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The three electrolytes that matter most in a CKD diet are sodium, potassium and phosphorus. Each has a different role, different food sources, and different risks if mismanaged. This guide unifies the targets and the practical food swaps in one reference.

Quick answer: CKD targets (general — confirm with your team): sodium <2000 mg/day, potassium 2000–3000 mg/day (stage 3+), phosphorus 800–1000 mg/day. Read every label and avoid additives starting with ‘phos-‘.

Sodium

  • Drives blood pressure, which drives CKD progression
  • Source: ~70% from processed foods, only ~15% from the salt shaker
  • Target (CKD): <2300 mg, stricter at <1500 mg with hypertension
  • Swap: fresh herbs, citrus, garlic — replace salt-heavy seasonings

Potassium

  • Critical for nerve and cardiac function — too high and too low are both dangerous
  • In CKD stage 3+ the kidneys lose ability to excrete excess potassium
  • High-K to limit: bananas, oranges, potatoes, spinach, tomato sauce, dried fruit
  • Low-K alternatives: apples, berries, cauliflower, cabbage, white rice

Phosphorus

  • Excess accelerates CKD bone & mineral disease (CKD-MBD) and vascular calcification
  • Inorganic phosphate additives (food labels: ‘phos-‘) absorbed ~90% — worst offenders
  • Natural sources (dairy, beans) absorbed ~40–60% — easier to manage
  • Avoid: dark colas, processed meats, processed cheese, instant foods

Putting it together: a sample CKD day

MealWhat to chooseWhat to avoid
BreakfastOats + berries + small eggBacon, processed cereal, OJ
LunchGrilled chicken + cabbage + riceDeli sandwich + chips
SnackApple + small handful of almondsBanana, dried fruit, chips
DinnerBaked fish + cauliflower + quinoaPizza, processed sausage
HydrationWater with lemonCola, energy drinks

For the broader food-to-avoid map, see our CKD foods-to-avoid guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is potassium dangerous in CKD when it’s healthy in general?

Healthy kidneys excrete excess potassium. In CKD they can’t, and serum levels above 5.5 mmol/L cause life-threatening arrhythmias.

How do I know what my targets should be?

Your nephrologist or renal dietitian sets them based on stage, labs and meds. The numbers here are general starting points.

Is there one food I should never eat with CKD?

Star fruit. It’s neurotoxic in CKD. Otherwise it’s about portion and frequency, not ‘never’.

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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