Calculate your recommended daily sodium intake based on age, health status, and activity level. Includes AHA guidelines, athlete adjustments, and food sodium tracker.
Sodium is an essential mineral that regulates fluid balance, nerve function, and muscle contractions. However, most people consume far more sodium than they need — the average American intake is roughly 3,400 mg per day, well above the recommended limits. Excess sodium is strongly linked to high blood pressure, heart disease, and stroke.
This calculator estimates your personalized daily sodium target based on your age, health conditions, and physical activity level. It follows the American Heart Association (AHA) guidelines, which recommend no more than 2,300 mg/day for most adults and an ideal limit of 1,500 mg/day for those with hypertension or at higher cardiovascular risk.
For athletes and heavy sweaters, higher sodium intake may be necessary to replace losses from perspiration. This calculator accounts for sweat-rate adjustments so endurance athletes can balance electrolyte needs without exceeding healthy levels for their circumstances. Whether you are a beginner or experienced professional, this free online tool provides instant, reliable results without manual computation.
The relationship between sodium and health is dose-dependent — both too little and too much can cause problems. This calculator helps you find the right balance for your specific situation, whether you're managing blood pressure, training for a marathon, or simply trying to eat healthier. A personalized target is far more useful than a one-size-fits-all number.
Base Target: • General adult: ≤2,300 mg/day (FDA Daily Value) • AHA ideal: ≤1,500 mg/day for most adults • Hypertension / heart / kidney disease: ≤1,500 mg/day • Children 1–3: ≤1,200 mg | 4–8: ≤1,500 mg | 9–18: ≤2,300 mg Athlete Adjustment: • Sweat sodium: ~400–1,800 mg/L of sweat (average ~800 mg/L) • Add estimated sweat sodium loss to base target Salt equivalence: 1 tsp salt ≈ 2,300 mg sodium (40% sodium by weight)
Result: 2,300 mg sodium / day (+ ~800 mg for exercise)
A healthy adult with no cardiovascular conditions has a base target of ≤2,300 mg/day. With 1 hour of moderate exercise losing approximately 1 L of sweat at ~800 mg sodium/L, the total allowance increases to ~3,100 mg for that day. This equals about 1.3 teaspoons of table salt. On rest days, the target reverts to 2,300 mg.
The 2020–2025 Dietary Guidelines for Americans recommend less than 2,300 mg of sodium per day for adults. The American Heart Association goes further, suggesting an ideal limit of 1,500 mg/day for most adults, especially those with high blood pressure. Despite these guidelines, 90% of Americans exceed the 2,300 mg limit.
About 70–75% of dietary sodium comes from processed and restaurant foods, 10–15% occurs naturally in unprocessed foods, and only 10–15% is added during home cooking or at the table. This means that simply "not adding salt" at the table has minimal impact — the real sodium reduction comes from choosing fewer processed foods and cooking more meals from whole ingredients.
For the average person exercising under an hour in temperate conditions, extra sodium beyond the daily limit is usually unnecessary. However, endurance athletes (marathon runners, ultra-cyclists, triathlon competitors) exercising for 2+ hours may lose 2,000–5,000 mg of sodium through sweat. Sports drinks, salt tablets, and salty foods during long events help maintain electrolyte balance.
Start by reading labels on everything — even bread, cereal, and condiments can be surprisingly high in sodium. Cook at home more often, where you control the salt. When eating out, ask for sauces and dressings on the side. Gradually reduce salt over 2–3 weeks; your taste buds adapt, and foods will begin to taste flavorful again without as much salt.
Salt (sodium chloride) is 40% sodium and 60% chloride by weight. One teaspoon of table salt contains approximately 2,300 mg of sodium. Food labels list sodium content, not salt content. To convert sodium to salt, multiply by 2.5 (e.g., 1,000 mg sodium = 2,500 mg salt = about 1/2 teaspoon).
During exercise, you lose sodium through sweat at a rate of roughly 400–1,800 mg per liter of sweat. A typical sweat rate during moderate exercise is 0.5–1.5 liters per hour. Endurance athletes exercising for several hours can lose significant amounts of sodium, increasing the risk of hyponatremia (dangerously low blood sodium) if they replace fluids without electrolytes.
Yes, but it's uncommon except in specific situations — heavy endurance exercise with excessive water intake (no electrolytes), severe diarrhea/vomiting, or certain medications. Symptoms of hyponatremia include nausea, headache, confusion, and in severe cases, seizures. The minimum physiological need is about 500 mg/day, well below what most people consume.
Sodium causes your body to retain water. This increases blood volume, which raises blood pressure. While not everyone is equally "salt-sensitive," population studies consistently show that reducing sodium intake lowers blood pressure, with the greatest benefit for people who already have hypertension. The DASH diet combines sodium reduction with potassium-rich foods for optimal blood pressure management.
The biggest sources: bread/rolls, cold cuts and cured meats, pizza, soup, sandwiches/burgers (especially fast food), cheese, pasta dishes, and savory snacks (chips, pretzels). A single fast-food meal can contain 2,000–3,000 mg of sodium — nearly an entire day's allowance. Condiments like soy sauce (~1,000 mg per tablespoon) are also significant contributors.
Not meaningfully. Sea salt and table salt contain virtually the same amount of sodium by weight. Sea salt may have trace minerals (magnesium, potassium) but in amounts too small to provide health benefits. The main difference is texture and flavor. Whether you use sea salt, Himalayan pink salt, or table salt, the sodium impact on health is the same.
Most people see measurable blood pressure improvements within 2–4 weeks of reducing sodium intake. A large study (DASH-Sodium Trial) found that reducing sodium from 3,300 mg to 1,500 mg/day lowered systolic blood pressure by an average of 7 mmHg in people with hypertension. Combined with the DASH diet, the reduction was up to 12 mmHg.
Yes. Potassium helps the kidneys excrete excess sodium, counterbalancing its blood-pressure-raising effect. The ideal approach is both lower sodium AND higher potassium (4,700 mg/day for adults). Potassium-rich foods include bananas, sweet potatoes, spinach, beans, yogurt, and avocados. The sodium-to-potassium ratio in your diet is actually a stronger predictor of cardiovascular risk than either mineral alone.