IV Infusion Time and Completion Time
Educational Use Only
This content is for educational purposes only and does not substitute for clinical training, institutional protocols, or professional medical guidance. Always verify calculations with your facility's protocols and a licensed pharmacist before administering medications to patients.
Medication dosages, IV drip rates, vital monitoring
Knowing when an IV will finish is just as important as knowing the rate. Nurses must calculate infusion duration for shift planning, medication scheduling, and timely bag changes. If a 1,000 mL bag started at 1400 and runs at 125 mL/hr, you need to know it finishes at 2200 — not halfway through the next shift. This page teaches you to calculate total infusion time, convert decimal hours to hours and minutes, determine clock completion times, and handle partial-bag and shift-change scenarios.
The Time Formula
Starting from the core IV relationship:
This gives you the duration in decimal hours (e.g., 6.67 hours). You then need to convert decimal hours into hours and minutes, and add the duration to the start time to find when the infusion finishes.
Converting Decimal Hours to Hours and Minutes
When you divide and get a decimal answer, the whole number part is hours and the decimal part must be multiplied by 60 to get minutes.
Example: 6.67 hours
- Whole hours: 6
- Minutes: minutes
- Result: 6 hours and 40 minutes
Example: 3.25 hours
- Whole hours: 3
- Minutes: minutes
- Result: 3 hours and 15 minutes
Common Decimal-to-Minutes Conversions
| Decimal | Minutes |
|---|---|
| 0.25 | 15 min |
| 0.33 | 20 min |
| 0.50 | 30 min |
| 0.67 | 40 min |
| 0.75 | 45 min |
Calculating Completion Time (Clock Time)
Once you know the duration, add it to the start time. Healthcare facilities use military (24-hour) time.
Military time refresher: Add hours directly. If the minutes reach 60 or more, carry over 1 hour. If the total exceeds 2400, subtract 2400 (the infusion crosses midnight).
Worked Examples
Example 1: Simple Completion Time
Order: Infuse 1,000 mL NS at 125 mL/hr. Started at 0800.
Step 1: Calculate the duration.
Step 2: Add to the start time.
Answer: The infusion will take 8 hours and finish at 1600.
Reasonableness check: A liter bag at 125 mL/hr finishing in 8 hours is a standard result you will see frequently. This serves as a useful benchmark — memorize it.
Example 2: Non-Even Division
Order: Infuse 1,000 mL LR at 150 mL/hr. Started at 1400.
Step 1: Calculate the duration.
Step 2: Convert to hours and minutes.
Duration = 6 hours 40 minutes.
Step 3: Add to the start time.
Answer: The infusion will take 6 hours and 40 minutes, finishing at 2040.
Example 3: Crossing Midnight
Order: Infuse 1,000 mL D5W at 75 mL/hr. Started at 2100.
Step 1: Calculate the duration.
Step 2: Convert to hours and minutes.
Duration = 13 hours 20 minutes.
Step 3: Add to the start time.
Since this exceeds 2400, subtract 2400:
Answer: The infusion will take 13 hours and 20 minutes, finishing at 1020 the next day.
Shift-Change Calculations
At shift change, the handoff to the oncoming nurse includes the IV fluid type, current infusion rate, and volume remaining (VTBI). Volume already infused is documented in the intake-and-output (I&O) record, not repeated in the bedside handoff. From the volume remaining and rate, the oncoming nurse can calculate when the bag will finish.
Example 4: Volume Remaining at Shift Change
Scenario: A 1,000 mL bag of NS started at 0700 running at 125 mL/hr. The day shift ends at 1900. How much will infuse during day shift, and how much will remain for the night nurse?
Step 1: Calculate hours on day shift.
Step 2: Calculate volume infused during the shift.
But the bag only holds 1,000 mL. Since , the bag will finish before the shift ends.
Step 3: Calculate when the bag actually finishes.
Answer: The bag will be empty at 1500 — the day nurse will need to hang a new bag or discontinue the IV before shift change. There is 0 mL remaining at 1900.
Example 5: Partial Bag at Shift Change
Scenario: A 1,000 mL bag of LR was started at 1400 at 100 mL/hr. The night shift begins at 1900. How much has infused by 1900, how much remains, and when will the bag finish?
Step 1: Time elapsed from 1400 to 1900 = 5 hours.
Step 2: Volume infused: mL.
Step 3: Volume remaining: mL.
Step 4: Time to infuse remaining volume: hours.
Step 5: Completion time: (midnight).
Answer: At shift change, 500 mL has infused and 500 mL remains. The bag will finish at 0000 (midnight).
Calculating Remaining Time from a Bag Check
Nurses regularly check IV bags to verify the fluid level matches the expected amount. If the bag has a specific volume remaining, you can calculate how much longer it will run.
Example 6: Checking a Bag Mid-Shift
Scenario: At 1000, the nurse checks the IV bag and sees approximately 350 mL remaining. The pump rate is 75 mL/hr.
Answer: The bag should finish at approximately 1440. The nurse should plan to have the next bag ready by then.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Forgetting to convert decimal hours to hours and minutes. An answer of “6.67 hours” is not a clock time. You must convert: minutes, so 6 hours 40 minutes.
- Adding decimal hours directly to clock time. You cannot add 6.67 to 1400 and get 2067. Convert to hours and minutes first (6:40), then add: .
- Forgetting to check if the bag runs out before the end of the shift. Always compare the total infusion time to the time remaining in the shift. If the bag finishes early, the night nurse does not inherit a partial bag — they inherit an empty line.
- Not accounting for midnight crossover. When the sum exceeds 2400, subtract 2400 to get the next-day time. Similarly, if the start time is in the evening and the duration is long, the completion will be the next calendar day.
- Using the original rate when the order has changed. If the provider adjusts the rate, recalculate the remaining time using the new rate and the remaining volume — not the original total volume.
Practice Problems
Test your understanding with these problems. Click to reveal each answer.
Problem 1: Order: Infuse 500 mL D5W at 100 mL/hr. Started at 0900. When will it finish?
Answer: The infusion will finish at 1400.
Problem 2: Order: Infuse 1,000 mL NS at 80 mL/hr. Started at 1600. When will it finish?
Subtract 2400:
Answer: The infusion will take 12 hours and 30 minutes, finishing at 0430 the next day.
Problem 3: A 1,000 mL bag of LR is running at 150 mL/hr and was started at 0600. The nurse checks at 1000. How much should remain in the bag?
Time elapsed: hours
Volume infused: mL
Remaining: mL
Answer: Approximately 400 mL should remain.
Problem 4: A 500 mL bag of D5 0.45% NS was started at 2200 at 83 mL/hr. When will it finish? Will it finish during the night shift (2200 to 0700)?
Subtract 2400:
Night shift ends at 0700, so yes, it finishes during night shift.
Answer: The bag will finish at approximately 0401 — within the night shift.
Problem 5: At 1500, a nurse receives report that a 1,000 mL bag of NS was hung at 1100 at 125 mL/hr. How much has infused, how much remains, and when will it finish?
Time elapsed from 1100 to 1500: 4 hours
Volume infused: mL
Remaining: mL
Time to finish: hours
Completion:
Answer: 500 mL has infused, 500 mL remains, and the bag will finish at 1900.
Key Takeaways
- Infusion time = Volume divided by Rate:
- Convert decimal hours to hours and minutes by multiplying the decimal part by 60
- Add the duration to the start time (in military time) to find the completion time
- If the total exceeds 2400, subtract 2400 — the infusion finishes the next day
- At shift change, hand off IV fluid type, current rate, and volume remaining (VTBI) so the next nurse can calculate the expected finish time — volume already infused goes in I&O documentation
- Regularly check the fluid level against the expected volume to catch pump errors or incorrect flow rates — infiltration is detected by physical assessment of the IV site (swelling, coolness, pain), not by bag level, since a pump will continue pulling fluid from the bag even when the IV has infiltrated
- Always verify that the completion time makes clinical sense — a 1,000 mL bag at 125 mL/hr should take 8 hours, a useful benchmark to memorize
Return to Math for Nurses for more topics.
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Last updated: March 29, 2026