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Apex Nursing

Reference — IV Therapy

IV Drip Rates Reference

IV flow-rate calculations are among the most safety-critical skills in nursing. This reference covers the core formulas, drop factor table, and standard infusion ranges for commonly ordered IV medications and fluids.

Educational use only. Infusion rates listed are general reference ranges. Always follow the prescriber's order, pharmacy label, and your institution's IV medication administration policies. Titrate vasoactive drugs only under licensed supervision with continuous monitoring. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Core Flow-Rate Formulas

What to FindFormula
mL/hr (pump rate)Total mL ÷ Total hours
gtt/min (manual drip)(Total mL × Drop factor) ÷ Total minutes
Infusion time (hr)Total mL ÷ Rate (mL/hr)
mcg/kg/min → mL/hr(Dose × Weight kg × 60) ÷ Concentration (mcg/mL)
units/hr → mL/hr(units/hr ordered × mL in bag) ÷ units in bag

IV Tubing Drop Factors

Tubing TypeDrop FactorTypical Use
Macrodrip 10 gtt/mL10 gtt/mLBlood and blood products
Macrodrip 15 gtt/mL15 gtt/mLGeneral IV fluids (adult)
Macrodrip 20 gtt/mL20 gtt/mLGeneral IV fluids (adult), most common
Microdrip 60 gtt/mL60 gtt/mLPediatric, critical care — precise low-volume infusions

With a 60 gtt/mL microdrip set: gtt/min numerically equals mL/hr. This is a useful shortcut for verification.

Common Maintenance IV Fluid Rates

Fluid / VolumeTime OrderedRate (mL/hr)
1,000 mL NS / LR8 hours125 mL/hr
1,000 mL NS / LR10 hours100 mL/hr
1,000 mL NS / LR12 hours83 mL/hr
500 mL NS4 hours125 mL/hr
250 mL NS (piggyback)1 hour250 mL/hr
100 mL NS (piggyback)30 min200 mL/hr

Common IV Medication Infusion Ranges

MedicationIndicationTypical RangeMonitor
Regular InsulinDKA / hyperglycemia0.1 units/kg/hr (per protocol)BG q1h, K⁺
HeparinDVT/PE, ACSWeight-based protocol; ~18 units/kg/hr initialaPTT q6h, bleeding
NorepinephrineSeptic shock0.01 – 3 mcg/kg/minMAP, HR, perfusion
DopamineCardiogenic shock2 – 20 mcg/kg/minHR, BP, urine output
NitroglycerinACS, hypertensive urgency5 – 200 mcg/min (titrate)BP, headache
Potassium ChlorideHypokalemiaMax 10 mEq/hr peripheral; 20 mEq/hr centralK⁺ level, cardiac rhythm
MorphinePain, PCA / continuous1 – 10 mg/hr (titrate per protocol)RR, SpO₂, sedation

Ranges are general educational references. Always verify per current institutional protocol, pharmacist, and prescriber order.

IV Safety — High-Alert Medications

ISMP designates the following IV medications as high-alert — errors with these drugs are more likely to cause significant patient harm:

  • Concentrated electrolytes — KCl, hypertonic saline, MgSO₄ (must be diluted; never administer undiluted K⁺ IV push)
  • Anticoagulants — Heparin, warfarin (verify aPTT/INR before adjusting rate)
  • Insulin — Double-check dose and pump programming with a second licensed nurse
  • Opioids — Monitor respiratory rate, SpO₂, and level of sedation continuously
  • Vasoactive drugs — Dopamine, norepinephrine require continuous hemodynamic monitoring
  • Chemotherapy — Requires special competency verification; double-check protocol

Independent double-checks for high-alert IV medications are required by most institutional policies. Always use a smart pump with drug libraries when available.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with Infusion Nurses Society (INS) Standards of Practice · CDC (CLABSI prevention) · Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →