Drink This Daily Trio to Live Longer: Coffee, Tea & Water’s Surprising Anti‑Aging Benefits

Your Daily Drinks May Be Secretly Shaping How Long You Live

For many women, the rhythm of the day is marked by simple rituals: coffee in the morning, tea in the afternoon, and a constant reminder to drink more water. These habits feel ordinary, almost automatic—but new science suggests they may quietly shape how long and how well we live. Instead of complicated longevity hacks, the answer may already be sitting in your favorite mug.

A large new study published in the British Journal of Nutrition explored how daily intake of coffee, tea, and water relates to lifespan and overall mortality. The full research can be accessed here: https://doi.org/10.1017/s0007114525104248. Its findings offer reassuring news for anyone trying to balance health with a busy, modern life.

How Coffee, Tea, and Water Were Studied Together

Researchers analyzed data from 182,770 adults participating in the UK Biobank. These individuals were followed for an average of 13 years, allowing scientists to compare long-term health outcomes with beverage consumption patterns.

Participants self-reported how many cups of water, coffee, and tea they drank each day. The researchers then examined mortality rates while adjusting for key lifestyle factors, including:

  • Age and sex
  • Smoking status
  • Physical activity levels
  • Body mass index
  • Overall diet quality

Because this was an observational study, it does not prove that beverages directly cause longer life. However, the size of the dataset and length of follow-up make the associations difficult to ignore.

The Statistics That Caught Researchers’ Attention

The results revealed a clear and consistent pattern:

  • People who consumed about 7–8 total cups per day of water, coffee, and tea had the lowest risk of death from all causes
  • Compared with very low beverage intake, this group experienced up to a 45% reduction in all-cause mortality
  • The most favorable balance appeared to be:
    • 2–3 cups of coffee daily
    • 3–4 cups of tea daily
    • The remainder from plain water
  • Drinking coffee or tea alone—without adequate water—did not provide the same protective benefit

In short, hydration mattered just as much as antioxidants.

Why This Daily Trio May Support Longevity

Researchers believe several mechanisms may explain the observed benefits:

  • Hydration support: Adequate water intake supports circulation, kidney function, and metabolic health
  • Antioxidant intake: Coffee and tea are rich in polyphenols that help reduce oxidative stress
  • Lower inflammation: Chronic inflammation is closely linked to aging and cardiovascular disease, and these beverages may help moderate it

Rather than replacing water, coffee and tea appear to work best when consumed as part of a balanced hydration routine.

A TCM View: Why Stress Management Matters for Longevity

From a Traditional Chinese Medicine perspective, longevity depends not only on nourishment but also on how well the body handles stress. Chronic stress disrupts the Heart and Pericardium systems, exhausts Qi, and accelerates aging over time.

That’s why pairing healthy hydration habits with simple self-care practices is so powerful. Alongside mindful drinking, these acupressure points for stress relief you can use easily help calm the nervous system and protect long-term vitality.

Three Essential Acupressure Points for Daily Stress Relief

Below are three foundational pressure points commonly used in TCM to regulate stress and emotional tension.

PC-6 (Neiguan) – Inner Pass

Acupoint: PC-6 (Other Names: Pericardium-6/Nei Guan/Inner Pass)
Acupoint: PC-6 (Other Names: Pericardium-6/Nei Guan/Inner Pass)
  • Location: Three finger-widths below the wrist crease, between the two tendons on the inner forearm
  • Benefits: Calms anxiety, regulates heart rhythm, and eases stress-related chest tightness
  • How to use: Apply steady pressure for 60–90 seconds while breathing slowly; repeat on both arms

LI-4 (He Gu) – Joining Valley

Acupoint: LI-4 (Other Names: Large Intestine-4/He Gu/Joining Valley)
Acupoint: LI-4 (Other Names: Large Intestine-4/He Gu/Joining Valley)
  • Location: The fleshy area between the thumb and index finger
  • Benefits: Releases full-body tension, supports emotional balance, and helps with stress headaches
  • How to use: Press firmly and massage in small circles for about 1 minute on each hand
  • Important: Avoid this point during pregnancy

PC-8 (Laogong) – Palace of Toil

Lao Gong
PC-8 Lao Gong
  • Location: The center of the palm, where the middle finger lands when making a loose fist
  • Benefits: Clears internal heat, calms irritability, and relieves mental fatigue from overwork
  • How to use: Gently press and hold for 30–60 seconds, focusing on slow exhalation

Putting It All Together

This research delivers a refreshing message: longevity doesn’t require perfection or extreme routines. Drinking enough water, enjoying coffee and tea in moderation, and supporting your body’s stress response with acupressure may work together to protect health over time.

Small, repeatable habits—what you sip, how you pause, and how you release tension—can quietly shape a longer, steadier path to wellness.

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Author: P. Sze

P. Sze P. Sze is the founder of TCM Tips and Dragon Acupuncture®. She graduated from the National University of Singapore with a first-class honor in Civil Engineering. S he also holds a master’s degree in Engineering and is the brain behind the innovative TCM products of Dragon Acupuncture®. She is the author of The Beginner's Guide to Auricular Therapy: Application of Ear Seeds (ISBN 978-1520451398) and Facial Gua Sha - Fight the Signs of Aging Naturally and Inexpensively (ISBN 978-1980678922). She has dedicated her life to ensuring that the complex theories behind oriental medicine and the seemingly dangerous techniques that involve needles and fire do not scare you from trying oriental medicine. This is why she writes endlessly about acupressure and its countless health and wellness benefits.

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