Top 10 Science-Backed Ways to Reduce Puffiness
Key Takeaways
- Feeling puffy in warm weather is often related to temporary fluid shifts rather than fat gain.
- Heat, long periods of sitting, sodium balance, hydration, lymphatic flow and inflammation can all influence water retention.
- Simple daily habits like walking, hydrating well, eating potassium-rich foods and breaking up sitting time may help support healthy fluid balance.
- Targeted herbs and supportive nutrition can be useful, but they work best alongside consistent lifestyle foundations.
- Sudden, one-sided, painful or persistent swelling should always be medically assessed.
One of the most common summer complaints I hear in clinic isn’t true weight gain at all. It’s that uncomfortable, heavy, puffy feeling that seems to appear overnight.
Rings feel tighter, ankles swell after a long journey, and your face can look fuller in the heat. In many otherwise healthy people, this is more about temporary fluid shifts than body fat, and it’s often influenced by heat, circulation, hydration, sodium balance and lymphatic flow.¹ ²
Edema simply means fluid accumulating in the tissues. That can happen when the balance between capillary filtration and lymphatic drainage shifts, which is influenced by pressure inside blood vessels, vascular permeability and how efficiently the lymphatic system is moving fluid back into circulation.¹ ²
The encouraging part? In many mild cases, everyday habits really do matter.
Why Does Heat Make You Puffy?
In hot weather, blood vessels naturally widen to help the body cool itself. That’s a clever built-in response, but it can also increase pressure in the capillaries and encourage more fluid to move into surrounding tissues, especially in the lower legs.¹ ⁴
Add travel, desk days or long stretches of sitting, and things can feel even more noticeable. When muscles aren’t contracting regularly, venous return and lymphatic flow tend to slow, which makes it easier for fluid to pool in the feet and ankles.³ ⁴
The lymphatic system plays a central role here. Unlike the cardiovascular system, it doesn’t have a pump like the heart, so it relies heavily on movement, breathing and muscle contraction to keep fluid moving.² ⁵
1. Hydrate Consistently (Don’t Wait For Thirst)
Adequate hydration helps support normal kidney function and healthy fluid regulation. Even mild dehydration may trigger hormonal responses that encourage the body to conserve water, which can make puffiness feel worse rather than better.¹
I often remind clients to sip steadily through the day instead of trying to “catch up” later. It sounds simple, but consistent hydration usually works better than big bursts of water all at once.
2. Walk Daily To Activate The Calf Muscle Pump
Walking activates the calf muscle pump, which helps move venous blood and lymph back toward the heart. This becomes especially important in hot weather, after flights, or during long periods of sitting.⁴
Even short walks can help. A quick lap after meals, a stroll between meetings or a few minutes on arrival after travel can make more difference than people expect.
3. Support Potassium Intake Through Whole Foods
Potassium helps regulate fluid and electrolyte balance alongside sodium. A diet rich in potassium-containing whole foods may support a healthier distribution of fluid between the inside and outside of cells.¹
Think avocados, leafy greens, beans, lentils, bananas, sweet potatoes and oily fish. This is one of those foundational nutrition shifts that tends to support more than one system at once.
4. Reduce Ultra-Processed And High-Sodium Foods
Most sodium in modern diets comes from packaged, processed and restaurant foods rather than the salt added in home cooking. Higher sodium intake is associated with increased extracellular fluid volume, which can contribute to puffiness in susceptible people.⁶
In clinic, I often find that people aren’t necessarily over-salting their meals, they’re simply getting caught by hidden sodium in convenience foods. Focusing on whole foods usually improves the sodium-to-potassium balance naturally.
Magnesium, vitamin B6 and supportive minerals may also help maintain healthy fluid balance. Where relevant, this is where a gentle formula such as Water Flo can sit quite neatly within a broader plan.
5. Support Lymphatic Flow Through Movement
The lymphatic system helps return excess interstitial fluid and proteins back into circulation, but it depends on physical movement to do that well. Skeletal muscle contraction, deep breathing and regular body movement all help keep lymph moving.² ⁵
Useful options include walking, stretching, swimming, rebounding and diaphragmatic breathing. I’m a big fan of simple movement here, not punishing exercise; sometimes five minutes on a rebounder morning and evening is enough to help people feel noticeably lighter.
Walking remains one of the most overlooked habits for circulation and recovery, which is why I come back to it so often in practice. You can also explore our related article on why walking is such an underrated wellness habit.
6. Include Hydrating, Plant-Rich Foods
Foods like cucumber, watermelon, celery and leafy greens provide water, potassium and phytonutrients, which are plant compounds that help support overall resilience and hydration status. They don’t “detox” the body in a magical sense, but they can absolutely support fluid balance and micronutrient intake.¹
If you enjoy green juices or smoothies, they can be a practical way to build this in. On busier days, a product such as Rejuv Super Greens may be a convenient addition.
7. Avoid Long Periods Of Sitting
Prolonged immobility is a common trigger for lower-limb swelling, particularly on flights, in cars or during long desk-based days. Even small movements such as ankle circles, standing breaks or short walks can support venous return and lymphatic drainage.³ ⁴
This is one of those little habits that adds up quickly. I often encourage my clients to stop waiting for the “perfect workout” and simply interrupt stillness more often. Even sitting at your desk or inflight with your feet up on a laptop bag (like our blog photo conveys) will greatly improve circulation and therefore reduce puffy ankles.
8. Embrace Herbs As Natural Diuretics
Some herbs, including dandelion, nettle, celery seed and juniper, have traditionally been used to support normal urinary output and fluid handling. Botanical support tends to work best when it complements underlying physiology rather than trying to force aggressive diuresis.¹ ⁶
Fluid retention is rarely just about “too much water.” More often, it reflects a combination of circulation, vascular permeability, electrolyte balance, lymphatic flow and inflammatory signalling.
For that reason, I prefer blends that support the system more gently. This is exactly the space where Water Flo may be helpful, especially around travel or the menstrual cycle when puffiness tends to flare for some women.
9. Prioritise Sleep And Recovery
Poor sleep is associated with increased inflammatory signalling and metabolic disruption, both of which may indirectly affect vascular function and fluid balance. Sleep is one of those quiet regulators that supports almost everything else.²
If you tend to retain water, don’t underestimate recovery. Gentle evening practices such as elevating the legs or resting with your feet up the wall can be surprisingly supportive.
10. Keep Inflammation Down
Inflammation may increase vascular permeability, which allows more fluid to move into the tissues. Chronic low-grade inflammation is also associated with impaired microvascular and lymphatic function.²
A diet rich in colourful plant foods, omega-3 fats and antioxidant compounds may help support a balanced inflammatory response. Antioxidants help protect cells from oxidative stress, which is essentially the wear and tear caused by unstable molecules generated through normal metabolism, stress and environmental exposures.
Where appropriate, food-first support can be complemented with targeted botanicals. For example, evidence-backed botanicals such as turmeric, ginger, sour cherry, nettle and rosehip may help support healthy inflammatory signalling and cellular resilience.
Puffiness is often a message, not a personal failing. Sometimes the body simply needs better rhythm: more movement, more nourishment, more rest.
When To Seek Medical Advice
Mild puffiness in hot weather is common, but some patterns should never be brushed off. Medical review is important if swelling is:
- Sudden or severe.
- Only on one side.
- Painful, hot or red.
- Associated with breathlessness or chest pain.
- Persistent despite lifestyle changes.
These features may be associated with underlying cardiovascular, renal, hepatic or venous issues and deserve proper medical assessment.¹ ⁶
Start With Your Bigger Picture
If puffiness, sluggishness or feeling “off” keeps showing up, it may be worth stepping back and looking at the wider picture. You can complete the Rejuv Wellness Profile for a more personalised starting point and a gentler way to reflect on what your body may be asking for.
References
- Koirala A, et al. Etiology and Management of Edema: A Review. Adv Chronic Kidney Dis. 2023;30(2):110–123. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36868727/
- Breslin JW. Edema and Lymphatic Clearance: Molecular Mechanisms and Ongoing Challenges. Clin Sci (Lond). 2023;137(18):1451–1476. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37732545/
- Koomans HA, Boer WH. Causes of edema in the intensive care unit. Kidney Int Suppl. 1997;59:S105–S110. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/9185115/
- Breslin JW. Physiology of microvascular exchange and lymph formation. Clin Sci (Lond). 2023. https://portlandpress.com/clinsci/article/137/18/1435/233819/Physiology-of-microvascular-exchange-and-lymph
- Hodge LM, Downey HF. Lymphatic pump treatment enhances lymphatic and immune function. Exp Biol Med (Maywood). 2011;236(10):1109–1115. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21865405/
- Lent-Schochet D, Jialal I. Physiology, Edema. StatPearls. Updated 2023–2026. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK537065/

