A model for transient deformation of neutral hydrogels that takes into account conservation of momentum, energy and mass for the solid polymer and fluid phase is derived, nondimensionalized and analyzed. Slow- and fast-response hydrogels are studied for three cases based on the response of (i) a spherical hydrogel, (ii) a constrained hydrogel slab to a step change in temperature, and (iii) the deformation in a temperature gradient. Model predictions for case (i) are shown to agree well with experiments for swelling and shrinking. For case (ii), solvent can be seen entering at the sides and flowing into the interior and towards the corners, such that the corners undergo a faster deformation than the sides. Immersed in a temperature gradient, case (iii), the hydrogel undergoes a bending motion and reaches a curved equilibrium shape, similar to the bending motion of polyelectrolyte hydrogels subjected to an external electric field. The benefit of the scale analysis conducted here, to predict correctly, prior to numerical computations, important characteristics such as stress, osmotic pressure and deformation times, is also highlighted.