DASH diet · hypertension

Foods low in Sodium

Mineral mostly consumed as salt (sodium chloride). Excess raises blood pressure in salt-sensitive people.

Why eat low sodium?

For a low-sodium diet, the FDA defines "low sodium" as 140 mg or less per serving. The American Heart Association recommends most adults aim for under 2,300 mg per day, with an ideal target of 1,500 mg for people with hypertension or heart-failure history. The DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) eating pattern emphasises whole foods and explicitly limits added salt.

Around three-quarters of dietary sodium in industrialised diets comes not from the salt shaker but from packaged and restaurant foods, breads, processed meats, soups, sauces, and condiments. That makes label reading and ingredient choice the main lever, not just "use less salt when cooking". Fresh fruits, vegetables, unprocessed meats, and most uncooked grains are naturally low-sodium.

Common high-sodium foods to swap include cured/processed meats, canned soups and broths (look for "low sodium" versions), bottled sauces, ready-meals, and most cheeses (cottage cheese and ricotta are exceptions). Herbs, spices, citrus, vinegar, and aromatic alliums (garlic, onion) can replace salt for flavour without affecting blood pressure.

Similar to Ravioli, meat-filled, with cream sauce, lowest in sodium first

Showing foods similar to Ravioli, meat-filled, with cream sauce
  1. Ravioli, NS as to filling, with cream sauce 234MG per 100 grams
  2. Ravioli, cheese-filled, with tomato sauce 246MG per 100 grams
  3. Pasta, ravioli, meat filling, canned in tomato sauce 260MG per 100 grams
  4. OLIVE GARDEN, cheese ravioli with marinara sauce 269MG per 100 grams
  5. Ravioli, cheese with tomato sauce, frozen, not prepared, includes regular and light entrees 280MG per 100 grams
  6. Babyfood, ravioli, cheese filled, with tomato sauce 282MG per 100 grams
  7. Ravioli, meat-filled, with tomato sauce or meat sauce, canned 283MG per 100 grams
  8. Ravioli, NS as to filling, no sauce 284MG per 100 grams
  9. Restaurant, Italian, cheese ravioli with marinara sauce 306MG per 100 grams
  10. Ravioli, cheese-filled, canned 306MG per 100 grams
  11. Ravioli, cheese-filled, with tomato sauce, canned 306MG per 100 grams
  12. CARRABBA'S ITALIAN GRILL, cheese ravioli with marinara sauce 371MG per 100 grams

Common questions

How much sodium per day is considered "low"?
The FDA defines low-sodium foods as having 140 mg or less per serving. The American Heart Association recommends most adults stay under 2,300 mg per day, with an ideal target of 1,500 mg for people with high blood pressure, kidney disease, or a family history of heart conditions. The UK NHS recommends a 6 g salt cap, which equates to about 2,400 mg of sodium.
What is the difference between salt and sodium?
Table salt (sodium chloride) is about 40% sodium by weight. So 1 gram of salt contains about 400 mg of sodium. Nutrition labels in some countries (UK, EU) show salt, while others (US) show sodium. Multiply salt by 0.4 to get sodium; multiply sodium by 2.5 to get salt.
Are low-sodium packaged products always healthier?
Not automatically. Some products reduce sodium by adding potassium chloride (relevant for people on kidney-restricted diets), and some replace sodium with sugar or fat for palatability. Reading the full ingredient panel matters. Whole, unprocessed foods are the most reliably low-sodium option.
Can I have any salt at all on a low-sodium diet?
Yes, strict zero-sodium diets are rarely needed or even achievable; sodium occurs naturally in many whole foods. The goal is usually to stay below the daily target across all sources. Cooking from scratch with controlled portions of salt is typically lower-sodium than processed alternatives.