Evidence reviewNutrition & dietEvidence Tier I

What Is the Evidence for the DASH Diet in Reducing Blood Pressure and Mortality?

The DASH diet reduces systolic blood pressure by 8–14 mmHg — equivalent to a first-line antihypertensive drug — and is associated with reduced cardiovascular disease mortality in long-term prospective studies.

Dr. Elena Vasquez, PhD, Nutritional Biochemistry
May 21, 2026
3 min read

The short answer

The DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) diet reduces systolic blood pressure by 8–14 mmHg in hypertensive individuals — a reduction comparable to a first-line antihypertensive medication. It is the most evidence-supported dietary intervention for blood pressure reduction and is associated with significantly lower cardiovascular disease mortality in long-term follow-up studies.

What the evidence actually shows

The original DASH trial (Appel et al., 1997, NEJM) randomised 459 adults to three diets for 8 weeks. The DASH diet — high in fruits, vegetables, low-fat dairy, whole grains, and lean protein, and low in saturated fat, red meat, and added sugar — reduced systolic blood pressure by 11.4 mmHg in hypertensive participants. The DASH-Sodium trial (Sacks et al., 2001, NEJM) demonstrated that combining the DASH diet with sodium restriction (1,500 mg/day) produced a 14 mmHg reduction in systolic blood pressure. A 2008 prospective study by Fung et al. following 88,517 women for 24 years found that higher DASH diet adherence was associated with a 24% lower risk of coronary heart disease and a 18% lower risk of stroke.

"The DASH diet reduced systolic blood pressure by 11.4 mmHg in participants with hypertension — comparable to drug therapy."

Appel et al., New England Journal of Medicine 1997

What the major health authorities say

The NIH National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute developed and strongly endorses the DASH diet as a first-line dietary intervention for hypertension. MedlinePlus identifies the DASH diet as one of the most evidence-based dietary approaches for reducing blood pressure. The NIA recommends a diet rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and low-fat dairy — the core components of DASH — for healthy ageing. The DASH diet has been ranked as the best overall diet by US News & World Report for multiple consecutive years.

Practical implications

The DASH diet is straightforward to implement: aim for 4–5 servings of fruits and vegetables per day, choose whole grains over refined grains, include 2–3 servings of low-fat dairy daily, limit red meat to one serving per week, and reduce sodium intake to 2,300 mg/day (ideally 1,500 mg/day for maximum blood pressure benefit). The potassium, magnesium, and calcium in DASH foods are the primary blood pressure-lowering nutrients. The diet does not require calorie counting and is sustainable long-term.

Vitaei verdict

The DASH diet has the strongest RCT evidence of any dietary pattern for blood pressure reduction, with effects comparable to antihypertensive medication. It is the recommended first-line dietary intervention for hypertension.

Where reasonable people still disagree

  • Whether the DASH diet or the Mediterranean diet provides superior long-term cardiovascular mortality reduction (both have strong evidence, with different mechanistic emphases).
  • The optimal sodium restriction level within DASH — whether 2,300 mg/day or 1,500 mg/day is the appropriate target for most individuals.
  • Whether the blood pressure benefits of DASH are primarily attributable to specific nutrients (potassium, magnesium) or to the overall dietary pattern.

Related Molecules