Copper Water: Basics, Benefits, And Downsides - Healthline

Healthline
  • Health ConditionsHealth ConditionsAll
    • Breast Cancer
    • Cancer Care
    • Caregiving for Alzheimer's Disease
    • Chronic Kidney Disease
    • Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)
    • Digestive Health
    • Eye Health
    • Heart Health
    • Menopause
    • Mental Health
    • Migraine
    • Multiple Sclerosis (MS)
    • Parkinson’s Disease
    • Psoriasis
    • Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA)
    • Sleep Health
    • Type 2 Diabetes
    • Weight Management
    Condition SpotlightAll
    • Controlling Ulcerative Colitis
    • Navigating Life with Bipolar Disorder
    • Mastering Geographic Atrophy
    • Managing Type 2 Diabetes
  • WellnessWellness TopicsAll
    • CBD
    • Fitness
    • Healthy Aging
    • Hearing
    • Mental Well-Being
    • Nutrition
    • Parenthood
    • Recipes
    • Sexual Health
    • Skin Care
    • Sleep Health
    • Vitamins and Supplements
    • Women's Wellness
    Product ReviewsAll
    • At-Home Testing
    • Men's Health
    • Mental Health
    • Nutrition
    • Sleep
    • Vitamins and Supplements
    • Women's Health
    Featured ProgramsAll
    • Your Guide to Glucose Health
    • Inflammation and Aging
    • Cold & Flu Season Survival Guide
    • She’s Good for Real
  • ToolsFeatured
    • Video Series
    • Pill Identifier
    • FindCare
    • Drugs A-Z
    • Medicare Plans by State
    LessonsAll
    • Crohn’s and Ulcerative Colitis Essentials
    • Diabetes Nutrition
    • High Cholesterol
    • Taming Inflammation in Psoriasis
    • Taming Inflammation in Psoriatic Arthritis
    NewslettersAll
    • Anxiety and Depression
    • Digestive Health
    • Heart Health
    • Migraine
    • Nutrition Edition
    • Type 2 Diabetes
    • Wellness Wire
    Lifestyle Quizzes
    • Find a Diet
    • Find Healthy Snacks
    • Weight Management
    • How Well Do You Sleep?
    • Are You a Workaholic?
  • FeaturedHealth NewsAll
    • Medicare 2026 Changes
    • Can 6-6-6 Walking Workout Help You Lose Weight?
    • This Couple Lost 118 Pounds Together Without Medication
    • 5 Science-Backed Ways to Live a Longer Life
    • Morning Coffee May Help You Live Longer
    This Just In
    • 5 Tips for a Healthy Lifestyle
    • How to Disinfect Your House After the Flu
    • Best Vegan and Plant-Based Meal Delivery for 2025
    • Does Medicare Cover Pneumonia Shots?
    • Chromosomes, Genetics, and Your Health
    Top Reads
    • Best Multivitamins for Women
    • Best Multivitamins for Men
    • Best Online Therapy Services
    • Online Therapy That Takes Insurance
    • Buy Ozempic Online
    • Mounjaro Overview
    Video Series
    • Youth in Focus
    • Healthy Harvest
    • Through an Artist's Eye
    • Future of Health
  • ConnectFind Your Bezzy Community

    Bezzy communities provide meaningful connections with others living with chronic conditions. Join Bezzy on the web or mobile app.

    All
    • Inflammatory Bowel Disease
    • Multiple Sclerosis
    • Depression
    • Migraine
    • Type 2 Diabetes
    • Psoriasis
    Follow us on social media

    Can't get enough? Connect with us for all things health.

Subscribe

Nutrition

  • Meal Kits
    • Overview
    • Diets
    • Meal Kits
    • Prepared Meals
    • Comparisons
    • Grocery Delivery
  • Special Diets
  • Healthy Eating
  • Food Freedom
  • Conditions
  • Feel Good Food
  • Products
  • Vitamins & Supplements
  • Sustainability
  • Weight Management

Nutrition

Evidence BasedDoes Copper Water Have Benefits?Medically reviewed by Kathy W. Warwick, RDN, CDCES, NutritionWritten by Ariane Lang, BSc, MBA on September 2, 2020
  • What it is
  • Claimed benefits
  • Downsides
  • Bottom line

Copper water is an emerging trend that promotes the practice of storing drinking water in a copper container or copper water bottle.

While you may have just recently heard about this trend, it’s widely supported by Ayurveda, an Indian system of holistic medicine with ancient origins.

Still, you may wonder whether this practice is beneficial and safe or just another fad.

This article reviews the purported benefits and downsides of drinking copper water.

a copper mug with waterShare on Pinterest

What is copper water?

Copper water isn’t a beverage you’ll find in the nearest supermarket or health store. Rather, you have to make it by storing drinking water in a copper container.

Copper is a trace element, meaning that you only need minimal amounts of it.

It plays a key role in multiple essential body functions, such as the production of energy, connective tissues, and your brain’s chemical messaging system. It’s widely found in foods like shellfish, nuts, seeds, potatoes, whole grain products, dark chocolate, and organ meat (1).

Proponents of this practice state that storing water in copper containers allows the metal to infuse into the water, thus conferring benefits to the drinker.

Still, while both its deficiency and excess may be detrimental to your health, copper deficiency is uncommon (1).

For example, the standard American diet meets or exceeds copper’s Daily Value (DV) — the recommended amount of a nutrient you should consume per day — which is set at 0.9 mg (2).

Summary

Copper water refers to water that has been stored in a copper container, allowing it to become infused with the mineral. However, copper deficiency is rare, as your daily copper needs can easily be met through common foods.

Claimed benefits

Proponents claim that copper water offers multiple benefits, including better heart and brain health, a more robust immune system, and even weight loss, anti-aging, and tanning effects.

However, it’s unlikely that copper water provides these health effects.

Instead, these benefits may merely reflect copper’s roles and functions in your body, given that it’s involved in energy production, pigmentation, the development of brain and heart tissue, immune system function, and angiogenesis — the formation of new blood vessels (1).

Antibacterial effects

One of copper’s benefit appears to be backed by science — its antibacterial effect.

Both old and recent evidence suggests that copper may be used as a water purification or sterilization system, as ancient Ayurveda techniques recommended (3, 4).

This may be especially beneficial for the estimated 1 billion people who don’t have access to safe drinking water (5).

Contaminated water can contain considerable amounts of bacteria, including Vibrio cholerae, Shigella flexneri, Escherichia coli, and Salmonella typhimurium, that can cause diarrhea — one of the leading causes of death in developing countries (4, 5).

Fortunately, simply storing water in a copper pot or vessel may kill these harmful bacteria (5, 6, 7, 8).

The term “contact killing” is used to describe copper’s antibacterial effect. Researchers believe that exposure to the mineral causes extensive damage to the cell walls of bacteria, causing their death (9, 10).

Still, studies agree that water should be stored in the copper container for several hours before drinking it to ensure that the antibacterial effect has been successful.

Some research reported the antibacterial effect when storing the water overnight. In contrast, other studies suggest waiting 16–24 hours, or even up to 48 hours (5, 6, 7, 8).

This means that filling a pricey copper water bottle in the morning to stay hydrated throughout the day might not have much of a sterilizing effect.

Rather, keeping water in copper pots or jars for longer may be more useful.

Summary

Storing water in copper containers seems to have antibacterial properties capable of killing harmful bacteria. However, the water must be stored for several hours — possibly even days — for it to work.

Potential downsides

Long-term exposure to high doses of copper may cause copper toxicity, which is characterized by nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and diarrhea. It may even lead to liver damage and kidney disease (1, 11).

One way you may develop copper toxicity is by consuming stagnant water that flows through copper-containing pipes, which allow for high quantities of copper to leach into the water (1).

The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends no more than 0.47 mg of copper per cup (2 mg per liter) of water. This ensures that the tolerable upper intake level of 10 mg per day won’t be exceeded (11).

When it comes to water stored in copper containers, even for periods of up to 16 hours, studies show that the amount of leached copper is well below WHO’s safety limits (5, 8).

Still, proponents of the trend suggest that you limit your copper water intake to 3 cups (710 mL) per day.

Summary

High copper intakes may lead to copper toxicity in the long run. However, the amount of copper that leaches into water stored in copper containers is below the safety limits.

The bottom line

Copper water is simply water that has been stored in a copper container. This allows for safe amounts of copper to leach into the water.

While most of the practice’s purported benefits aren’t backed by scientific studies, it exerts an antibacterial effect that may kill diarrhea-causing bacteria in contaminated water.

However, research suggests that for the leached copper to kill bacteria, the water must be stored in a copper vessel at least overnight or up to 48 hours.

This means that the best containers are most likely copper pots or jars rather than copper water bottles that are filled on the go.

 

How we reviewed this article:

History

Share this article

Evidence Based

This article is based on scientific evidence, written by experts and fact checked by experts.

Our team of licensed nutritionists and dietitians strive to be objective, unbiased, honest and to present both sides of the argument.

This article contains scientific references. The numbers in the parentheses (1, 2, 3) are clickable links to peer-reviewed scientific papers.

Medically reviewed by Kathy W. Warwick, RDN, CDCES, NutritionWritten by Ariane Lang, BSc, MBA on September 2, 2020

related stories

  • How Much Water Should You Drink Per Day?
  • What to Know About Copper Toxicity
  • Can Drinking More Water Help You Lose Weight?
  • Do Copper Bracelets Help Ease Arthritis?
  • Is Colloidal Copper Good for Your Skin?

Read this next

  • How Much Water Should You Drink Per Day?Written by Kris Gunnars, BSc

    Drinking enough water can help increase your energy levels. Learn exactly how much water you should drink in a day and the factors that affect it.

    READ MORE
  • What to Know About Copper ToxicityMedically reviewed by Shilpa Amin, M.D., CAQ, FAAFP

    Let's look at symptoms of copper toxicity, the most likely sources of exposure to this metal, and what you can do to prevent your exposure to high…

    READ MORE
  • Can Drinking More Water Help You Lose Weight?Written by Adda Bjarnadottir, MS, RDN (Ice) and Alina Sharon

    Drinking water can help reduce appetite and make you burn more calories. Several studies show that water can help you lose weight.

    READ MORE
  • Do Copper Bracelets Help Ease Arthritis?Medically reviewed by Debra Rose Wilson, Ph.D., MSN, R.N., IBCLC, AHN-BC, CHT

    You may have heard that wearing a copper bracelet can improve conditions such as arthritis. Find out where this idea came from and whether there’s…

    READ MORE
  • Is Colloidal Copper Good for Your Skin?Medically reviewed by Debra Rose Wilson, Ph.D., MSN, R.N., IBCLC, AHN-BC, CHT

    Colloidal copper is a popular health supplement. It’s similar to colloidal silver, which is also widely used for wellness and medical purposes.

    READ MORE
  • Should You Drink 3 Liters of Water per Day?Written by Rachael Ajmera, MS, RD

    You may know that drinking water is good for you, but it can be hard to determine how much to drink. This article explains the benefits and downsides…

    READ MORE
  • Copper DeficiencyMedically reviewed by Saurabh Sethi, M.D., MPH

    Copper deficiency isn’t common, but it can happen. Here are the symptoms and how your doctor can treat it if you’re diagnosed. We’ll also tell you the…

    READ MORE
  • 8 Foods That Are High in CopperWritten by Helen West, RD

    Though your body only needs small amounts of copper, it's an essential nutrient that you need to obtain through your diet. Here are 8 foods high in…

    READ MORE
  • Best Fish Oil for Kids: The 8 Best Options According to a Dietitian

    Most kids can get enough omegas from a balanced diet, but fish oil supplements for kids can be useful for those who are picky eaters, when recommended…

    READ MORE
  • The Best L-Glutamine SupplementsWritten by Alice Porter-McLaughlin

    L-glutamine supplements may have various health benefits. Learn about our top L-glutamine picks and how they compare.

    READ MORE

Tag » How Much Water In Copper Pipe