Electrolyte supplements are everywhere. Who benefits from them and when?
[February 28, 2026]
By TRAVIS LOLLER
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Social media is filled with influencers rating
electrolyte supplements or even telling followers how to make their own.
But experts say many of the claims about the health benefits of these
drinks need to be taken with a grain of salt.
Electrolytes are electrically charged substances that help regulate
chemical reactions in the body. In the context of hydration, they
balance fluid levels inside and outside of cells, said Julia Zumpano, a
registered dietitian at the Cleveland Clinic.
We lose some electrolytes through sweat, primarily sodium chloride —
which is what is in table salt. Drinking too much plain water when
sweating very heavily can dilute the salt in your body even further,
throwing things out of balance. Electrolyte drinks and powders are meant
to hydrate and replace the lost salt. They often contain other
electrolytes like potassium and magnesium. Many also contain some form
of sugar.
In general, the kidneys in a healthy person do an excellent job of
keeping our electrolytes in balance. Extras simply come out in your
urine, said Vanderbilt University nephrologist Hunter Huston, who also
consults for a UK-based company that provides electrolyte replacement
plans for endurance athletes.
Taking "an electrolyte-enriched drink, just for health purposes,
probably isn’t doing much," he said.

Today “rapid hydration” and “advanced hydration” drinks are taking off,
but who actually benefits from them and when?
It all started with Gatorade
It was 1965 at the University of Florida and then-assistant Gators
football Coach Dwayne Douglas had something on his mind. As Robert Cade,
the school's first kidney researcher, later explained, Douglas asked
him, “Doctor, why don’t football players wee-wee after a game?”
“That question changed our lives,” Cade said.
The obvious answer was that the football players couldn't urinate
because they were losing so much fluid through sweat. Cade’s research
team determined a player could lose as much as 18 pounds (8.16
kilograms) during a game. But it wasn't just water the players were
losing. They were sweating away sodium and chloride and losing both
plasma volume and blood volume. The losses were sapping their strength
and stamina.
Cade mixed up a briny solution to replace the water and salt players
were losing. Sugar would help the gut absorb the sodium. The first batch
made him vomit. Some lemon juice made it taste a little better. It still
wasn't delicious, but soon the team’s performance improvement could not
be ignored — especially in the second half of games when the opposite
team's players were starting to wilt in the Florida heat and humidity.
Cade, who died in 2007, said he never dreamed Gatorade would be
purchased by regular consumers.
No one-size-fits-all
While it seems that everyone is drinking electrolyte supplements these
days, not everyone actually needs them.
A good rule of thumb is that if you are exercising for less than two
hours, plain water is probably fine, said Vanderbilt's Huston. The
average healthy person can tolerate losing around 2% of their body
weight in sweat before they really start to feel it, he said. “That’s
increased thirst, it’s fatigue, it cramping.”
Everyone is different, though. Some people sweat very heavily or have
sweat that is especially salty.
In the world of extreme sports like ultramarathons, athletes often get
professional help to test how much they sweat and get a tailored
nutrition plan.
“Most folks that are exercising, that are, say, doing a marathon, are
gonna be way past that two hours, and it does then make sense to be
thinking about, ‘What’s going to be my fluid and electrolyte replacement
plan?’” Huston said.
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Electrolyte supplements are poured into glass of water Tuesday, Feb.
24, 2026, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
 Aspirational athletes
Darren Rovell has followed the rise of sports drinks from a niche
market to the mainstream. He is the author of “First in Thirst: How
Gatorade Turned the Science of Sweat Into a Cultural Phenomenon” and
was an investor in the sports drink Bodyarmor.
When he was a runner in high school, he said, they were given
Gatorade to drink and told the reason it tasted bad was because it
was good for you. “And then at some point in the nineties, it got to
be sugary.” After PepsiCo purchased the brand in 2001, “that really
became the first time where you see Gatorade everywhere in front of
your face including in a pizza place, and it starts to be, ‘OK. Is
this just a different type of soda?’"
Rovell says electrolyte brands market the idea that drinking their
products will either make you an athlete or, if you already are an
athlete, give you a performance edge.
“It all starts in the aspiration of being better, but you know we do
have to check ourselves,” he said.
A flood of newer options
The supplements out today have an incredibly wide variety of
electrolyte concentrations, said Patrick Burns, who practices
emergency medicine at Stanford Health Care and occasionally runs in
ultramarathons. With some having five times the sodium of others,
consumers should not assume all supplements are the same.
Burns also warned that people should be careful about supplementing
potassium, because it can be dangerous in large amounts.
He noted that many brands now offer zero sugar varieties, even
though the glucose in sugar is what allows for rapid absorption of
the sodium.
“They’re not internally consistent, at all, with what they’re trying
to sell you,” he said. “For optimal absorption, you need some sugar
in with your salt.”
The bottom line
“Electrolytes can help, especially with heavy sweating or exercise,
but for most people, they’re not something you need every single
day, and you definitely don’t need large amounts of it,” the
Cleveland Clinic's Zumpano said.

For a healthy person who is not sweating intensely, the beverages
probably won't hurt you, but they won't help you either.
“You’re getting extra sugar, and there’s no reason (for) rapid
absorption of sodium because you’re not sodium depleted," said Mark
Segal, a professor of nephrology at the University of Florida
College of Medicine. Most people get all the salt and potassium they
need from food, he said.
As far as making your own electrolyte powders, the experts said it
can be done, but you have to know what you are doing. They advised
against using a recipe from an influencer.
“How do you know how much you need?” Zumpano asked. “There's a large
margin of error there. I'd probably just avoid it.”
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