Amazon UK lists hundreds of products marketed for kidney health. Quality varies enormously. Use this seven-point checklist before you add to basket.
The 7 checks
- UK address on the label
- MHRA registration if any herbal ingredient is listed
- No 'potassium' or 'phosphate' on the ingredient list
- Vitamin A under 1.5 mg per daily dose
- Vitamin C under 500 mg per daily dose
- Independent third-party test certificate or batch number
- Clear manufacturer — not just an Amazon brand storefront
Common red flags on listings
- 'Kidney detox' or 'kidney cleanse' wording
- Claims to 'cure' or 'reverse' CKD
- No published ingredient list in the listing
If you have CKD
Bottom line
How to read a UK supplement label like a renal pharmacist
- Check the active ingredients table for %NRV. Anything over 200% NRV deserves scrutiny.
- Scan "other ingredients" for potassium chloride/citrate, phosphate salts, and effervescent bicarbonates that hide sodium.
- Look for vitamin A as retinol vs beta-carotene. Beta-carotene-only is safer in CKD.
- Confirm the manufacturer is UK GMP-certified and registered with the FSA or MHRA where relevant.
- Avoid blends marketed as "kidney detox", "renal cleanse" or "uric acid flush".
Practical UK checklist for Buying Kidney Vitamins on Amazon UK: 7 Things to Check First
- Know your numbers. Ask your GP for your most recent eGFR, urine ACR, blood potassium, phosphate, bicarbonate and 25-OH vitamin D.
- Audit what you already take. Lay every supplement, herbal product and sports nutrition pot on the kitchen table. List actives by dose, not by %NRV.
- Cross-check against UK guidance. NICE NG203 for CKD, NG118 for stones, NG136 for hypertension; NHS condition pages for general nutrition.
- Book a pharmacist medicines review. Free on the NHS in England (the New Medicine Service and Structured Medication Reviews) and in equivalent schemes across Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
- Re-evaluate every 3–6 months. Kidney function changes; what was right last year may not be right today.
Common myths vs UK clinical reality
- Myth: 'Kidney cleanses flush toxins.' Reality: The kidneys are the cleansing organ; no UK clinical body endorses 'cleanse' supplements, and several have caused acute kidney injury.
- Myth: 'More vitamins is always better.' Reality: High-dose vitamin A, vitamin C and selenium are linked to harm in CKD; safety lies inside the UK RNI ranges.
- Myth: 'Natural means safe.' Reality: Several herbals (Aristolochia, high-dose liquorice, comfrey) cause kidney injury. Look for MHRA Traditional Herbal Registration (THR) marks.
- Myth: 'Drink as much water as possible.' Reality: Pale-straw urine is the goal in early CKD; advanced CKD and dialysis often require fluid restriction.
Common mistakes UK kidney patients make with supplements
- Reaching for a standard high-street multivitamin. Most contain retinol vitamin A and sometimes added potassium or phosphate — fine for the general population, not ideal in CKD.
- Using "low-sodium" salt as a swap. LoSalt, Solo and similar products are mostly potassium chloride, which can be dangerous in CKD, on ACE inhibitors, ARBs or potassium-sparing diuretics.
- Buying a "kidney cleanse" or "renal detox" blend. No UK clinical body endorses these; several have caused acute kidney injury.
- Stacking single-nutrient mega-doses. Three separate "high-strength" pots often deliver three times the safe ceiling for vitamin A, selenium or zinc.
- Stopping prescribed renal vitamins (Renavit) and replacing them with a supermarket multivitamin. Renavit is designed for dialysis losses; over-the-counter products are not.
- Forgetting to mention supplements at GP and pharmacy reviews. Interactions with warfarin, tacrolimus, ciclosporin and SGLT2 inhibitors are common and easy to miss.
