High blood pressure is common, usually silent, and a major risk factor for heart attacks and strokes — but it is also one of the most responsive conditions to everyday habits. Plenty of people can nudge their readings down, sometimes substantially, through changes that cost little and benefit the rest of their health too. This is general information, not medical advice: if you have high blood pressure or take medication for it, work with your GP or use trusted NHS guidance, and never stop a prescribed treatment on your own.

What it means to lower it naturally

Lowering blood pressure naturally means using diet, activity, weight and other lifestyle factors — rather than, or alongside, medication — to bring the pressure in your arteries down toward a healthy range. It is not an alternative to medical care; for many people the two work together, and lifestyle changes can sometimes reduce the dose of medication needed.

If you are unsure what the figures on a monitor actually mean, it is worth first getting to grips with how blood pressure is measured and what the numbers signify. From there, the changes below are the ones with the strongest evidence behind them.

Cut down on salt

Of all the dietary levers, salt is among the most powerful. Eating too much salt makes the body hold on to water, which raises the volume of blood and the pressure in your arteries.

The catch is that most dietary salt is not added at the table — it is hidden in everyday processed foods: bread, breakfast cereals, sauces, ready meals, processed meats and many restaurant and takeaway dishes. The NHS recommends adults eat no more than 6 grams of salt a day, roughly a teaspoon. Practical steps:

  • Check labels and choose lower-salt versions; "green" or "low" salt labels help.
  • Cook from scratch more often, where you control the seasoning.
  • Flavour food with herbs, spices, garlic, lemon or pepper instead of salt.
  • Go easy on obvious culprits like crisps, cured meats and stock cubes.

Cutting salt can lower blood pressure within weeks, and the effect is often greatest in those who already have raised readings.

Move more

Regular physical activity strengthens the heart so it pumps blood with less effort, which lowers the pressure in your arteries. You do not need to become an athlete. Most guidelines suggest aiming for around 150 minutes of moderate activity a week — brisk walking, cycling, swimming or anything that gets you a little out of breath.

Even modest, consistent movement helps, and the easiest place to start is often on foot; our look at the benefits of walking explains why it punches above its weight. If you are starting from a low base, the trick is to make it a habit rather than a one-off effort and build up gradually.

Reach and keep a healthy weight

Carrying excess weight, particularly around the middle, raises blood pressure. The encouraging part is that you do not need to reach an "ideal" weight to benefit: losing even a modest amount can lower readings, and the effect grows with each kilogram lost. Combining better eating with more activity is more effective and more sustainable than crash dieting.

Eat for your blood pressure

Beyond salt, the overall pattern of your diet matters. The eating approach with the strongest evidence is DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension), which emphasises:

  • Plenty of vegetables and fruit
  • Wholegrains rather than refined carbohydrates
  • Beans, pulses, nuts and seeds
  • Low-fat dairy and lean proteins
  • Less red and processed meat, sugary foods and saturated fat

Many of these foods are rich in potassium, which helps balance the effects of sodium and relax blood vessel walls. Bananas, leafy greens, beans and potatoes are good sources (though anyone with kidney problems should check with a clinician before increasing potassium). Eating well on a budget is entirely possible — our guide to meal planning on a budget shows how.

Drink less alcohol

Regularly drinking more than the recommended limits raises blood pressure over time. The UK guideline is to drink no more than 14 units a week, spread over several days with some drink-free days. Cutting back if you currently drink heavily can lower blood pressure noticeably, and also helps with weight and sleep.

Stop smoking

Each cigarette causes a temporary spike in blood pressure, and smoking damages artery walls over time, raising the long-term risk of heart disease and stroke. Stopping is one of the single best things you can do for your cardiovascular health, and the benefits begin within hours. NHS stop-smoking services and products genuinely improve your chances of success.

Sleep, stress and caffeine

These factors are more indirect but still worth attention:

  • Sleep — poor or too-little sleep is linked to higher blood pressure. Aiming for enough good-quality sleep helps; our guide to how much sleep you need sets out sensible targets.
  • Stress — chronic stress encourages habits that push pressure up, such as poor eating, drinking and inactivity. Managing it pays off in several ways.
  • Caffeine — large amounts can cause short-term spikes in some people, though moderate intake is fine for most.

Monitor and stay in touch with your GP

Because high blood pressure is usually symptomless, the only way to know whether your changes are working is to measure. Many pharmacies offer free checks, and home monitors are inexpensive. Take readings calmly, sitting and rested, and keep a note of them.

Crucially, lifestyle changes complement medical care rather than replace it. If your readings are persistently high, or very high, or you have other risk factors, speak to your GP. Do not start, stop or alter blood pressure medication on your own — that is always a conversation with a health professional.

The bottom line

Blood pressure responds well to everyday habits: cutting salt, moving more, losing excess weight, eating a DASH-style diet rich in vegetables and potassium, drinking less alcohol, stopping smoking and sleeping well can all help bring it down. These changes work best together and alongside, not instead of, medical advice. Measure regularly to see what is working, and keep your GP in the loop — especially before changing any medication.