Urine color can give useful clues about hydration and sometimes health issues, but it’s not a diagnosis on its own.
🚽 What urine is
Urine
It reflects:
- hydration level
- kidney function
- diet and medications
🎨 Urine colors and what they may mean
💛 Pale yellow (ideal)
- normal hydration
- healthy kidneys
🟡 Dark yellow
- mild dehydration
- you may need more water
🟠 Amber / honey color
- more significant dehydration
- sweating, heat, or low fluid intake
🟤 Brown / cola color
⚠️ Needs attention
Possible causes:
- severe dehydration
- liver problems
Liver disease - muscle breakdown (rare but serious)
🔴 Pink or red
⚠️ Important to check
Hematuria
Possible causes:
- urinary tract infection
- kidney stones
- sometimes foods (beetroot)
🟢 Blue or green
- rare
- usually medications or dyes
- sometimes infections
⚪ Cloudy or milky
Urinary tract infection
- possible infection
- may come with burning or odor
⚫ Very dark (almost black)
- rare
- can indicate serious conditions
- needs medical evaluation
🚨 When to see a doctor
- blood in urine without clear cause
- persistent brown or cola-colored urine
- pain, fever, or burning
- strong odor with cloudiness
🧠 Important reality
Urine color can also change due to:
- vitamins (especially B-complex)
- medications
- foods (beets, carrots, etc.)
🧾 Bottom line
Urine color is a simple hydration and health clue, not a diagnosis. Persistent unusual colors—especially red, brown, or cloudy with symptoms—should be checked medically.
If you want, tell me your urine color and symptoms, and I can help interpret it more precisely.