Nuun Sport and Liquid I.V. Hydration Multiplier are two of the most popular everyday electrolyte options, and they take opposite approaches: a light, low-sugar effervescent tablet versus a higher-sodium, sugar-assisted stick. In our six-criteria assessment, Nuun Sport scored 8.2/10 and Liquid I.V. scored 8.6/10.
This comparison uses the same six-criteria methodology we apply to every product. Formulas change — always check the current label before buying.
What’s the difference between Nuun Sport and Liquid I.V.?
The split is sodium and sugar. Nuun Sport delivers a modest 300 mg sodium with five electrolytes (plus potassium, magnesium, calcium, chloride) and just 1 g of sugar, sweetened with stevia, in a portable effervescent tablet. Liquid I.V. delivers a stronger 520 mg sodium and more potassium (370 mg), but pairs it with 11 g of added sugar to drive its sodium-glucose co-transport (CTT) absorption approach, plus added B-vitamins and vitamin C.
Ingredient breakdown: Nuun Sport vs Liquid I.V.
Sodium. Liquid I.V.’s 520 mg suits faster rehydration and heavier losses; Nuun’s 300 mg is a lighter, everyday dose. Sugar. This is the clearest divide: Nuun is essentially sugar-free, Liquid I.V. carries 11 g (about 50 calories) that is functional for absorption but unsuitable for low-sugar goals. Format. Nuun’s effervescent tablet is the more portable, no-measuring option; Liquid I.V.’s stick powder is widely stocked and travel-friendly too.
Who should choose Nuun Sport vs Liquid I.V.?
Choose Nuun Sport if you want a low-sugar, low-calorie tablet for moderate activity and daily sipping, value portability, or watch sugar intake. Choose Liquid I.V. if you want faster, sugar-assisted rehydration with added vitamins for travel, heat, or recovery, and do not mind the sugar.
Who should be careful: both are meaningful sodium sources. If you manage blood pressure or follow a sodium-restricted diet, talk to a healthcare professional first. This comparison is educational — not medical advice.
Bottom line: choosing between Nuun Sport and Liquid I.V.
Liquid I.V. edges ahead at 8.6/10 for stronger rehydration and added vitamins, but Nuun Sport at 8.2/10 is the better pick for low-sugar, everyday use. Match the formula to your needs: read the full Nuun Sport review and Liquid I.V. review, and see how both rank in our best electrolyte powders lineup.
A note on sugar and absorption
Liquid I.V.’s sugar is functional: glucose helps move sodium and water across the intestinal wall, the principle behind oral rehydration solutions. Nuun trades a little of that absorption speed for a near-zero-sugar profile. Neither is “better” in the abstract — it depends on whether you want sugar in your electrolyte mix.
Is Nuun Sport or Liquid I.V. better for daily hydration?
For light daily use, Nuun Sport’s lower sodium and near-zero sugar make it the easier everyday choice. Liquid I.V.’s higher sodium and sugar suit heavier losses, travel, or recovery rather than routine desk-day sipping.
Which has less sugar, Nuun or Liquid I.V.?
Nuun Sport has about 1 g of sugar (stevia-sweetened); Liquid I.V. has about 11 g of added sugar per stick. If low sugar matters, Nuun is the clear pick.
Why does Liquid I.V. contain more sugar?
The sugar is functional. Liquid I.V. uses a sodium-glucose co-transport approach where glucose helps the gut absorb sodium and water faster — the same principle as oral rehydration solutions. It adds about 50 calories per stick.
Which is more portable?
Both travel well. Nuun’s effervescent tablet needs no measuring and is very compact; Liquid I.V.’s stick is widely available in stores. For pure pocket-friendliness, the tablet has a slight edge.
Sources
- Sawka, M.N. et al. (2007). Exercise and Fluid Replacement — ACSM Position Stand.
- Institute of Medicine (2005). Dietary Reference Intakes for Water, Potassium, Sodium, Chloride, and Sulfate.

