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Medically reviewed by the Vital Signs Today Medical Review Board. Last updated 18 June 2026. Every range and figure below is drawn from the peer-reviewed and clinical sources listed at the end of this article.

Blood urea nitrogen (BUN) is one of the most common numbers on a routine metabolic panel, and a mildly high reading worries a lot of people unnecessarily. The good news is that the most frequent reasons for an elevated BUN, dehydration and a very high protein intake, are reversible without medication. This guide explains what high actually means, the evidence-based steps that bring the number down, and the signs that mean you should call a clinician instead of adjusting your diet.

Key takeaways

  • A normal adult BUN is roughly 7 to 20 mg/dL, and the single fastest way to lower a mildly high result is to correct dehydration by drinking more water, since concentrated blood raises BUN even when the kidneys are healthy.
  • Cutting an excessive protein intake toward 0.6 to 0.8 g per kg of body weight per day reduces the nitrogen waste your liver converts into urea, lowering BUN in people with chronic kidney disease (KDOQI 2020).
  • A BUN above 20 mg/dL with a BUN-to-creatinine ratio over 20:1 usually points to dehydration or reduced kidney blood flow, not kidney damage, but persistent elevation needs a clinician to interpret it alongside creatinine and eGFR.

What counts as high BUN?

For most adults, a normal BUN is about 7 to 20 mg/dL, so a value above that range is considered high (MedlinePlus). The exact cutoff varies by laboratory, age, and sex, and older adults often sit at the upper end normally. BUN alone rarely tells the full story. Clinicians read it next to creatinine and the calculated BUN-to-creatinine ratio. A normal ratio runs about 10:1 to 20:1, and a ratio above 20:1 typically signals a prerenal cause such as dehydration or reduced blood flow rather than kidney damage itself (StatPearls, NCBI). A very high protein diet, above roughly 180 to 200 g per day, can push BUN into the mid-20s even with perfectly healthy kidneys, which is why context matters before anyone panics about one number.

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Why lower it?

You lower BUN mainly to fix the underlying cause, not to chase the number itself, because BUN is a marker rather than a disease. A persistently elevated BUN above 20 mg/dL can reflect dehydration, a high protein load, gastrointestinal bleeding, heart failure, or reduced kidney function, and each has a different fix (Cleveland Clinic). When urea builds up to very high levels in advanced kidney disease, it contributes to uremia, which causes fatigue, nausea, poor appetite, and confusion. A low-protein diet of 0.6 to 0.8 g per kg per day partly suppresses the nitrogen metabolites that drive these uremic symptoms (KDOQI 2020). The practical reason to act is simple. A high BUN is often an early, easily reversible signal that your body needs more fluid or less dietary protein, and catching it early prevents a small problem from being mistaken for a serious one.

Evidence-based ways to lower BUN

The most effective ways to lower BUN are rehydrating, moderating protein, and treating the medical cause, with diet and fluids resolving most mild cases. Because dehydration concentrates blood and increases urea reabsorption, correcting fluid status often drops BUN within a day or two, while protein changes act over weeks (StatPearls, NCBI).

Diet and fluids

  • Rehydrate first: When you are dehydrated, your kidneys conserve water and reabsorb more urea, raising BUN while creatinine stays steady. Restoring normal fluid intake reverses this prerenal pattern, and a BUN-to-creatinine ratio over 20:1 is the classic fingerprint that points to fluid as the culprit (StatPearls, NCBI).
  • Right-size protein: For people with chronic kidney disease, KDOQI 2020 supports 0.55 to 0.60 g protein per kg per day, or 0.6 to 0.8 g per kg per day for those with diabetes, to cut the nitrogen waste that becomes urea. Healthy adults with normal kidneys do not need this restriction, but trimming an extreme intake from 180 g back toward normal lowers BUN.
  • Limit dehydrating habits: Heavy alcohol and very high caffeine intake can worsen fluid loss, so moderating them supports rehydration.

Lifestyle

  • Recheck timing of testing: Drawing blood after a hard workout, a high-protein meal, or a fasting period without water can transiently raise BUN. A repeat test under normal conditions often reads lower without any other change.
  • Manage blood pressure and blood sugar: High blood pressure and diabetes are the two leading causes of chronic kidney disease in the United States, and controlling both protects the kidney function that keeps urea clearance normal (NIH).
  • Review supplements: High-dose protein powders and creatine can nudge BUN up. Pausing them before a recheck clarifies whether they are the cause.

Medical options

  • Stop or adjust offending medications: Diuretics, NSAIDs, and some blood pressure drugs can raise BUN by reducing kidney blood flow or causing fluid loss. Only a clinician should change these, but adjustment frequently normalizes the number.
  • Treat the source: Gastrointestinal bleeding raises BUN because digested blood is a protein load, and heart failure lowers kidney perfusion. Treating these conditions lowers BUN as a side effect (Cleveland Clinic).
  • Address advanced kidney disease: When BUN is very high from reduced kidney function, management may include intravenous fluids, protein guidance from a renal dietitian, and in end-stage disease, dialysis, which physically removes urea from the blood.

How fast can it change?

A BUN driven by dehydration can fall within 24 to 48 hours of restoring fluids, because rehydration quickly reverses the urea reabsorption that caused the spike (StatPearls, NCBI). Protein-related changes are slower and show up over one to several weeks, since the effect depends on the steady daily load of nitrogen your body processes into urea. By contrast, a BUN elevated by chronic kidney disease changes only as fast as the underlying kidney function and treatment allow, which is why a single high reading is usually rechecked rather than acted on dramatically. The key takeaway is that fluids work fast, diet works gradually, and disease-driven BUN tracks the disease. If your number does not improve after correcting hydration and protein, that pattern itself is useful information for your clinician.

When do you need medication or a doctor?

See a clinician if your BUN stays above 20 mg/dL on a repeat test, if creatinine is also high, or if your eGFR is reduced, because these together suggest the issue is kidney function rather than diet or fluids (Cleveland Clinic). BUN is most meaningful when read alongside creatinine, eGFR, and the BUN-to-creatinine ratio, so self-treating from one number is risky. Seek prompt care if a high BUN comes with warning signs of uremia or serious illness, including persistent nausea or vomiting, swelling in the legs or face, very little urine output, confusion, or signs of gastrointestinal bleeding such as black stools. Do not start or stop any prescription medication, including diuretics or NSAIDs, on your own to lower BUN. Adjusting these drugs requires a clinician who can weigh your full picture, including blood pressure, heart, and kidney status.

Frequently asked questions

Does drinking water lower BUN?

Yes, when the high BUN is caused by dehydration. Rehydrating reverses the urea reabsorption that concentrated blood causes, and BUN can drop within 24 to 48 hours (StatPearls, NCBI). Water will not lower a BUN that is high from kidney disease or a heavy protein load.

What is a dangerously high BUN level?

There is no single danger threshold, but very high BUN often appears in advanced kidney failure and may cause uremic symptoms like nausea and confusion. The value matters most alongside creatinine and eGFR, so a clinician should interpret any markedly elevated result.

Can a high protein diet raise BUN?

Yes. More protein means more amino acid breakdown and more urea. A very high intake above roughly 180 to 200 g per day can raise BUN into the mid-20s even with normal kidneys and good hydration. Trimming protein lowers it over a few weeks.

How long does it take to lower BUN?

It depends on the cause. Dehydration-driven BUN can fall within 24 to 48 hours of rehydrating. Protein-related changes take one to several weeks. BUN from chronic kidney disease changes only as the underlying condition is treated.

Is a BUN of 25 something to worry about?

A BUN of 25 mg/dL is mildly above the typical 7 to 20 range and is often explained by dehydration, a high-protein meal, or recent exercise. Recheck under normal conditions and review it with creatinine and eGFR. Persistent elevation deserves a clinician’s review.

Sources

This article is for general educational purposes and is not medical advice. It cannot diagnose or treat you and does not replace your clinician. Always discuss your lab results and any health decisions with a qualified healthcare professional.