Keep forgetting to drink water? Here’s how to track your water intake in a way you’ll actually remember — simple systems that stick.
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Get it on Play StoreI used to think I was “pretty good” at drinking water.
Then I actually tracked it for a week and realized I was getting through maybe 800 ml by 4 pm and then panic-chugging 1 liter at night like that somehow counted. It did not feel great.
That’s the thing. Most people don’t forget water because they’re lazy. They forget because water has zero urgency until you feel like a dried-up raisin.
And honestly, a lot of advice on this is weirdly unhelpful. “Just drink more water” is right up there with “just sleep earlier.” Cool. Thanks.
If you want to track water intake without forgetting, you need a system that fits your actual day — not some Pinterest-perfect routine where you sip from a glass bottle while journaling at sunrise.
This is the big one.
If your plan is “I’ll remember,” you won’t. Not consistently.
You remember things that are tied to something else:
You do not remember vague goals floating around in your head like “be more hydrated.”
So the fix is simple: attach water to stuff you already do.
That’s the whole game.
This is the easiest method I’ve found, and it works way better than random reminders every hour.
Pick 5 to 7 things you already do every single day. Then pair water with each one.
For example:
That adds up fast without feeling annoying.
I did this during a month when I kept getting headaches around 3 pm. My setup was stupid simple: wake up, coffee, lunch, gym, dinner. Every one of those had a water amount attached. No app complexity. No overthinking.
If you keep forgetting, your anchors are too weak or too random. Tie water to habits that happen no matter what.
This is my strongest opinion on water tracking:
Counting every sip is overrated.
Nobody wants to open an app 14 times a day because they took 3 mouthfuls from a tumbler. That’s how people quit by day 2.
Track by container instead.
Examples:
So if your goal is 2.5 liters, you just need:
Way easier.
I personally like a 1-liter bottle because the math is so clean. If I finish 1 bottle by lunch and another by evening, I know I’m in decent shape. If I’m working out or it’s insanely hot, I add more.
Make the unit easy enough that your brain doesn’t resist it.
Out of sight really is out of mind here.
If your bottle lives in the kitchen while you work in another room, you will drink less. Every time.
A few practical spots that work:
And yes, this sounds obvious. But obvious is different from done.
One tiny change that helped me: I stopped using a “nice” bottle that leaked a little, had an annoying lid, and needed two hands to open. I replaced it with one I could flip open in one second.
My water intake went up almost immediately.
Friction matters more than motivation.
This works especially well if you’re the kind of person who likes checking boxes.
Options:
The reason this helps is simple: you need to see progress before your brain cares.
I’ve had phases where I used a 2-liter bottle with lines drawn on it:
Not aesthetic. Very effective.
And if you want something cleaner, use a habit tracker like Trider at myhabits.in. You can set water as a daily habit and track bottles or liters instead of trying to remember it in your head all day.
Most people overdo reminders.
If your phone buzzes every 45 minutes, you’ll ignore it by tomorrow. Your brain starts treating it like background wallpaper.
Instead, set 3 strategic reminders:
That’s it.
Something like:
Notice the wording there.
Don’t use reminders that say “Drink water.” Too vague. Use reminders that tell you exactly what to do.
Bad:
Better:
Specific reminders actually trigger action.
A lot of people pick 4 liters because it sounds healthy and then wonder why they fail.
Look, if you currently drink 1 liter a day, jumping to 3.5 liters is just unnecessary drama.
Start with your baseline.
For 3 days, track what you already drink without trying to improve it. If you average:
Small wins stick.
And yes, water needs vary based on body size, weather, food, caffeine, exercise, and health conditions. So I’m not going to pretend there’s one magic number for everyone.
But from a habit standpoint, the best goal is the one you can repeat for 30 days.
This sounds almost too simple, but it works.
Drink water:
I used “before coffee” for a while because I never miss coffee. Never. So water got to ride along with that habit.
If you miss your water habit often, ask yourself: what behavior happens right before it? That’s where the anchor should go.
One reason people forget water is because access gets weirdly inconvenient.
You leave the house without your bottle. You’re in a meeting. You’re commuting. You’re at the gym and the fountain is annoyingly far. So you just… don’t drink.
Set up backups:
Honestly, this is one of those “be less idealistic” habits.
Would it be lovely to drink from one perfect reusable bottle all day? Sure.
But if a backup bottle means you hit your goal, do that.
A lot of people say they “forget” water when they actually mean they’re not interested in drinking it.
Fair.
Some easy fixes:
No, you do not need to romanticize hydration. You just need to make it less dull.
I go through phases where ice-cold water is all I want, and phases where I’ll drink way more if it’s through a straw. Tiny detail. Big difference.
If you want the no-overthinking version, do this:
That’s it.
If 2 liters is too much for where you are right now, make it 1.5 bottles. Still counts.
If you want to be more structured, set a daily habit in Trider and mark:
Simple is what gets repeated.
This is usually not a discipline problem.
It’s one of these:
So don’t just “try harder.”
Change the system.
That’s what finally worked for me with hydration. Not more willpower. Just fewer chances to forget.
The best water tracking method is the one that feels almost too easy.
And that usually means:
Do that for a week and you’ll probably drink more water without thinking about it nearly as much.
If you want to actually track this stuff, I use Trider — it’s free at myhabits.in