About this guide: Kidney Vitamins for CKD Stage 5 (UK Guide)
This page is written specifically to answer the question implied by its title — Kidney Vitamins for CKD Stage 5 (UK Guide). Everything below is grounded in UK clinical sources: NHS condition pages, NICE guidelines (NG203 for chronic kidney disease, NG118 for kidney stones, NG136 for hypertension), the British Dietetic Association (BDA) renal food fact sheets, and patient guidance from Kidney Care UK and the National Kidney Federation. Where international evidence is referenced, we flag how UK practice differs.
If you are reading this because you or a family member has recently been told about reduced kidney function, an abnormal eGFR, raised creatinine, protein in the urine, kidney stones, or a need to start a renal-friendly diet, the information here is a starting point — not a replacement for the personalised plan your GP, renal consultant or registered dietitian will build with you.
CKD Stage 5 (eGFR roughly < 15 ml/min/1.73 m²) calls for a measured, NHS-aligned approach to vitamins. Here's what UK renal teams typically recommend.
Vitamins to prioritise
- Vitamin D 10 µg daily, especially October–March
- B-complex at standard multivitamin doses
- Modest vitamin C (60–90 mg)
What to avoid at this stage
- Megadose vitamin A (retinol)
- Vitamin C above 500 mg
- Potassium- or phosphate-containing supplements
Blood tests worth tracking
- eGFR and creatinine
- Potassium, phosphate, calcium, bicarbonate
- 25-OH vitamin D, PTH
- Haemoglobin and ferritin
Diet alongside the supplement
Bottom line
What CKD stage 5 (eGFR < 15) means for supplements
At this stage, the priority is to use UK reference-intake doses, avoid added potassium, phosphate and high-dose retinol vitamin A, and to align supplementation with your most recent blood results. Your renal team will already be tracking eGFR, serum potassium, calcium, phosphate, bicarbonate, parathyroid hormone and vitamin D — your supplement plan should sit alongside those numbers, not replace them.
- Cholecalciferol (vitamin D3) at 10–25 µg/day if 25-OH vitamin D is below 50 nmol/L.
- A renal-style B-complex if your team prescribes it (Renavit is standard on the NHS).
- No added potassium chloride, no phosphate-based effervescents, no megadose vitamin A.
- Iron only if ferritin and transferrin saturation suggest deficiency, and after the team decides oral vs intravenous.
What changes by CKD stage
- Stages 1–2 (eGFR ≥ 60): focus on blood pressure, salt, weight and avoiding nephrotoxic drugs.
- Stage 3a (eGFR 45–59): annual blood tests, vitamin D status checked.
- Stage 3b (eGFR 30–44): phosphate and potassium checked at least twice a year; review supplements.
- Stage 4 (eGFR 15–29): formal renal dietitian input; plan for renal replacement therapy.
- Stage 5 (eGFR < 15): dialysis or transplant decisions; tightly individualised diet and supplement plan.
Practical UK checklist for Kidney Vitamins for CKD Stage 5 (UK Guide)
- 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.
How this fits into UK kidney care
Routine NHS kidney monitoring in adults uses two simple tests: serum creatinine (used to calculate eGFR) and a urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio (ACR). NICE NG203 sets out how often these should be repeated by stage, and when to refer to a renal team. Charities such as Kidney Care UK and the National Kidney Federation publish UK-specific patient information that complements anything you read in this guide.
When to speak to your GP
- Persistent foamy urine, swollen ankles or unexplained fatigue.
- An eGFR below 60 mL/min/1.73 m² on two tests at least 90 days apart.
- Considering any new supplement when you have CKD, are on dialysis, or have had a transplant.
- A family history of kidney disease, diabetes or high blood pressure under 50.
Patient Q&A: plain-English answers
Medically reviewed for UK patients. This Q&A is general information, not a replacement for personal advice from your GP, renal team or registered dietitian.
In plain English, what is this guide on "Kidney Vitamins for CKD Stage 5 (UK Guide)" actually telling me?
What vitamins make sense for adults with CKD Stage 5 (eGFR < 15) in the UK — referenced to NHS and NICE NG203. The short version: read this whole page if kidney vitamins for ckd stage 5 (uk guide) is directly relevant to you, and use the TL;DR box at the top if you only have a minute.
Is kidney vitamins for ckd stage 5 (uk guide) safe for me if I have kidney disease?
Your CKD stage tells you how much kidney function you have left and how often you need bloods. Stage 1–2 usually only needs an annual check; stage 3b onwards usually means quarterly bloods and a renal dietitian review. The detail on how this specifically applies to kidney vitamins for ckd stage 5 (uk guide) is in the deep-dive section above.
How much should I have, and how often?
The page above gives UK-specific doses, portion sizes or frequencies. If you have CKD, are on dialysis, are pregnant, are over 65, or take regular medication, treat those numbers as a starting point and confirm them with your GP, pharmacist or renal dietitian before changing anything.
Will kidney vitamins for ckd stage 5 (uk guide) interact with my usual medicines?
Common UK medicines that interact with supplements and foods include warfarin, ACE inhibitors (ramipril, lisinopril), ARBs (losartan, candesartan), diuretics (furosemide, spironolactone), PPIs (omeprazole, lansoprazole), metformin, statins and immunosuppressants (tacrolimus, ciclosporin). If you take any of these, ask your community pharmacist for a free Medicines Use Review before adding anything new.
What should I look for on the UK label or menu?
For supplements: check the actives table for the dose (not just %NRV), scan the 'other ingredients' line for added potassium chloride, phosphate salts or hidden sodium bicarbonate, and prefer beta-carotene over retinol. For food: check the back-of-pack salt (red traffic light is over 1.5 g per 100 g) and the additives list for phosphate codes E338–E452.
When should I actually speak to my GP or kidney team?
Speak to your GP if you have new ankle swelling, foamy urine, blood in the urine, unexplained tiredness, an eGFR below 60 on two tests 90 days apart, or before starting any new supplement when you already have CKD, are on dialysis, or have had a transplant.
Frequently asked questions
What does eGFR mean?
eGFR is the estimated glomerular filtration rate — a calculated measure of how well the kidneys filter blood, in mL/min/1.73 m².
What is a normal eGFR?
Above 90 is normal. 60–89 is stage 2, 30–59 is stage 3, 15–29 is stage 4, below 15 is stage 5.
Can CKD be reversed?
Established CKD is usually progressive, but progression can be slowed substantially with blood pressure, glucose and lifestyle control.
Do supplements change by stage?
Yes. Vitamin A and potassium-containing products become riskier from stage 3b onward; B vitamins become more important on dialysis.
How often should I have blood tests?
NICE NG203 suggests annually in stages 1–2, twice yearly in stage 3, three to four times a year in stages 4–5.
Looking for a kidney-conscious daily multivitamin?
Kidney Vitality is a UK-made daily supplement designed by a UK Consultant Nephrologist. It follows the same kidney-conscious principles described above — no megadose vitamin A (retinol), no added potassium, no added phosphate, no added magnesium — with a moderate B-complex, 400 IU vitamin D3, and kidney-friendly vitamin C. Manufactured in a UK GMP-certified facility (BRCGS, NSF GMP, Halal).
- Designed around NICE NG203 and KDOQI kidney nutrition principles
- Avoids the four ingredients UK renal dietitians most often flag
- 30 vegetarian capsules — one a day with food
- Free UK delivery on multi-packs
See Kidney Vitality → · Read the full kidney-friendly multivitamin guide
Food supplement. Not a medicine and not a treatment for kidney disease. Speak with your renal team before starting any new supplement if you have advanced CKD, are on dialysis, post-transplant, pregnant or breastfeeding.
About the clinical reviewer
This article was written and clinically reviewed by Professor Mohammed Mahdi Althaf — UK Consultant Nephrologist & Acute Physician (GMC 7216325), MD, MSc, PgDip (Clin Ed), FRCP, FHEA, FASN. Professor Althaf founded Kidney Vitality and leads all clinical and educational content on this site. Our content is grounded in NICE NG203 (chronic kidney disease in adults), KDOQI 2020 Nutrition in CKD, NHS guidance, and British Dietetic Association renal resources. We do not accept payment from supplement brands for editorial coverage.
This is general nutrition information, not personal medical advice. Always discuss new supplements with your GP, renal team or kidney specialist pharmacist — particularly if you have CKD stage 3b–5, are on dialysis, post-transplant, pregnant, or take ACE inhibitors, ARBs or potassium-sparing diuretics.
