How the formula works
Drip rate is the bridge between an order written in volume per time (e.g., "1000 mL of LR over 8 hours") and what you do at the bedside on a gravity-fed line: count drops. The formula is one line:
gtt/min = (Volume in mL × Drop factor in gtt/mL) ÷ Total time in minutes
Three things matter:
- Volume — total mL ordered (bag size or bolus volume).
- Drop factor — printed on the tubing package. The most common ones in U.S. practice are 10, 15, and 20 gtt/mL for macrodrip and 60 gtt/mL for microdrip.
- Time in minutes — convert hours to minutes before plugging in. NCLEX traps you here: an order written "over 6 hours" is 360 minutes, not 6.
Macrodrip vs microdrip — when to use which
Tubing drop factor is a hardware decision made when you spike the bag, not a math decision. Two rules of thumb:
- Macrodrip (10–20 gtt/mL) — adult maintenance fluids, blood products, anything ≥ 80 mL/hr.
- Microdrip (60 gtt/mL) — pediatrics, slow infusions, low-volume drips where 1 mL extra matters. Microdrip math has a shortcut: gtt/min = mL/hr exactly, because 60 gtt/mL × 1/60 (min/hr) = 1.
NCLEX trap: A question that says "infuse 250 mL over 30 minutes with 60-gtt tubing" wants 500 gtt/min, not 250. Microdrip's "gtt/min = mL/hr" shortcut only works when time is expressed in hours.
Worked example
Order: 1,000 mL Lactated Ringer's over 8 hours, macrodrip tubing (15 gtt/mL).
- Convert time: 8 hr × 60 min/hr = 480 min.
- Apply formula: (1000 × 15) ÷ 480 = 15,000 ÷ 480 = 31.25 gtt/min.
- Round to whole drops: 31 gtt/min. Some references round up at 0.5; in practice, NCLEX accepts standard rounding.
Cross-check: 1000 mL ÷ 8 hr = 125 mL/hr. That should match the pump rate if you're pumping instead of dripping.
Common pitfalls
- Forgetting the unit conversion. Time must be in minutes. Dividing volume by hours gives mL/hr, not gtt/min.
- Reading the wrong drop factor. Always confirm by reading the tubing package — institutions stock a mix.
- Miscounting drops at bedside. Count for 15 seconds and multiply by 4 for a faster check than counting a full minute.
- Treating a pump like a drip. Smart pumps deliver mL/hr; you don't count drops on a pumped line.