Skip to calculator
Fluid Balance Free · No login

Fluid Balance / Intake & Output

Running 24-hour fluid balance tracker. Add inputs and outputs individually. Flags fluid overload and deficit. Free nursing calculator for fluid balance / intake &...

💧
🎯

End of shift, six patients, and the fluid charts are a mess of uncrossed items. You need a running total and a balance figure before the handover sheet is signed.

Fluid Balance / Intake & Output
Fluid Balance
➕ Add Input
➖ Add Output
Normal daily fluid balance (adult):
Intake: ~2000–2500 mL · Output: ~2000–2500 mL · Balance: ±200 mL
Insensible losses: ~500–800 mL/day (respiration, skin) — not measurable
Urine output targets: ≥0.5 mL/kg/hr adult · ≥1 mL/kg/hr child
Flags: Positive >2000 mL — fluid overload risk · Negative >500 mL — dehydration risk
💡 Document fluid balance every shift and cumulative 24-hour total. Always include insensible loss estimate in clinical handover.
⚕️ Clinical safety: 🇦🇺 Verify with facility drug formulary and senior clinician · Meets AHPRA/ACSQHC standards

1 What this calculator does

Calculates running 24-hour fluid balance from intake and output entries. Adds all input categories (IV, oral, NG feeds) and all output categories (urine, drain, vomit, stool) and shows the cumulative balance with flags for clinically significant fluid overload or deficit.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

Fluid Balance = Total Input (mL) − Total Output (mL) Positive = net fluid gain · Negative = net fluid loss

Accurate fluid balance is critical for detecting early fluid overload (a cause of pulmonary oedema and increased mortality in ICU patients) and fluid deficit (prerenal AKI, haemodynamic compromise). A positive balance of >1,000 mL/24 hours triggers clinical review in most acute care settings. Urine output below 0.5 mL/kg/hr for 2 consecutive hours is an AKI warning. The chart must account for ALL inputs and outputs — insensible losses (respiration, sweating) are typically estimated at ~500 mL/24 hours for afebrile patients.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
Simple post-op patient
Given: Inputs: IV 1500 mL + oral 400 mL = 1900 mL · Outputs: urine 1200 mL + drain 150 mL = 1350 mL
Working: 1900 − 1350
Answer: Balance: +550 mL (mild positive)
💡 Within acceptable range for post-operative day 1. Continue monitoring.
Standard
Fluid overloaded patient
Given: Inputs: IV 3000 mL + oral 600 mL = 3600 mL · Outputs: urine 900 mL + drain 200 mL = 1100 mL
Working: 3600 − 1100
Answer: Balance: +2500 mL — FLAG: >1000 mL positive
💡 Significant positive balance. Notify medical team. Assess for signs of pulmonary oedema. Consider fluid restriction.
Advanced
Fluid depleted — low urine output
Given: Inputs: IV 500 mL + oral 300 mL = 800 mL · Outputs: urine 300 mL + vomit 600 mL = 900 mL
Working: 800 − 900
Answer: Balance: −100 mL — FLAG: UO low at 300 mL/24 hrs
💡 Urine output 300 mL over 24 hours is critically low (AKI criterion). Medical review urgently required.

4 Sanity check

Normal 24-hr urine output adult
800–2,000 mL (0.5–1 mL/kg/hr)
< 400 mL/24 hrs = oliguria. < 100 mL/24 hrs = anuria. Both require urgent medical review.
Positive balance flag
> +1,000 mL/24 hrs — notify medical team
Cumulative positive balance over multiple days increases oedema and pulmonary complication risk.
Negative balance flag
< −500 mL/24 hrs — assess hydration status
Combined with rising creatinine or falling BP — prerenal AKI is likely.
Insensible losses
~500 mL/24 hrs (afebrile) · up to 2,000 mL in fever/burns
Insensible losses are not directly measurable but should be accounted for in the assessment.

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
Not recording every IV bag changeover Relying on memory at end of shift Inputs under-documented — positive balance understated Record each bag as it goes up, not at the end of shift. Cross off each bag/bottle on the chart when completed.
Forgetting oral intake on a 'nil by mouth' patient who sneaks water Not reassessing oral status Fluid balance inaccurate — management decisions on wrong data Confirm NBM status at every assessment. Document any oral intake observed.
Estimating urine output from a pad without weighing No scale available Output significantly underestimated 1 g pad weight = 1 mL urine. Weigh pad dry then wet. Difference in grams = mL of urine.
Not noting the start time of the 24-hour period Omission on the chart header Two different start times used — balance calculation crosses chart boundaries Mark the 24-hour reset time clearly on the chart. Standard is 06:00 or 08:00 in most Australian hospitals.