Hydration for teen (ages 14-17) doing swimming
Training-day target 2,950 ml/day. Swimmers lose fluid through sweat and respiration even in the pool — but because they don't feel sweaty, they drink dramatically less than field athletes.
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Teen athletes (ages 14-17) doing swim training face a different hydration problem than either the general age group or the general sport. Swimmers lose fluid through sweat and respiration even in the pool — but because they don't feel sweaty, they drink dramatically less than field athletes. Pool-side fluid loss is invisible — swimmers are cooled by the water, don't feel thirsty, and exit 2-3% dehydrated after a hard set. Humidity over the pool surface adds respiratory loss. Full competitive load — multi-session training days, double-headers, and tournament weekends are routine. Target 2,950 ml (3.0 L) of total fluids on a training day — approximately 550 ml above the teen (ages 14-17) baseline to cover the session's fluid loss.
Targets for teen athletes (ages 14-17) doing swim training
Training-day target for teen athletes (ages 14-17): 2,950 ml
Baseline for the teen (ages 14-17) age band is 2,400 ml from IOM pediatric guidance. swim training adds approximately 550 ml on top, covering the ~500 ml lost in a typical 60-minute session.
Source: IOM pediatric fluid intake + sport-specific sweat rate research
Pre / during / post — the only framework that matters
Start the session ahead, not catching up. For this age band and sport: a pre-session dose 60-90 minutes before, scheduled sips during, and weight-based replacement after. Non-training days use the age-band baseline only — don't over-drink on rest days.
Urine colour is the cleanest daily signal
Pale straw by the mid-afternoon bathroom visit means the athlete started the session hydrated. Dark yellow or amber before training means a pre-session 500 ml top-up, not 'just start'.
Age maturity: Full competitive load — multi-session training days, double-headers, and tournament weekends are routine.
Match intake to real session length. A preschooler's 'soccer practice' is structurally different from a teen's — don't apply teen protocols to 5-year-olds, and don't apply preschool protocols to competitive tweens.
Practical tips for this age and sport
- Bring a labelled bottle to the pool deck — every single session
- Between sets: 100-150 ml — set it as part of the athlete's recovery ritual
- After any session >30 minutes: 400 ml within 20 minutes of exiting the pool
- Chlorine can suppress thirst — don't rely on 'do I feel thirsty' during a swim
- Weigh pre/post for a week to calibrate the athlete's actual sweat rate
- Caffeine + pre-workout products: only with adult guidance; plain water + electrolytes handle 95% of needs
Training-day plan — printable for the sports bag
Enter the athlete's age, weight, and sport. Get a pre/during/post schedule, a bottle-size recommendation, and a 7-day tracker for training weeks. Free, no signup to download.
Build the training plan →When to watch or act
Signs of Dehydration
- Dizziness on standing after a hard set — immediate stop, 500 ml, no return without clearance
- Urine darker than light straw before training — pre-session deficit, top up 500 ml before starting
- Performance drop in the last third of the session — classic hydration signal, not 'being tired'
- Headache or nausea during or after training — stop, hydrate, don't push through
Frequently Asked Questions
How much water does a teen kid need on a swim training day?
About 2,950 ml (3.0 L) of total fluids across the day. Baseline for this age band is 2,400 ml, and swim training adds the rest to cover the 60-minute session's fluid loss.
What's the pre / during / post split for this age and sport?
Pre 500-700 ml in the 90-120 minutes before, during 250 ml every 15-20 minutes, post 1.5× any body-weight drop across the next 2 hours. Electrolyte during sessions >60 minutes of moderate-to-high intensity.
What about sports drinks — does swim training need them at this age?
For sessions or matches over 60 minutes at moderate-to-high intensity, yes. Otherwise water + a balanced post-session meal is better than a sports drink with added sugar.
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