A doctor has shared guidance on how frequently you should be going for a pee, warning that trying to urinate too often may actually backfire.
After seeing a TikTok in which a pelvic floor specialist expressed frustration at people who head to the bathroom every hour, Dr Karan Rajan weighed in with an explanation of what’s considered typical and what frequent “just in case” trips could be teaching your body to do.
He explained: “You should be peeing on average every 2-4 hours even if you’re well hydrated.
“If you’re peeing every hour you’re training your brain to misfire and you could be creating urge incontinence.”

The NHS describes urge incontinence as leaking urine after a sudden, powerful need to pee — or immediately following that urge.
One of the most common reasons is an overactive bladder, where the bladder muscle contracts more than it should. In practical terms, this can make someone feel they need the toilet even when their bladder isn’t actually full.
According to Cleveland Clinic, signs of an overactive bladder can include the following:

Dr Rajan added: “Your bladder and brain communicate in a feedback loop. Your bladder fills with urine over 2-4 hours. Stretch receptors in the bladder wall detect the volume increase.
“And when the bladder is half full, so 150-200ml, the stretch receptors send a signal to your brain. And then you get a mild urge awareness that your bladder is filling and that process is normal.
“But if you pee every time you feel even a hint of bladder fullness even at small volumes like 50-100ml, your brain starts learning the wrong pattern.
“When you constantly respond to small bladder volumes your brain recalibrates. It starts thinking bladder at 50-100ml, time to pee now. The urge signal gets stronger and more frequent and more intense. Your stretch receptors become hypersensitive and they start firing at lower volumes. Basically, false alarms.”
He said this kind of “retraining” can contribute to urge incontinence over time — but the process can also be reversed by rebuilding healthier signals between the bladder and the brain.
“When you feel a strong urge, stop and stay still, tighten and relax your pelvic floor rapidly… This sends a competing signal to your brain to override the urgency,” he advised.

