
Aspire guide
Hydration
Hydration manual
Caffeine and Hydration
Does caffeine dehydrate you? The truth about coffee and performance.
Why this matters
Does caffeine dehydrate you?
Read time
4 min
Audience
Athlete + Coach
Use it for
Hydration
Start here
Caffeine fits hydration when the plan is deliberate.
Coach prompt
Ask the athlete what they will drink before and with caffeine instead of debating caffeine in theory.
Quick reference
Topic snapshot

Key action
Caffeine and Hydration
Read time
4 min
Audience
Athlete + Coach
Start here
Caffeine fits hydration when the plan is deliberate.
Best next move
Use it this week
Ask the athlete what they will drink before and with caffeine instead of debating caffeine in theory.
Quick reference map
Use the topic like a clear checklist
Protocol
Start here
Jump to this section and use it like a coaching quick reference.
Overview
The Caffeine Myth: Does Coffee Dehydrate You?
Jump to this section and use it like a coaching quick reference.
Protocol
A field protocol coaches can actually repeat
Jump to this section and use it like a coaching quick reference.
In the library
Format
Read the topic here, then download the PDF only when you need an offline copy.
Best use
Open the sections you need, then share the same topic link with coaches, parents, or athletes.
Quick start
Start here
Does caffeine dehydrate you?
Myth check
Normal caffeine use does not erase hydration when total fluid intake is adequate
- Coffee, tea, gels, and pre-race caffeine can still fit a good hydration plan.
- The body adapts to regular intake more than people expect.
What does matter
Dose, timing, heat, gut tolerance, and total fluid still change how the athlete responds
- Higher doses can raise GI risk, jitters, or poor decision-making around drinking.
- Caffeine in heat needs a fluid plan beside it, not instead of it.
Best use
Treat caffeine as one tool inside a bigger race-day or training-day system
- Athletes should know what they will drink, when they will drink, and what the caffeine source will be.
- Gels, sports drink, and coffee all behave differently in the athlete's real routine.
The Caffeine Myth: Does Coffee Dehydrate You?
Short answer: Not really, no.
Short answer: Not really, no.
Research shows:
- Moderate caffeine consumption doesn't cause dehydration
- The fluid in coffee/tea contributes to hydration
- Tolerance develops quickly to diuretic effects
Field use
A field protocol coaches can actually repeat
Morning
Check the athlete before practice starts
Dark urine, headache, and an empty bottle are red flags before the session even begins.
During training
Use planned drinking moments
Scheduled drink breaks beat thirst when the day is hot, dry, or altitude-adjusted.
After practice
Replace losses steadily
Push recovery fluids across the next few hours instead of one rushed bottle.
Unlock the rest of the manual
Full access opens every section and the ebook PDF.
What to do next
Use it this week
Ask the athlete what they will drink before and with caffeine instead of debating caffeine in theory.
Source topics
caffeine • coffee • dehydration • diuretic • myth
