2 published verifications about daily water intake daily water intake ×
“The recommendation to drink 8 glasses of water per day is not medically necessary for most people.”
The specific "8 glasses of water per day" rule lacks rigorous scientific backing as a universal medical requirement. Multiple high-authority sources — including the U.S. National Academy of Medicine, the American Journal of Physiology, and the CDC — confirm that no studies support this exact prescription and that hydration needs vary widely by individual. However, adequate hydration itself is well-evidenced as important for health, and actual recommended total fluid intake (from all sources) often meets or exceeds 64 ounces for most adults.
“Drinking eight glasses of water per day is the optimal daily water intake for human health.”
This claim is false. No scientific evidence supports "eight glasses of water per day" as the optimal intake for human health. The National Academies explicitly state there is no single daily water requirement, and a peer-reviewed review in the American Journal of Physiology found zero studies backing the "8×8" rule. Actual water needs vary significantly by sex, body size, activity level, climate, and diet, and roughly 20–30% of daily water intake comes from food. Every major health authority rejects this as a myth.