirely if you have high blood pressure, heart failure, or kidney disease that requires sodium restriction.
Potassium and magnesium
Both move slowly on a typical diet. Potassium comes from leafy greens, beans, avocados, yoghurt, and bananas. Magnesium comes from nuts, seeds, dark leafy greens, and dark chocolate. Most women fall short of recommended intakes; a slow attention to these categories of food is the right approach. Supplements are reasonable if food sources are not realistic.
Electrolyte drink mixes
The commercial electrolyte mixes (LMNT, Liquid IV, Pedialyte, etc.) are convenient ways to deliver the right ratio of sodium-potassium-magnesium. They are not magic, but they are useful when fluid loss is high, hot weather, exercise, illness, or when you find plain water hard to drink in volume.
Avoid the ones with large amounts of added sugar. Many sports drinks pack 40+ grams of sugar per bottle, which makes no sense on a GLP-1.
Signs you are overdoing it
It is genuinely difficult to over-hydrate to a clinically dangerous level for a healthy woman drinking water slowly through the day. But the signs are worth knowing:
- Frequent urination of clear, copious volumes: every hour, large amounts. Some of this is normal on high water intake; persistent extremes are not.
- Headache and nausea after a sudden large volume: for example, four glasses of water in 30 minutes
- Bloating, swelling in fingers, faint feelings: these can be signs of hyponatraemia (low sodium), which is more common in long-distance athletes drinking too much plain water during exercise
These are uncommon at the 2–2.5 litre target spread across a day. If you are drinking much more than that, talk to your prescriber, usually the issue is timing or salt rather than total volume.
The morning test
A simple proxy for hydration status: the colour of your first morning urine. If it is pale yellow to nearly clear, you are likely in good hydration shape. If it is dark amber, you were under-hydrated yesterday.
This is not a perfect test (vitamins, beetroots, and some medications change colour) but it is a free, fast, useful check most mornings.
What Steady does with this
Water logging is one tap from the home screen. The daily target is set in onboarding (default: 2 litres, adjustable). The weekly scorecard shows hydration as one of four lines, alongside protein, fibre, and dose adherence. A week of low hydration alongside high nausea symptoms makes the pattern visible at a glance.
Sources
- EFSA Panel on Dietetic Products. Scientific Opinion on Dietary Reference Values for water. EFSA Journal 2010. EFSA
- Popkin BM, D'Anci KE, Rosenberg IH. Water, hydration and health. Nutr Rev 2010. PubMed
- Institute of Medicine. Dietary Reference Intakes for Water, Potassium, Sodium, Chloride, and Sulfate. 2005. NAP
Medical disclaimer: Significant changes in fluid intake or electrolyte supplementation belong with your prescriber if you have heart, kidney, or blood pressure issues. See our full medical disclaimer.