Drinking water first thing in the morning can boost hydration, digestion, energy, and focus. Here’s what it actually does and how to make it stick.
Privacy policy for Mindcrate website
Not getting results from your habit tracker? Here’s how to tell when it’s time to switch methods, with clear signs and better options.
Simple habit trackers beat fancy ones because they’re easier to use daily. Here’s why boring wins, plus practical tips to stick longer.
Can habit tracking improve your sleep? Learn how to test it with a simple 14-day experiment, track the right habits, and spot what really works.
Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.
Get it on Play StoreI am fully on the drink-water-first-thing team. Not because it sounds healthy and aesthetic on a wellness reel—because it actually makes my mornings feel less like I’ve been hit by a truck.
The first time I started doing it consistently, I noticed something annoying and amazing at the same time: my body was basically begging for water every morning, and I had been ignoring it for years. One big glass of water before coffee changed more than I expected.
And no, it’s not magic. But it is one of those tiny habits that gives you a surprisingly solid return.
You lose water while you sleep. A normal night of breathing, sweating a bit, and not drinking anything for 6–8 hours means you wake up mildly dehydrated.
That doesn’t mean you’re in crisis mode. But it does mean your body is starting the day a little behind.
So when you drink water first thing, you’re basically giving your system a reset button. Hydration, circulation, digestion, and even brain function all get a small but real boost.
This one is obvious, but still underrated.
If you wake up and immediately scroll your phone, shower, make coffee, answer messages, and only then drink water, you’ve already gone 30–60 minutes with zero hydration. That sounds small, but your body notices.
A glass or two of water first thing helps replace what you lost overnight. I usually aim for 300–500 ml right after waking up. If I’m feeling extra dry—especially after a salty dinner or bad sleep—I go closer to over the first 20 minutes.
But don’t chug like you’re in a competition. Sip it.
Dehydration and brain fog are not identical, but they love hanging out together.
When I skip morning water, I feel weirdly sluggish. Not sleepy exactly—more like my brain is buffering. Water helps with alertness, focus, and that “okay, I can function now” feeling.
And this matters more than people think. If you start your day clearer, you’re more likely to do the other good stuff too—move your body, eat breakfast, and not spiral into “I’ll start tomorrow” mode.
This is one of the biggest practical wins.
Water can help stimulate your digestive system, and for a lot of people, it helps trigger a bowel movement in the morning. That’s not glamorous, but it is wildly useful.
I’ve had stretches where my mornings felt off because, well, my stomach was dragging its feet. Adding water first thing made my digestion feel more predictable. Regularity is underrated. When your gut is happy, your whole day is less annoying.
If you deal with constipation, morning water is not a cure-all, but it’s a smart habit to pair with fiber, movement, and enough sleep.
I love coffee. Deeply. Emotionally. Probably too much.
But if I drink coffee before water, my body gets cranky. Water first helps take the edge off that morning dehydration, so caffeine feels smoother and less like a punch.
And this is a big one if you get headaches, jitters, or that weird dry-mouth feeling after coffee. Sometimes it’s not the coffee—it’s the fact that you were already underhydrated when you drank it.
So yes, keep your coffee. Just don’t make it the first liquid your body sees every morning.
A lot of people think energy problems are always about sleep, but dehydration can absolutely make you feel tired, cranky, and low-effort.
Starting with water won’t transform you into a superhero by 8 a.m. But it can make your energy feel steadier. Less drag. Less “why am I exhausted already?”
And when you combine that with a decent breakfast and a little morning movement, the difference is honestly noticeable.
I need to say this clearly: drinking water first thing is helpful, not miraculous.
It won’t fix bad sleep. It won’t melt fat. It won’t detox anything because your liver and kidneys already handle that job.
I hate wellness nonsense that overclaims simple habits. Water is great because it’s simple. That’s the whole point.
So if someone tells you it will “flush toxins” like your body is some dirty pipe, ignore them. The real benefits are more grounded:
That’s plenty.
My practical answer: start with 1 glass.
That’s usually around 250–300 ml. If you wake up very thirsty, sleep with your mouth open, exercise in the morning, or live in a hot climate, you might want 500 ml.
But don’t force some random extreme number. More is not automatically better. The best amount is the one you’ll actually do every single day.
And if drinking plain water feels boring, try:
I personally like room-temp water because ice-cold water first thing can feel rude.
This is where most people mess up. They hear a good idea, do it for 2 days, forget once, and then act like the habit failed.
No. The system failed.
Here’s how to make morning water stick:
Keep a glass or bottle beside your bed. If you have to walk to the kitchen before you can drink, the habit gets weaker.
Drink water before brushing your teeth. Or before checking your phone. Or right after your alarm stops.
Don’t start with a complicated routine. No lemon-cutting ceremony. No “I’ll do 700 ml and journaling and breathwork.” Just water.
This is the part that helped me most. I’m very motivated by not breaking a chain. Use a habit tracker, a calendar, or something like Trider (myhabits.in) to keep the streak visible.
If you forget once, fine. Drink water the next day. That’s it. No moral drama.
A few people feel nauseous if they drink too much too fast first thing. If that’s you, try:
And if you have a medical condition that affects fluid balance, talk to a professional. Common sense beats internet advice every time.
Mine is boring, which is why it works.
I wake up. I drink one full glass of water. I stand near a window for a minute. Then I make coffee.
That’s it. No performance. No “perfect morning routine.” Just a tiny sequence that makes the rest of the day feel less chaotic.
And honestly, that’s the win. Not some dramatic transformation. Just a better start.
If you do nothing else from this article, do this: drink one glass of water before anything else tomorrow morning.
Not because it will solve your life. Because it’s one of the easiest habits with one of the best payoff-to-effort ratios I know.
And if you want help keeping it consistent, try tracking it in Trider (myhabits.in). A simple streak is weirdly motivating—and sometimes that’s all you need to turn a good idea into a real habit.
So yeah, fill a glass tonight and make tomorrow morning stupidly easy.