Hydration
5 min read

Dehydration Treatment at Home: What Works, What Doesn't, and When You Need Something Stronger

Minimalist IV therapy icon set featuring customizable add-ons for hydration, detox, and recovery.
Published On:
May 2, 2026
Author:
Kyle Larson, RN, BSN
Medical Reviewer:
Dr. Fatima Hussein, MD
Last Updated:
May 11, 2026

Dehydration Treatment at Home: What Works, What Doesn't, and When You Need Something Stronger

Author: Kyle Larson, RN, BSN  |  Medical Reviewer: Dr. Fatima Hussein, MD  |  Published: May 2, 2026  |  Last Updated: May 11, 2026

You Know the Feeling

It starts with the headache. A slow, dull pressure behind your eyes that builds through the afternoon. You hiked Runyon Canyon this morning, hit the steep loop on the east side, and posted a summit selfie with the Hollywood sign behind you. Three miles round trip under a sun that felt pleasant at 8 a.m. and punishing by 10. You brought one 16-ounce water bottle. You finished it before the halfway point.

Now you are home in your apartment in West Hollywood, sitting on the couch with the blinds drawn, and the headache is getting worse. Your mouth feels like cotton. Your lips are cracked. Standing up to walk to the kitchen makes the room tilt for half a second before it steadies. You pour a glass of water, drink it, and feel nothing change.

Or maybe it is Sunday morning. You went out last night in Santa Monica, split a bottle of wine at a restaurant on Main Street, then walked to a bar on the Third Street Promenade for two more drinks. You danced. You forgot to eat dinner. You woke up at noon with a headache that pulses in time with your heartbeat, and the thought of food makes your stomach clench. You open a Gatorade from the fridge. An hour later, you still feel wrecked.

These scenarios repeat across Los Angeles every weekend. A construction worker in the San Fernando Valley who spent eight hours in 95-degree heat. A new mom in Sherman Oaks running on four hours of sleep and forgetting to drink water between feedings. A tourist who walked Hollywood Boulevard and the Griffith Observatory trail in the same afternoon without stopping for shade. The details change. The result does not: your body is running a deficit it cannot close with a single glass of water, and you need to understand why before you can fix it.

What's Going On in Your Body When You're Dehydrated

Dehydration is more than thirst. It is a cascade of chemical imbalances that affects every organ system, starting at the cellular level and working outward until you feel it in your head, your muscles, and your mood.

Your cells depend on a precise balance of water and electrolytes to function. Sodium sits outside your cells. Potassium sits inside. This gradient powers the electrical signals that fire your nerves, contract your muscles, and regulate your heartbeat. When you lose fluid through sweat, breathing, or alcohol metabolism, the concentration of sodium in your blood rises. Your body pulls water out of your cells to dilute it. The cells shrink. Their internal chemistry slows down.

Blood volume drops next. Your blood is about 55 percent plasma, and plasma is about 90 percent water. Lose enough fluid and your plasma volume decreases, thickening your blood. Your heart pumps harder to circulate the same volume of oxygen. Your blood pressure drops. Your kidneys receive less blood flow and start conserving water by concentrating your urine, which is why dark yellow urine is one of the earliest visible signs of dehydration symptoms.

Electrolyte depletion compounds the problem. Sodium loss triggers headaches and confusion because your brain cells are sensitive to osmotic shifts. Potassium loss weakens your muscles and disrupts your cardiac rhythm. Magnesium loss amplifies fatigue, irritability, and muscle cramps. These minerals leave your body through sweat in meaningful quantities. A single hour of vigorous exercise in the dehydration in Los Angeles heat can drain 1,000 to 1,500 milligrams of sodium, 200 milligrams of potassium, and 10 to 20 milligrams of magnesium from your reserves. For the full breakdown of what each electrolyte does and how much you actually need, see our guide on electrolytes explained.

Your digestive system takes a hit, too. Dehydration slows gut motility, because your intestines need water to move food through the tract. Nausea, bloating, and loss of appetite are common in moderate dehydration, which makes eating and drinking feel harder at the exact moment your body needs fuel the most. This creates a feedback loop: you feel too sick to consume the fluids that would make you feel better, and every hour that passes deepens the deficit.

Cognitive function declines at 2 percent body weight loss from fluid. Reaction times slow. Concentration fractures. Decision-making suffers. Studies on athletic performance show measurable drops in accuracy and processing speed at dehydration levels most people would describe as "a little thirsty." You are not imagining the brain fog. Your neurons are working with less water and fewer electrolytes than they need to fire at full speed.

The Usual Fixes (And Why They Fall Short)

Most people reach for the same handful of solutions when dehydration hits. Each one helps to a degree. None of them solves the full problem.

Water. Drinking water is the obvious first step, and it matters. But water alone does not replace the electrolytes you lost. Worse, drinking large amounts of plain water can dilute the sodium remaining in your blood, a condition called hyponatremia. Your body absorbs plain water through the small intestine at a rate of about 500 to 1,000 milliliters per hour. If you lost two or three liters over the course of a hot day or a long night, catching up takes hours. And you will urinate out a significant portion of what you drink if it lacks the sodium your kidneys need to signal water retention.

Gatorade and sports drinks. These contain sodium, potassium, and sugar, which improve water absorption compared to plain water. The sugar activates a sodium-glucose co-transporter in your intestinal lining that pulls water across the membrane faster. The downside: most sports drinks contain 21 to 34 grams of sugar per bottle, along with artificial colors and flavors. They also deliver limited amounts of potassium and zero magnesium. They help with mild dehydration after exercise. They do not address the full electrolyte picture.

Pedialyte and oral rehydration solutions. These were designed for clinical dehydration in children, and they follow the World Health Organization's oral rehydration formula more closely than sports drinks do. Lower sugar, higher sodium, better potassium content. Pedialyte is a meaningful improvement over Gatorade for adult dehydration. The limitation is the same as every oral solution: gut absorption takes time, and if nausea is part of your symptom picture, keeping anything down becomes its own challenge. If you got dehydrated from food poisoning or stomach flu specifically, the absorption problem is worse — see our guide on food poisoning recovery for what to do when oral rehydration can't keep pace.

Coconut water. High in potassium (600 milligrams per cup), low in sodium (250 milligrams per cup). The potassium-to-sodium ratio is the opposite of what most dehydrated people need. Sweat contains far more sodium than potassium, so coconut water replaces the mineral you lost the least of while neglecting the one you lost the most. It tastes good. It helps a little. It is not a dehydration treatment.

Eating watermelon, cucumbers, and other water-rich foods. These foods contribute fluid and some vitamins. They do not deliver meaningful amounts of sodium, potassium, or magnesium in the quantities a dehydrated body needs. Eating a cup of watermelon gives you about 170 milliliters of water and 170 milligrams of potassium. Compare that to the liter-plus deficit and the multi-gram electrolyte gap you are working against. Food supports recovery. It does not drive it.

The core problem with every oral approach is the same: your digestive tract absorbs nutrients at a fixed rate, and that rate drops further when your gut is dehydrated. You are trying to fix a plumbing problem by pouring water into the drain and hoping it makes it through.

The Faster Fix Most People Don't Know About

IV hydration therapy bypasses your digestive system and delivers fluid, electrolytes, and vitamins into your bloodstream through a vein in your arm. The bioavailability is 100 percent. That means every milligram of sodium, every milligram of potassium, every microgram of B12 enters your circulation without passing through your stomach and intestines first.

Compare that to oral absorption. When you swallow a vitamin or drink an electrolyte solution, your digestive tract absorbs somewhere between 20 and 40 percent of the active ingredients, depending on gut health, food timing, and the specific nutrient. The rest passes through. An IV eliminates that gap.

A standard Hydration IV session delivers a liter of normal saline (0.9 percent sodium chloride solution) into your bloodstream over 30 to 45 minutes. Normal saline matches the osmolarity of your blood, which means your body accepts and distributes the fluid without the dilution risk that comes from drinking large volumes of plain water. The saline restores plasma volume, supports kidney function, and helps your body re-establish the sodium gradient your cells need to operate.

Beyond saline, a hydration session can include targeted additions. B-complex vitamins (B1, B2, B3, B5, B6) support energy metabolism at the cellular level. B12 addresses the fatigue that dehydration amplifies. Magnesium helps relax muscles and ease the cramping that potassium loss alone does not explain. Anti-Nausea Medication can take the edge off the stomach discomfort that prevents many dehydrated people from eating or drinking in the first place.

Instadrip's Hydration IV costs $299 and includes one free add-on. Each additional add-on is $50. Available add-ons include Vit C 2500/5000mg, Magnesium (Stress Relief), Anti-Nausea Medication, and Extra Fluids 1000mL, among others. Your Instadrip nurse helps you choose the right combination based on your symptoms and how you are feeling when they arrive.

The timing difference is significant. Oral rehydration requires 6 to 8 hours for your body to absorb enough fluid and electrolytes to close a moderate deficit. IV hydration can restore plasma volume and deliver electrolytes within 30 to 45 minutes. Most clients report that their headache lifts and their energy returns before the session ends. This is not a placebo effect. It is the direct result of restoring the fluid and minerals your blood and cells were missing.

Mobile IV therapy adds another layer of convenience. When you are dehydrated enough to feel dizzy, nauseous, and foggy, the last thing you want to do is drive to a clinic, sit in a waiting room, and wait for your name to be called. For a side-by-side look at how mobile IV stacks up against a clinic visit, see our comparison of IV therapy vs urgent care for dehydration. Instadrip brings a licensed nurse to your door. You sit on your couch, in your bed, or at your kitchen table while the IV runs. No driving. No parking. No waiting.

Who This Works Best For

Hikers and trail runners coming off Griffith Park trails. The Griffith Park loop covers rugged terrain with minimal shade once you pass the tree line. Temperatures on the exposed ridgeline run 10 to 15 degrees hotter than the forecast for your neighborhood. You lose a liter or more of sweat on a moderate 5-mile hike, and most people carry less water than they need. A Hydration IV at your home in Los Feliz or Silver Lake after the hike can restore what the trail took.

Professionals working long hours in Century City. Back-to-back meetings, a lunch you skipped, three cups of coffee, and a 10-hour day in a climate-controlled office that dries out your skin and respiratory tract. You leave work with a headache you blame on stress, but your water bottle has been sitting full on your desk since 9 a.m. Chronic low-grade dehydration shows up as fatigue, poor concentration, and afternoon crashes that coffee cannot fix.

Parents in Sherman Oaks and Studio City. Running after a toddler in the backyard, pushing a stroller to the park, cleaning up after lunch, starting dinner. You pour water for your kids and forget to pour one for yourself. By evening, your head hurts and your patience is gone. Dehydration compounds the sleep deprivation you are carrying.

Athletes training in Santa Monica and Venice. Outdoor CrossFit sessions at the beach, long runs along the Marvin Braude bike path, beach volleyball tournaments on the sand south of the pier. High-intensity exercise in coastal heat and humidity drives fluid and electrolyte losses that sports drinks cannot keep pace with. A post-workout Hydration IV with a Magnesium (Stress Relief) add-on may help support muscle recovery and reduce next-day soreness.

Wedding prep in Beverly Hills. The bride, groom, and wedding party spent the rehearsal dinner celebrating a little too hard. The ceremony is tomorrow at 2 p.m. Bloating, headache, and exhaustion are not the look anyone planned for. A morning Hydration IV with Anti-Nausea Medication can help the wedding party show up feeling closer to their best. For the full cost picture, check the IV therapy pricing breakdown.

What to Expect If You Try It

Booking takes two minutes. You visit instadrip.com or call to schedule. Select the Hydration IV, pick your preferred time, and share your address. Instadrip offers same-day availability seven days a week across more than 20 Los Angeles neighborhoods.

A licensed nurse arrives at your location within 60 minutes of your confirmed booking. They carry everything needed for the session: IV supplies, saline, add-on medications, and safety equipment. Before starting, the nurse reviews your medical history, checks your vitals, and asks about your symptoms. This intake takes about five minutes.

The nurse inserts a small IV catheter into a vein in your arm, connects the saline bag, and adjusts the drip rate. You feel a brief pinch during insertion. After that, you sit back and wait while the fluid flows. Most sessions take 30 to 45 minutes. You can watch TV, scroll your phone, nap, or talk. The nurse monitors the infusion and adjusts as needed.

When the bag is empty, the nurse removes the catheter, applies a bandage, and provides aftercare instructions. Drink water for the rest of the day to maintain the hydration level your IV restored. Eat a balanced meal with protein and vegetables. Avoid alcohol for at least four hours. Most clients notice improvement in headache, energy, and mental clarity within 20 to 30 minutes of starting the session. Some feel the full benefit over the following two to three hours as the electrolytes and vitamins distribute through their tissues.

All treatments are administered by licensed medical professionals. Your nurse carries liability insurance and follows California nursing practice standards for IV therapy administration.

Frequently Asked Questions

When should you go to the hospital for dehydration?

Go to the emergency room if you experience confusion, rapid heartbeat that does not slow when you sit down, fainting, inability to keep any fluids down for more than six hours, or urine output that stops for 12 or more hours. These are signs of severe dehydration that may require medical monitoring, lab work, and higher-volume IV fluid replacement than an outpatient session provides. Infants and elderly adults reach dangerous dehydration levels faster than healthy adults, so the threshold for seeking emergency care is lower for these groups.

How long does it take to recover from dehydration?

Mild dehydration (headache, dry mouth, dark urine) resolves in 6 to 12 hours with consistent oral fluid and electrolyte intake. Moderate dehydration (dizziness, muscle cramps, low urine output) may take 12 to 24 hours to correct through oral rehydration alone. IV hydration can shorten that timeline to 30 to 90 minutes for symptom relief, because fluids and electrolytes enter your bloodstream without waiting for gut absorption. Full cellular rehydration, where the water inside your cells returns to normal levels, takes 24 to 48 hours regardless of the method.

What is the fastest way to cure dehydration?

IV hydration is the fastest method for restoring fluid volume and electrolyte balance. The 100 percent bioavailability of IV-delivered saline and electrolytes means your body receives and uses every milligram within minutes. Oral rehydration solutions (like Pedialyte) are the next fastest option, followed by sports drinks, then plain water. The speed difference matters most when symptoms are moderate to severe, or when nausea prevents you from keeping oral fluids down.

Can you be dehydrated even if you drink water?

Yes. Drinking plain water without electrolytes can leave you in a state of cellular dehydration even though your stomach feels full. Without adequate sodium, your kidneys cannot retain the water you drink, and you urinate it out before your cells absorb it. Certain medications (diuretics, blood pressure drugs) increase fluid loss. Chronic conditions like diabetes can cause elevated fluid loss through frequent urination. Coffee and alcohol both promote fluid excretion. If you drink water throughout the day and still have dry skin, headaches, and fatigue, electrolyte imbalance may be the missing piece.

What are the signs of severe dehydration in adults?

Severe dehydration symptoms include extreme thirst, sunken eyes, very dark or absent urine output, rapid breathing, rapid heartbeat, low blood pressure, confusion or irritability, cool and clammy skin, and fainting. Skin turgor test: pinch the skin on the back of your hand. In a hydrated person, the skin snaps back in under two seconds. In severe dehydration, the skin remains tented for three or more seconds. Severe dehydration is a medical emergency and requires professional treatment.

What medicine helps with dehydration?

There is no prescription medication that reverses dehydration on its own. The treatment is fluid and electrolyte replacement. Oral rehydration solutions (available at any pharmacy without a prescription) contain the specific ratio of sodium, potassium, and glucose that maximizes water absorption in the gut. Anti-nausea medication (like ondansetron) can help if vomiting prevents you from keeping fluids down. IV saline with electrolytes is the clinical standard for moderate to severe dehydration in both hospital and outpatient settings.

Is dehydration dangerous for older adults?

Dehydration carries higher risk for adults over 65. Older adults have a diminished thirst response, meaning they may not feel thirsty even when their fluid levels are low. Kidney function declines with age, reducing the body's ability to concentrate urine and conserve water. Medications common in older adults (diuretics, ACE inhibitors, laxatives) increase fluid loss. Dehydration in older adults can cause urinary tract infections, kidney stones, falls from dizziness, and in severe cases, organ damage. Regular fluid intake with electrolytes is critical, and IV hydration offers a fast intervention when oral intake is insufficient.

Does coffee dehydrate you?

Coffee has a mild diuretic effect, meaning it increases urine production in the short term. For regular coffee drinkers, the body adapts to this effect and the net hydration impact is minimal. For infrequent coffee drinkers or those consuming more than 300 milligrams of caffeine (about three cups), the diuretic effect can contribute to fluid loss. Coffee should not be your sole source of hydration, but drinking a cup or two per day does not cause dehydration in someone who also drinks adequate water and eats a balanced diet.

Your Next Step

Dehydration does not have to ruin your afternoon, your weekend, or your week. If oral fluids and rest are not getting you back to where you need to be, Instadrip brings licensed nurses to your door across Los Angeles for same-day hydration sessions. Find Instadrip on Google Maps for reviews and same-day booking.

About the Author

Kyle Larson, RN, BSN, is the founder of Instadrip, a mobile IV vitamin therapy company serving Los Angeles. As a registered nurse, Kyle brings clinical expertise to every treatment and is passionate about making IV therapy accessible and convenient for LA residents.

About the Reviewer

Dr. Fatima Hussein, MD, serves as Instadrip's Medical Director. She oversees all IV therapy protocols and reviews all health content published on instadrip.com to ensure medical accuracy.

Subscribe to newsletter

Subscribe to receive the latest blog posts to your inbox every week.

By subscribing you agree to with our Privacy Policy.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Instadrip is a professional nursing corporation based in Los Angeles, CA. It is owned and operated by a licensed registered nurse, under the supervision of a California licensed medical director. Instadrip is in full compliance with California state laws and regulations.
Join our newsletter to stay up to date on events and releases.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
© 2026 Instadrip Nursing Corporation. All right reserved.
This website and our services are not intended to regulate or encourage self-management of medically diagnosed alignments or behaviors. The services provided by Instadrip Nursing Corporation have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. The material on this website and its related social media accounts is for information purposes only and should not be taken as medical advice. We recommend you contact your primary care physician prior to starting any new vitamin therapy such as an IV vitamin drip, push, or shot. Our products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease. Our IVs are manufactured in an FDA approved Pharmacy in the USA.