To investigate how differing moderate sodium chloride concentrations affect rehydration after exercise and subsequent exercise capacity, eight males lost 1.98 +/- 0.1% body mass exercising in the heat, then consumed one of four drinks in a volume equivalent to 150% of mass loss. Drinks were identical except for sodium chloride content (1 +/- 1, 31 +/- 1, 40 +/- 1, 50 +/- 1 mmol/l). After 4 h recovery subjects cycled for 5 min at 70% VO(2peak) then at 95% VO(2peak) until volitional fatigue. Urine output was inversely related to sodium intake: more was produced with the 1 than the 40 and 50 mmol/l drinks (P < 0.01). Time to exhaustion in the exercise capacity test was not different between treatments (P = 0.883). The addition of 40 or 50 mmol/l of sodium chloride to a rehydration beverage reduced subsequent urine output, thereby providing more effective rehydration than a sodium-free drink. This did not, however, result in improved performance 4 h after the end of the rehydration period.