Nephrology · Clinical Calculator · IV Fluids

Maintenance IV Fluid Rate Holliday-Segar & 4-2-1 Rule

Calculate daily maintenance fluid volume and hourly infusion rate by body weight using the Holliday-Segar method and the 4-2-1 rule. Includes a Common IV Fluid Compositions reference table covering tonicity, electrolyte content, and typical clinical indications across crystalloids (isotonic, hypotonic, dextrose) and colloids.

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Instructions
  1. Enter the patient's body weight in kg. The calculator accepts any weight >0 kg.
  2. The result displays both the daily volume (mL/day) via the Holliday-Segar formula and the hourly rate (mL/hr) via the 4-2-1 rule.
  3. Review the clinical notes in the result box — Holliday-Segar was derived in children; adult targets and fluid selection differ from the formula output.
  4. Consult the IV Fluid Compositions table below the calculator to choose the appropriate fluid type (tonicity, electrolytes, buffer).
  5. Adjust the rate for clinical context: fever, ongoing losses, AKI, heart failure, or cirrhosis all require individualized targets.

All computation runs in your browser; no values are stored or transmitted.

When to Use

Use this calculator to estimate the starting maintenance IV fluid rate for a patient who cannot take fluids orally or enterally, or as a reference when checking an existing infusion order. The Holliday-Segar formula and 4-2-1 rule provide a weight-based starting point that must then be individualized to the clinical context — they are not fixed prescriptions.

Appropriate uses

  • Estimating maintenance fluid needs in pediatric patients (the population the formula was originally validated in).
  • Providing an initial rate for adults who are nil per os (NPO) for procedures, as a starting point before clinical adjustment.
  • Cross-checking a prescribed fluid order against weight-based targets.
  • Educational reference for fluid management principles alongside the IV fluid compositions table.
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Limitations and cautions

  • Adults: Holliday-Segar often over-estimates adult maintenance needs. A common adult target is 25–30 mL/kg/day; rates are often capped at ~2400 mL/day.
  • Fluid type matters: Current guidance (NICE CG174; Moritz & Ayus) strongly favors isotonic maintenance fluids in most patients to prevent iatrogenic hyponatremia — do not use hypotonic saline (0.45% NaCl, D5W) as default maintenance without careful electrolyte monitoring.
  • Adjust for losses: This calculator estimates insensible-only maintenance. Add replacement for ongoing losses (surgical drains, GI losses, fever) separately.
  • Contraindicated in volume-overloaded states: Do not apply formula targets to patients with pulmonary edema, anuria/oliguria, or severe heart failure without specialist guidance.
Pearls & Pitfalls
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Use isotonic fluids for maintenance

NICE CG174 (2013/2017) and Moritz & Ayus (NEJM 2015) demonstrate that hypotonic fluids cause hospital-acquired hyponatremia — a preventable harm. Unless a specific indication exists (e.g., hypernatremia correction), maintenance IV fluids should be isotonic (0.9% NaCl or a balanced crystalloid such as Lactated Ringer's or Plasma-Lyte 148). Add potassium and glucose as appropriate to the clinical situation.

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Adult maintenance is different from pediatric

Holliday-Segar was derived from metabolic data in hospitalized children in 1957. In adults, the formula frequently yields rates higher than physiological need, especially in sedentary, post-operative, or critically ill patients. Many adult protocols cap maintenance at 1.5–2.0 L/day or 25–30 mL/kg/day. Use the formula output as a ceiling estimate, not a target, in adult patients.

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Pitfalls to avoid

  • Do not use the formula rate unchanged in oliguric AKI, severe heart failure, or cirrhosis with ascites — volume status must guide therapy in these patients.
  • Do not use 0.45% NaCl ("half-normal") or D5W as routine maintenance — the risk of hyponatremia is well documented.
  • Do not confuse maintenance fluids with resuscitation fluids — this calculator estimates maintenance only, not bolus resuscitation requirements.
  • Fever increases insensible losses approximately 10–15% per degree Celsius above 37°C; adjust accordingly.
Why Use It

Appropriate maintenance fluid therapy prevents both dehydration and fluid overload — two common iatrogenic complications in hospitalized patients. A weight-based starting point ensures that very small or very large patients receive proportionate initial rates, which are then refined with clinical monitoring. The accompanying IV fluid composition table helps clinicians rapidly select the most physiologically appropriate fluid, a decision that affects sodium balance, acid-base status, and the risk of adverse electrolyte events.

Maintenance IV Fluid Calculator — Holliday-Segar / 4-2-1 Rule

Enter the patient's body weight in kilograms. The calculator will display the estimated daily volume (Holliday-Segar) and hourly infusion rate (4-2-1 rule), with clinical context notes.

Enter weight in kilograms (kg). Accepts any weight from 0.5–300 kg.
Daily Volume
mL/day
Hourly Rate
mL/hr
Adult Target
25–30 mL/kg/day

⚕ Holliday-Segar daily volume: ≤10 kg → 100 mL/kg; 10–20 kg → 1000 + 50 mL/kg above 10; >20 kg → 1500 + 20 mL/kg above 20. 4-2-1 hourly rate: ≤10 kg → 4 mL/kg/hr; 10–20 kg → 40 + 2 mL/kg/hr above 10; >20 kg → 60 + 1 mL/kg/hr above 20. Originally validated in children; adult maintenance is commonly capped at ~2400 mL/day (25–30 mL/kg/day). Fluid selection requires clinical judgment — see the composition table below. Requires physician review before prescribing.

IV Fluid Classification & Compositions

Plasma osmolarity reference ≈ 285–295 mOsm/L. Values are approximate and per litre; confirm against the product label.

Crystalloids — Isotonic

FluidComposition (per L, approx.)Tonicity / Osm (mOsm/L)Common uses
0.9% NaCl (Normal Saline, NSS)Na 154, Cl 154Isotonic · ~308Hypovolemia, shock, hyponatremia, with blood transfusions
Lactated Ringer's (Hartmann's)Na 130, K 4, Ca 2.7, Cl 109, lactate 28Isotonic · ~273Sepsis, trauma, surgery, dehydration
Plasma-Lyte 148Na 140, K 5, Mg 3, Cl 98, acetate 27, gluconate 23Isotonic · ~295Sepsis, critical care, perioperative fluid
Ringer's solution (no lactate)Na 147, K 4, Ca 4.5, Cl 156Isotonic · ~309Volume replacement

Crystalloids — Hypotonic

FluidComposition (per L, approx.)Tonicity / Osm (mOsm/L)Common uses
0.45% NaCl (½ NS)Na 77, Cl 77Hypotonic · ~154Hypernatremia, maintenance (free water)
0.33% NaClNa 56, Cl 56Hypotonic · ~111Pediatric maintenance (less common)
0.225% NaCl (¼ NS)Na 38, Cl 38Hypotonic · ~77Specialized pediatric use (usually with dextrose)

Dextrose-containing

FluidComposition (per L, approx.)Tonicity / Osm (mOsm/L)Common uses
5% Dextrose in Water (D5W)Dextrose 50 g~252 — isotonic in bag, effectively hypotonic after metabolismFree water replacement, drug dilution
10% Dextrose in Water (D10W)Dextrose 100 gHypertonic · ~505Hypoglycemia, neonatal care
50% Dextrose (D50)Dextrose 500 gHypertonic · ~2525Severe hypoglycemia, hyperkalemia protocol (with insulin)
D5 0.9% NaCl (D5NS)Dextrose 50 g + Na 154, Cl 154Hypertonic · ~560Maintenance with sodium replacement
D5 0.45% NaClDextrose 50 g + Na 77, Cl 77Hypertonic · ~406Maintenance fluids
D5 Lactated Ringer'sDextrose 50 g + LR electrolytesHypertonic · ~525Postoperative maintenance
D5NM (Dextrose 5% + maintenance electrolytes)Dextrose 50 g + Na ~40, K ~13, Mg, acetate (Normosol-M type)HypertonicDaily maintenance
D5NR (Dextrose 5% + balanced electrolytes)Dextrose 50 g + Na ~140, K ~5, Mg, acetate/gluconate (Normosol-R type)HypertonicMaintenance / replacement

Colloids

FluidCompositionCommon uses
Human Albumin 5%50 g/L albumin, iso-oncoticVolume expansion
Human Albumin 25%250 g/L albumin, hyper-oncoticHypoalbuminemia, cirrhosis (large-volume paracentesis / SBP), dialysis support
Dextran 40Low-molecular-weight glucose polymerRarely used
Dextran 70Higher-molecular-weight dextranRarely used
Gelatin solutionGelatin-based colloidVolume expansion (where available)

* Lactated Ringer's osmolarity is 273 mOsm/L (mildly below plasma), but it is considered physiologically isotonic due to protein-binding effects of lactate in vivo. D5 Half-NS osmolarity of ~406 mOsm/L is in-bag; after dextrose metabolism it is effectively hypotonic. Plasma osmolarity reference: 285–295 mOsm/L.

Next Steps

Use the result as a starting point, not a fixed prescription.

  • Individualize the rate for clinical context: volume status, ongoing losses (fever, surgical drains, vomiting, diarrhea), urine output, comorbidities (AKI, heart failure, cirrhosis, SIADH).
  • Monitor daily: weight, fluid balance (ins vs. outs), serum electrolytes (Na, K, Cl, HCO₃), renal function, and clinical signs of overload or dehydration.
  • Choose the fluid type from the composition table: prefer isotonic (balanced crystalloid or 0.9% NaCl) for most maintenance; add KCl and glucose as appropriate.
  • Reassess and adjust the rate at each clinical review; avoid fixed-rate orders that persist beyond 24 hours without reassessment.
  • Transition to oral/enteral hydration as soon as clinically feasible — IV maintenance fluids are a bridge, not a long-term solution.
  • Consult nephrology or critical care for patients with complex fluid-electrolyte disturbances, AKI, or severe heart failure.
Evidence & References

Formula

QuantityRuleFormula
Daily volume (mL/day) Holliday-Segar ≤10 kg: 100 × weight; 10–20 kg: 1000 + 50 × (wt − 10); >20 kg: 1500 + 20 × (wt − 20)
Hourly rate (mL/hr) 4-2-1 Rule ≤10 kg: 4 × weight; 10–20 kg: 40 + 2 × (wt − 10); >20 kg: 60 + 1 × (wt − 20)
Adult maintenance target NICE CG174 25–30 mL/kg/day; typical adult cap ~2000–2500 mL/day

References

  1. Holliday MA, Segar WE. The maintenance need for water in parenteral fluid therapy. Pediatrics. 1957;19(5):823–832.
  2. Moritz ML, Ayus JC. Maintenance intravenous fluids in acutely ill patients. N Engl J Med. 2015;373(14):1350–1360.
  3. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE). Intravenous fluid therapy in adults in hospital (CG174). 2013 (updated 2017).
Important: This calculator is an educational aid for licensed clinicians and does not replace individualized clinical assessment. Holliday-Segar was derived in children; adult maintenance targets and fluid type selection require clinical judgment beyond formula output. Always verify fluid orders against current prescribing guidelines and the patient's clinical status before administration.
References 3 sources
  1. Holliday & Segar 1957
  2. NICE CG174
  3. Moritz & Ayus NEJM 2015
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