Skip to calculator
Pump Free · No login

Infusion Pump Rate (mL/hr)

Calculate mL/hr pump setting from volume and time ordered. Includes blood product 4-hour safety alert. Free nursing calculator for infusion pump rate (ml/hr). AU ...

⚗️
🎯

The IV bag just went up and the ward round doctor gives a verbal order for the rate before leaving the bay. You need the pump set before the next patient.

Infusion Pump Rate (mL/hr)
Pump
1 L = 1000 mL
mL/hr = Volume ÷ Time (hours) Blood products must complete within 4 hours of issue per international guidelines. Label bag with start time.
⚕️ Clinical safety: 🇦🇺 Verify with facility drug formulary and senior clinician · Meets AHPRA/ACSQHC standards

1 What this calculator does

Calculates the mL/hr pump setting from total volume and ordered infusion time. Includes a blood product 4-hour safety alert that fires when packed cells or FFP would exceed the safe completion window at the ordered rate.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

mL/hr = Volume (mL) ÷ Time (hours)

The pump rate is volume divided by time in hours — the simplest of all IV calculations, yet the most consequential when wrong. Most volumetric pumps accept values to one decimal place. For blood products, international transfusion standards require completion within 4 hours of issue from the blood bank to reduce haemolysis and bacterial contamination risk; this calculator flags any order that would breach that window.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
Standard maintenance bag
Given: 1000 mL ordered over 8 hours
Working: 1000 ÷ 8
Answer: 125 mL/hr
💡 Set pump to exactly 125 mL/hr. Confirm secondary line is clamped.
Standard
Short antibiotic infusion
Given: 100 mL over 30 minutes (0.5 hours)
Working: 100 ÷ 0.5
Answer: 200 mL/hr
💡 Short infusions — always verify the drug's recommended infusion time on the label before setting.
Advanced
Blood product safety check
Given: 300 mL packed red cells over 3 hours
Working: 300 ÷ 3 = 100 mL/hr — completes within 4-hour window ✓
Answer: 100 mL/hr — safe
💡 Label the bag with start time. If not complete within 4 hours of issue, it must be discarded per transfusion policy.

4 Sanity check

Typical adult maintenance
60–150 mL/hr
Rates outside this range warrant a second check of the order.
Blood product limit
Must complete ≤4 hours from blood bank issue
Calculator flags any ordered time that would exceed 4 hours.
Paediatric pump rates
Often 1–30 mL/hr
Rates under 20 mL/hr: consider syringe driver, not volumetric pump.
Time in decimal hours
30 min = 0.5 hrs · 90 min = 1.5 hrs
The most common entry error — always convert minutes before entering.

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
Time entered in minutes not hours Typing 30 for 30 minutes instead of 0.5 Rate 60× too slow — severe under-infusion Convert to decimal hours first: 30 min = 0.5, 45 min = 0.75, 90 min = 1.5
Wrong fluid type selected Blood selected for crystalloid or vice versa 4-hour safety alert fires incorrectly or fails to fire when needed Verify fluid type against the physical bag and prescription label before calculating
Not accounting for tubing prime volume Forgetting the 15–20 mL held in giving set First dose slightly under-delivered Prime tubing before connecting; the prime volume is not counted toward patient dose
Setting pump after a delay Rate correct but start time not logged at infusion start Blood product may exceed 4-hour issue window Log issue time from the blood bank sticker, not the order time