The VerdictMODERATE CONVICTIONWorth-It: Situational ROI (66/100)

Potassium lowers blood pressure and prevents strokes — but only if you get the dose right, and OTC supplements can't.

Switch your cooking salt. Swap regular table salt (100% sodium chloride) for a potassium-enriched version — LoSalt or NoSalt are 75% NaCl / 25% KCl. This single change is backed by a 20,000-person trial showing 14% fewer strokes and 12% fewer deaths. It costs about £3–5 per month and requires zero pills. If you take ACE inhibitors, ARBs, or water tablets — get a blood test first.

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Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.
Vitamins & Minerals

Potassium

Blood Pressure & Sodium Balance

CONDITIONAL
Switch your table salt to a 75%/25% potassium-enriched blend (LoSalt or NoSalt). That's the exact intervention tested in a 20,000-person trial.
If you take ACE inhibitors, ARBs (blood pressure medications), or water tablets — get a blood test before changing anything. The interaction is potentially serious. For everyone else: this £3–5/month salt swap has more evidence behind it than almost any supplement you can buy.
Potassium genuinely lowers blood pressure and prevents strokes — but only if you get the dose right, and OTC supplements can't deliver it.
Potassium is an essential mineral your body uses to balance every cell — found naturally in bananas, potatoes, avocados, and most vegetables. Think of it as a counterweight to sodium: when you eat too much salt, your body holds onto fluid and your blood vessels tighten. Potassium tells the kidneys to flush sodium out and helps the blood vessel walls relax. The key insight from the last decade of research is that it's not about hitting a specific potassium number — it's about fixing the ratio of sodium to potassium in your diet. And the most effective way to do that isn't a capsule — it's changing what salt you cook with.
  1. 1 The verdict: Potassium genuinely reduces blood pressure and cuts cardiovascular risk — a 20,000-person trial over five years found that switching to potassium-enriched salt reduced strokes by 14% and deaths by 12%.
  2. 2 What most people get wrong: OTC potassium capsules at pharmacies are legally capped at 99mg per serving — less than 3% of the therapeutic dose — because high-dose solid tablets caused small-bowel injuries in the 1960s. These pills cannot produce the effects the trials showed.
  3. 3 Start here: Replace regular table salt with a potassium-enriched cooking salt (75% sodium chloride / 25% potassium chloride) for all home cooking. That's one swap, costs about £3–5 per month, and is the exact intervention in the landmark trial.
Best for
Adults with high blood pressure eating a high-sodium Western diet; anyone wanting to reduce cardiovascular risk; recurrent kidney stone formers (potassium citrate, separately).
Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling.

The Protocol

Potassium protocol

Dosing by Population

Population Approach Daily Target Form Source
Adults with hypertension Salt substitution + high-vegetable diet >3,500 mg/day total; ~1,170 mg supplemental above baseline Potassium-enriched salt, dietary increase EFSA 2016; Poorolajal 2017
Recurrent kidney stone formers (calcium oxalate) Prescription K-citrate — requires urologist assessment 30–60 mEq/day (1,170–2,340 mg K) Potassium citrate (prescription) Soygur 2002; AUA guidelines
Keto / very-low-carb dieters Daily supplemental replacement (insulin-driven renal losses) 2,000–3,000 mg/day supplemental Potassium bicarbonate or citrate powder Metabolic ward studies

Forms Comparison

Form Bioavailability GI Tolerance Best For Notes
Potassium citrate ~94% Moderate Kidney stone prevention, bone health, alkaline load Alkalinises urine; reduces urinary calcium; prescription at therapeutic doses
Potassium bicarbonate ~94% Moderate Bone health, reducing urinary calcium, keto Provides alkaline anion; dissolves easily in water
Potassium gluconate ~94% Good General supplementation Gentler on the stomach than KCl; lower K density per gram
OTC potassium capsules (99mg) ~94% Excellent Clinically: nothing meaningful FDA cap = <3% of therapeutic dose per serving; cannot produce BP effects
Food (potato, banana, avocado) ~94% Excellent All populations; DASH-pattern eating Comes with fibre, Mg, Ca matrix — superior to isolated K supplements

Absorption tips

  • Bioavailability is not the problem — potassium absorbs at ~94% from all forms. The limiting factor is dose, not absorption.
  • The co-anion determines the additional benefit: KCl is best for BP and hypokalemia correction. K-citrate and K-bicarbonate add alkalinising effects — better for bone health and kidney stones.
  • Fix magnesium first if supplementation isn't working. Mg deficiency leaves the renal ROMK channel open, causing continuous K+ wasting in urine. Potassium supplementation without adequate Mg is largely futile in Mg-deficient states.
  • Spread doses across meals to minimise GI side effects at higher intakes.
  • Avoid solid high-dose KCl tablets — historical association with small-bowel ulceration. Powder, liquid, or food-form is safer.

Safety & Interactions

Safety profile

⚠ Critical Interaction Warning

If you take ACE inhibitors (lisinopril, ramipril), ARBs (losartan, valsartan), potassium-sparing diuretics (spironolactone, amiloride), or have chronic kidney disease — do NOT increase potassium intake without a blood test first. These conditions impair your kidneys' ability to excrete potassium, making hyperkalemia (dangerously high blood potassium) a real risk. Severe hyperkalemia can cause fatal cardiac arrhythmias.

Drug Interactions

Medication What Happens Severity Action
ACE inhibitors (lisinopril, ramipril) Suppresses aldosterone → reduces renal K+ excretion → hyperkalemia risk Severe Monitor serum K+ if switching to potassium-enriched salt; avoid high-dose K+ supplements
ARBs (losartan, valsartan) Blocks angiotensin II → aldosterone suppression → K+ retention Severe Same as ACE inhibitors — medical supervision required
K-sparing diuretics (spironolactone, amiloride) Blocks epithelial Na channels or aldosterone receptors — profound hyperkalemia risk Potentially Fatal Potassium supplements and potassium-enriched salt are CONTRAINDICATED
NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen) Reduces GFR, impairs K+ elimination; triples hyperkalemia risk when combined with RAAS drugs or CKD Severe Avoid potassium loading with chronic NSAID use; especially dangerous with spironolactone
Digoxin K+ and digoxin compete for Na+/K+-ATPase. Hypokalemia → fatal digoxin toxicity. Hyperkalemia → digoxin inefficacy. Severe (both directions) Maintain serum K+ strictly at 3.6–5.0 mmol/L; no unsupervised supplementation
Loop diuretics (furosemide) Causes continuous K+ wasting (hypokalemia) — opposite direction Moderate Supplementation may be required — but only under medical supervision
Magnesium (deficiency) Mg required to block ROMK channel — deficiency causes refractory K+ wasting in urine Moderate Correct Mg deficiency first; K+ supplementation without Mg will fail in Mg-deficient states

Contraindicated Populations

Upper Limit

No tolerable upper intake level (UL) has been established by NASEM or EFSA for dietary potassium in healthy adults — normal kidneys efficiently excrete excess. The concern is entirely with supplemental forms in people with impaired renal excretion.

Clinical hyperkalemia threshold: serum K+ >5.0 mmol/L. Life-threatening: >6.0 mmol/L (cardiac arrest risk).

MODERATE

The evidence for blood pressure and cardiovascular effects is HIGH — but only via dietary potassium and salt substitutes. OTC supplement pills (99mg) cannot deliver the therapeutic dose. Overall conviction is capped at MODERATE because the delivery mechanism consumers typically choose is ineffective.

BP reduction
(hypertensives)
HIGH
CVD events
(salt substitute)
HIGH
Kidney stones
(K-citrate)
HIGH
BP prevention
(normotensives)
MODERATE
OTC pills
(99mg)
LOW
What would change this verdict
To upgrade OTC supplementation from LOW to HIGH: a 5-year multi-centre RCT (N>10,000) comparing dietary salt substitution vs. high-dose oral potassium powder (not the capped 99mg tablets) showing equivalent MACE and stroke reduction. This would establish isolated oral supplementation as a viable alternative to salt substitution — a question the current trial base hasn't answered.

Worth Your Money?

Weekly cost £0.75–1.25/week for potassium-enriched salt (replaces your regular table salt — same usage, slightly higher cost). OTC capsules: £2–3/week for a clinically irrelevant dose.
Worth it if You eat a high-sodium diet, have high blood pressure, or want to meaningfully reduce cardiovascular risk. The evidence here is about as strong as supplement research gets — a 20,000-person trial with hard clinical endpoints (stroke, death).
Lower priority if Your diet is already rich in vegetables, legumes, and minimal processed food — you're likely getting adequate potassium. Spending money on OTC capsules is a lower priority than any dietary change that increases fruit and vegetable intake.
Conditional Value

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Sources

Action ROI

Is this worth your time, money, effort, risk, and trust for this goal? Different from Verdict Score (evidence strength) and Leverage Map (relative importance) — Action ROI is the worth-it call once friction is priced in.

Action ROI score
66/100 Situational ROI Trust grade B
Yes, but as a salt swap, not a pill. Switching to potassium-enriched salt has strong evidence; the 99mg capsules sold for blood pressure are too weak to do anything.
Time
Low
Money
Low
Effort
Low
Risk
Medium
Why this score
Why it didn’t score higher
Best for
Lower ROI if
Minimum effective dose
Replace table and cooking salt with a potassium-enriched salt (75 percent sodium chloride, 25 percent potassium chloride, e.g. LoSalt, NoSalt); no specific milligram target needed. For kidney stones, potassium citrate 30 to 60 mEq/day by prescription. OTC 99mg capsules do not reach a therapeutic blood pressure dose.
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