Lifestyle changes can lower systolic blood pressure by 5–20 mmHg — comparable to a single medication for some people. Combining several habits matters more than any one magic fix.
1. Cut sodium aggressively
Most Americans exceed 3,400 mg/day. Aim for under 2,300 mg, or 1,500 mg if your doctor recommends it. Read labels — bread, soup, and cheese are hidden sources.
2. Follow DASH-style eating
Emphasize fruits, vegetables, whole grains, lean protein, and low-fat dairy. See our cholesterol-lowering foods guide for overlap.
3. Move 150 minutes per week
Brisk walking, cycling, or swimming. Even 10-minute sessions count. Consistency lowers pressure within weeks.
4. Lose modest weight if overweight
Every 2.2 lb (1 kg) lost can drop systolic pressure roughly 1 mmHg in overweight adults.
5. Limit alcohol
No more than one drink daily for women, two for men — less may be better. Alcohol raises pressure and interacts with medications.
6. Manage stress
Chronic stress elevates cortisol and pressure. Try 10 minutes of deep breathing, prayer, meditation, or gentle yoga daily.
7. Improve sleep
Poor sleep raises blood pressure. Target 7–8 hours — see our sleep guide.
8. Monitor at home
Log readings twice daily for two weeks after any change. Share trends, not single numbers, with your clinician.
When medication is still needed
Natural methods help but aren’t always enough — especially with diabetes, kidney disease, or readings above 140/90 consistently. Never stop prescribed drugs without medical guidance. Read understanding blood pressure for target ranges.
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Medical disclaimer: This article is for general information only and does not replace advice from your doctor or qualified health professional.