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Lemon water is the one ‘kidney trick’ urologists actually recommend — but only for one specific reason: lemon juice raises urinary citrate, which inhibits calcium-oxalate stone formation. It does not ‘alkalize’ your body (your kidneys already manage pH precisely).

Quick answer: 1/2 cup of fresh lemon juice mixed in water daily raises urinary citrate and reduces calcium-oxalate stone risk. Use the juice of 2 fresh lemons, diluted in 1.5 L water sipped over the day. Skip if you have GERD or thin enamel.

Why lemon water works for stones

Calcium-oxalate is the most common kidney stone type (~75%). Urinary citrate is a natural stone inhibitor — it binds calcium and prevents crystal aggregation. Lemon juice provides ~5.9 g of citric acid per 100 ml — more than orange juice, with much less sugar.

Lemon water recipe (urology-aligned)

  • Juice 2 fresh lemons (~60 ml juice)
  • Add to 1.5 L water
  • Sip across the day — not in one go
  • Use a straw if you’re worried about enamel
  • No sugar; sweetness defeats the purpose

Lemon water for non-stone kidney support

Even without stones, lemon water nudges hydration up — most people drink more of a flavored water than plain water. That alone supports kidney health. See our hydration guide for the targets.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does lemon water alkalize the body?

No. Your kidneys precisely control serum pH; food can’t shift it meaningfully. The benefit is urinary citrate, not ‘alkalizing’.

How long until stones decrease?

Trials measure recurrence over 12–24 months. Combine with low sodium and adequate calcium for best effect.

Bottled lemon juice or fresh?

Fresh delivers the most citrate and the least added sodium/preservatives.

Sources & Further Reading

This article is for educational purposes. James Rivera is a researcher, not a physician. If you have chronic kidney disease (CKD), are on dialysis, take prescription medication, or are pregnant, consult your nephrologist before changing your diet.

How we research: Articles on Kidneys Detox are written by our editorial team using AI-augmented research workflows. We summarise evidence from peer-reviewed studies and authoritative bodies including the National Kidney Foundation, the NIH, Mayo Clinic, and peer-reviewed nephrology journals. Nothing on this site is medical advice. Talk to your licensed physician before changing diet, medication, or exercise routines.

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