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Low-Potassium Foods: A Kidney-Friendly List (and Who Needs One)

A clear list of low-potassium foods for kidney disease — plus the high-potassium foods to limit, a leaching trick, and who actually needs to restrict potassium.

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Low-Potassium Foods: A Kidney-Friendly List
Last updated on July 7, 2026, and last reviewed by an expert on July 7, 2026.

If your doctor has told you to watch your potassium, your first question is probably the practical one: which foods are actually low in it? Here’s a clear, usable list — the low-potassium foods to build meals around and the high-potassium ones to keep an eye on. But there’s an important question to answer first, because plenty of people are restricting potassium who don’t need to.

Low-Potassium Foods: A Kidney-Friendly List

Quick answer: Low-potassium foods include apples, berries, grapes, white bread and rice, green beans, cucumber, cabbage, and cauliflower. Higher-potassium foods to limit include potatoes, tomatoes, bananas, oranges, avocado, beans, and dairy. But whether you need to limit potassium at all depends on your kidney stage and blood tests — many people with early kidney disease don’t, and cutting healthy produce unnecessarily has its own downsides.1 Always base a potassium restriction on your labs and your care team’s advice, not on fear.

First: do you even need to restrict potassium?

This matters, so it goes first. Potassium is essential — it runs your heart, muscles, and nerves — and it comes packaged in some of the healthiest foods there are. You only need to limit it if your blood potassium is running high (hyperkalemia) or is at risk of doing so, which typically happens in more advanced kidney disease, or with certain blood pressure medications.

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People with early-stage CKD and normal potassium levels usually don’t need a low-potassium diet at all. Restricting it anyway means cutting fruits, vegetables, and legumes that benefit your heart and gut for no reason. Even in more advanced disease, research on plant-forward, lower-protein diets suggests they don’t automatically cause the high potassium many people fear.2 So the right first move isn’t to slash potassium — it’s to check your blood test and ask your team whether restriction applies to you.

Low-potassium foods to build meals around

If you do need to keep potassium down, these are your reliable staples (portion sizes still matter — even a low-potassium food adds up in large amounts):

Fruit

Vegetables

Grains and protein

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Higher-potassium foods to limit

These are healthy foods for most people — the issue is only their potassium load if you need to restrict:

CategoryHigher-potassium foods
VegetablesPotatoes, sweet potatoes, tomatoes and tomato sauce, spinach, mushrooms, squash
FruitBananas, oranges and orange juice, avocado, dried fruit, melon (large amounts)
ProteinBeans, lentils, nuts
DairyMilk, yogurt
OtherChocolate, salt substitutes (often potassium chloride!)

One that surprises people: salt substitutes. Many “no-salt” seasonings replace sodium with potassium chloride, which is exactly what you don’t want if you’re limiting potassium. Read the label.

The leaching trick: keep the potatoes

You don’t have to banish higher-potassium vegetables entirely. Leaching pulls a good portion of the potassium out:

  1. Peel the vegetable and slice it thin or dice it small.
  2. Soak it in a large amount of warm water for at least a couple of hours (longer is better).
  3. Drain, then cook in fresh water — not the soaking water.

It works because potassium is water-soluble and leaches into the water you throw away. It won’t make a potato potassium-free, but it can turn an off-limits food into an occasional portion-controlled one. Boiling in general lowers potassium more than roasting or frying, since the mineral escapes into the cooking water.

Canned, dried, and juiced: the sneaky ones

How a food is processed changes its potassium, sometimes in ways that catch people out:

Portions still count

A subtle point people miss: “low-potassium” isn’t the same as “unlimited.” Eat enough of any food and the potassium adds up. A small apple is low-potassium; a huge fruit salad of “low-potassium” fruits can still push your total up. If you’re restricting, watch portion sizes as well as choices — your dietitian can give you a daily potassium target to aim for.

Where this fits in the bigger picture

Potassium is just one of four nutrients a renal diet manages, alongside sodium, phosphorus, and protein. For the full framework, see our guide to the renal diet. To round out your food choices, pair this with foods for people with kidney disease and foods to avoid with kidney disease, and put it into practice with the renal diet meal plan.

Suggested read: 17 Foods to Avoid if You Have Kidney Disease

The bottom line

Low-potassium foods — apples, berries, grapes, green beans, cabbage, cauliflower, white grains — make it easy to eat well if you need to keep potassium down, while potatoes, tomatoes, bananas, beans, and dairy are the higher-potassium foods to limit. Leaching lets you keep some of the higher ones in smaller portions, and watching portion sizes keeps your total in check. But the most important step comes before any of this: confirm with your blood tests and your care team whether you actually need to restrict potassium, because many people with early kidney disease don’t — and giving up healthy produce without cause helps no one.

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  1. Ikizler TA, Burrowes JD, Byham-Gray LD, et al. KDOQI Clinical Practice Guideline for Nutrition in CKD: 2020 Update. Am J Kidney Dis. 2020;76(3 Suppl 1):S1-S107. PubMed ↩︎

  2. Sakaguchi Y, Kaimori JY, Isaka Y. Plant-dominant low protein diet: a potential alternative dietary practice for patients with chronic kidney disease. Nutrients. 2023;15(4):1002. PubMed ↩︎

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