Most adults carry about 4.5–5.7 liters of blood, and the total shifts with body size, sex, pregnancy, and age.
You’ve probably heard the “five liters” line. It’s a handy midpoint for a typical adult, yet it’s not the same for all people. Blood volume tracks with body size and life stage, so the cleanest way to think about it is a range plus an estimate that scales to your size.
This article gives you usable numbers early, then shows why they vary. You’ll learn two practical ways clinicians estimate blood volume, how pediatric numbers differ from adult ones, and why percent-of-total blood loss is used in urgent care. You’ll also get two tables that let you compress the topic into quick check points.
What blood volume means in plain terms
Blood volume is the total amount of blood circulating through your arteries, veins, and small vessels at a given moment. It includes plasma (the liquid part) plus red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets. Plasma makes up the larger share of the total volume, while red blood cells take up much of the rest.
Your body keeps circulating volume within a tight band. If volume drops fast, blood pressure can fall and organs may not get enough blood flow. If volume rises too far, excess fluid can strain the heart and lungs. Most day-to-day changes come from shifts in plasma volume, while red cell mass changes more slowly.
Typical blood volume in adults
A practical working range for many healthy adults is about 4.5 to 5.7 liters of blood. One common shortcut in clinical care is to estimate blood volume by body weight, using roughly 65–70 mL of blood per kilogram for adults.
Here’s the simple estimate:
- Convert your weight to kilograms (lbs ÷ 2.2).
- Multiply by 65 to 70 to get milliliters.
- Divide by 1000 to convert to liters.
Say you weigh 70 kg. Using 65–70 mL/kg, the estimate lands near 4.6–4.9 liters. Many references still talk about “about five liters” for a 70 kg adult, which is close enough for day-to-day understanding. The StatPearls overview Physiology, Blood Volume notes that the average adult carries close to 5 liters and also lists common formulas used in clinical settings.
How Much Blood Does Body Have? For adults and kids
Kids aren’t just smaller adults. Newborns and infants have a higher blood volume per kilogram than adults. As children grow, their mL/kg values trend toward adult ranges. That’s why pediatric dosing and blood-loss planning is usually weight-based.
A clear, clinician-facing reference comes from Great Ormond Street Hospital’s NHS appendix that lists circulating blood volumes by age group. It shows higher mL/kg values in neonates, then lower values in infants, children, and adults. See Appendix 5: Circulating Blood Volumes for those ranges.
In real life, a full-term newborn may have only a few hundred milliliters of blood in total, while a school-age child may have a couple of liters. Since the total is smaller, blood loss that sounds “small” in milliliters can represent a large share of total volume for a child.
Why blood volume changes from person to person
Two people can share the same scale weight and still have different blood volumes. These factors do most of the work.
Body size and lean mass
Blood volume rises with body size because there’s more tissue to supply with blood flow. Lean mass tends to carry more blood per kilogram than fat mass, so weight-only estimates can drift as body composition shifts.
Sex and height
On average, adult women have lower total blood volume than adult men at the same weight. Many quick estimates reflect that by using a slightly lower mL/kg value for women. Height also matters, which is why height-and-weight formulas can outperform a simple mL/kg shortcut when teams want a tighter estimate.
Pregnancy
Pregnancy increases circulating blood volume a lot. It helps supply the placenta and meet higher demands on the pregnant body. StatPearls notes that blood volume can rise by roughly 50% during pregnancy, which is one reason some blood tests look diluted later in pregnancy.
Hydration and salt balance
Plasma volume can shift with hydration and sodium balance. Short-term dehydration can shrink plasma volume, and rehydration can restore it. That swing can change how you feel and can influence some lab results, even when red cell mass hasn’t changed much.
Age, illness, and medicines
Age can change how the body handles fluid shifts. Some conditions and medicines can also affect fluid balance. Clinicians don’t lean on one number alone. They pair symptoms, main signs, exam findings, and labs to judge what’s going on.
How clinicians estimate blood volume
There’s no at-home device that measures total blood volume directly. In medicine, estimation is the norm, and direct measurement is reserved for select cases. These are the main approaches.
Method 1: Weight-based estimation
This is the fast method used for many bedside calculations. Adult estimates often use 65–70 mL/kg. Pediatric references use higher mL/kg values early in life. It’s quick and often close enough, yet it can drift in people at higher body weights.
Method 2: Height-and-weight formulas
When teams want a tighter estimate, they use formulas that include height, weight, and sex. The StatPearls blood volume chapter summarizes classic approaches like Nadler’s equation and also describes a Lemmens-Bernstein-Brodsky method designed to perform better at higher body weights. The study Estimating blood volume in obese and morbidly obese patients explains why a flat “70 mL/kg for all adults” approach can overstate blood volume as body weight rises.
Method 3: Direct measurement in specialty care
Direct measurement exists, often using tracer techniques. It’s not routine. It tends to appear in specialty situations where knowing total blood volume could change treatment decisions.
Table 1: Estimation ranges and when they fit
This table pulls together common estimation choices and where they tend to be used. It’s meant for learning and planning, not self-diagnosis.
| Group or scenario | Common estimate | How to use it |
|---|---|---|
| Neonates | 85–90 mL/kg | Higher mL/kg is typical early in life |
| Infants | 75–80 mL/kg | Used for pediatric dosing and volume planning |
| Children | 70–75 mL/kg | Trends toward adult ranges as kids grow |
| Adults (general) | 65–70 mL/kg | Fast estimate for day-to-day questions and basic planning |
| Adult men (often used) | ~70 mL/kg | Often used in quick bedside math |
| Adult women (often used) | ~65 mL/kg | Often used in quick bedside math |
| Pregnancy | Higher total than pre-pregnancy | Rises across pregnancy; labs can look diluted |
| Higher body weight | Lower mL/kg than 70 | Use height-and-weight formulas for a tighter estimate |
What blood donation means in numbers
Whole-blood donation volumes vary by country and collection system, yet a common range is around 450 to 500 mL. If you estimate an adult’s blood volume at 5,000 mL, that donation is close to 9–10% of total blood volume.
Percent-of-total is the easiest way to make donation numbers feel real. A smaller adult may donate a similar milliliter amount, which becomes a larger percentage of their total volume. That helps explain why some people feel lightheaded after donation while others feel fine.
Want to calculate it?
- Donation percentage = (donation mL ÷ your estimated blood volume mL) × 100
Your body replaces plasma faster than red cells. Over the next day or two, fluid shifts and normal drinking usually restore plasma volume. Red cell replacement takes longer, which is why donation centers space out whole-blood donations and may check hemoglobin before you donate.
Blood loss and why percent matters
Urgent care teams often talk about blood loss in percent of total blood volume, not only in milliliters. Percent helps match symptoms and bedside patterns to the scale of loss. It also helps teams compare patients of different sizes.
StatPearls summarizes the ATLS hemorrhagic shock classes and ties them to percent loss. It also notes that total circulating blood volume is often treated as about 7% of body weight in an average adult. You can read the class breakdown in Hemorrhagic Shock (StatPearls, NCBI Bookshelf).
Even outside trauma, percent-based thinking is useful. Surgeons use it in blood management planning. Pediatric teams use it because a smaller total volume means the same milliliter loss is a larger share of the whole.
Table 2: Blood loss percentages and common patterns
This table is for general understanding. If you suspect heavy bleeding or shock, seek emergency care right away.
| Estimated loss of total volume | What people may notice | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| Up to 15% | Might feel close to normal, mild thirst, mild fast pulse | Control bleeding if possible, sit or lie down, get medical care if bleeding continues |
| 15% to 30% | Fast pulse, faster breathing, cool or pale skin, dizziness | Get urgent medical care; call local emergency number if symptoms worsen |
| 30% to 40% | Low blood pressure may appear, confusion, marked weakness | Call emergency services; keep the person warm and still |
| Over 40% | Severe weakness, fainting, severe low blood pressure | Emergency care is needed immediately |
Common misunderstandings worth clearing up
“Five liters” is a midpoint, not a rule
Five liters is a useful mental anchor for a typical adult. It’s not a fixed target. A smaller adult may be closer to 4 liters, and a larger adult can land above 6 liters. Pregnancy can raise totals further.
Total volume is not the same as red cell level
People sometimes mix up blood volume with hemoglobin or hematocrit. You can have a normal total volume and still have low hemoglobin (anemia). You can also have a normal hemoglobin level and still be low on circulating volume after dehydration or blood loss. They’re related measures, not the same measure.
Weight-only estimates can drift at higher body weights
It’s tempting to treat “mL/kg” as a one-size rule. At higher body weights, it can overstate blood volume. That’s why obesity-focused estimation methods exist in the medical literature and why height-based formulas are often preferred when teams want a tighter estimate.
When the question turns into a health concern
If you’re reading this because you’re worried about blood loss, fainting, or persistent dizziness, treat the numbers as context, not a diagnosis. Seek medical care right away for heavy bleeding, chest pain, trouble breathing, new confusion, or fainting. For non-urgent symptoms like recurring lightheadedness, ongoing fatigue, or frequent bruising, a clinician can check blood counts and assess hydration and blood pressure patterns.
A quick takeaway you can use
Most adults land around 4.5–5.7 liters of blood, and mL/kg estimates help you scale that number to your size. Kids carry more blood per kilogram, which matters when thinking about blood loss or dosing. If you need a tighter estimate, height-and-weight formulas can improve accuracy, especially at higher body weights. When bleeding is a concern, percent of total volume is a clearer way to think than raw milliliters.
References & Sources
- StatPearls (PubMed).“Physiology, Blood Volume.”Defines blood volume, gives typical adult totals, and lists common estimation equations.
- Great Ormond Street Hospital NHS.“Appendix 5 Circulating Blood Volumes.”Provides pediatric and adult mL/kg reference ranges by age group.
- National Library of Medicine (PubMed).“Estimating blood volume in obese and morbidly obese patients.”Explains why a flat mL/kg estimate can drift at higher body weight and presents an estimation approach.
- StatPearls (NCBI Bookshelf).“Hemorrhagic Shock.”Summarizes percent blood-loss classes and typical physiologic patterns used in emergency care.
