Evidence reviewLifestyleEvidence Tier II

How Does Chronic Dehydration Affect Aging and Longevity?

Chronic mild dehydration is associated with accelerated biological aging, higher rates of chronic kidney disease, and increased cardiovascular risk — and a 2023 NIH study found that adults with higher serum sodium (a marker of chronic underhydration) had significantly faster biological aging.

Dr. Amelia Stone, MD, Endocrinology
May 21, 2026
3 min read

The short answer

A landmark 2023 NIH study found that adults with serum sodium levels in the higher-normal range (142–146 mEq/L) — a marker of chronic underhydration — had significantly faster biological aging, higher rates of chronic disease, and a 21% higher risk of premature death compared to those with optimal hydration (serum sodium 137–142 mEq/L). Chronic mild dehydration is far more common than most people realise and is largely preventable.

What the evidence actually shows

Dmitrieva et al. (2023) in eBioMedicine analysed data from 11,255 US adults followed for 25 years and found that higher serum sodium (indicating chronic underhydration) was associated with accelerated biological aging (measured by 15 biomarkers), higher rates of heart failure, stroke, atrial fibrillation, peripheral artery disease, chronic lung disease, diabetes, and dementia, and a 21% higher risk of premature death. The effect was dose-dependent and independent of other risk factors. The mechanism is thought to involve increased vasopressin (antidiuretic hormone) levels, which have been shown to promote fibrosis and inflammation in multiple organ systems.

"Adults with serum sodium in the higher-normal range had a 21% higher risk of premature death and significantly faster biological aging."

Dmitrieva et al., eBioMedicine 2023

What the major health authorities say

MedlinePlus and the NIH recommend adequate fluid intake for overall health, noting that water is essential for virtually every bodily function. The NIA notes that older adults are at higher risk of dehydration because the sense of thirst diminishes with age and kidney function declines. The NIA recommends that older adults drink fluids regularly throughout the day, even when not feeling thirsty. The adequate intake for water is approximately 3.7 litres per day for men and 2.7 litres per day for women (from all sources including food).

Practical implications

The optimal serum sodium target for longevity appears to be 137–142 mEq/L. Achieving this requires consistent fluid intake throughout the day — not just when thirsty, particularly for older adults. Practical strategies: drinking a glass of water with each meal and between meals; keeping a water bottle visible as a reminder; eating water-rich foods (fruits, vegetables, soups); and monitoring urine colour (pale yellow is optimal; dark yellow indicates dehydration). Serum sodium is routinely measured in basic metabolic panels and can be used to assess hydration status.

Vitaei verdict

Chronic mild dehydration is associated with accelerated biological aging and higher mortality risk. Maintaining serum sodium in the optimal range through consistent fluid intake is a simple, low-cost longevity intervention.

Where reasonable people still disagree

  • Whether the association between higher serum sodium and mortality is causal or reflects confounding by other factors that cause both dehydration and poor health outcomes.
  • The optimal daily fluid intake for different ages, body sizes, activity levels, and climates.
  • Whether specific types of fluids (water, herbal tea, diluted fruit juice) provide equivalent hydration benefits.