Most people think their salt intake is fine.The problem is not just the salt you add at home — it’s the hidden salt in everyday snacks.
Too much salt over time leads to:
- High blood pressure
- Faster kidney damage
- Increased protein leak (UACR)
- Higher heart risk
How much salt is safe?
Target: less than 5 grams of salt per day(roughly 1 teaspoon from all sources combined)
Most Indian diets end up around 8–12 grams per day, mainly because of packaged and ready-to-eat foods.
Common high-salt snacks in the Indian diet:
- Namkeen / mixture / bhujiaAround 400–700 mg sodium in just 30 gramsVery easy to overeat without realising
- Chips (potato or banana chips)About 500–800 mg sodium per small packetOften eaten mindlessly
- Biscuits (even “light” or tea biscuits)Roughly 150–300 mg sodium in 2–3 biscuitsAdd up quickly with daily tea
- Pickles (achar)Very high salt contentEven small quantities contribute significantly
- Sauces (ketchup, soy sauce)1 tablespoon can contain 300–1000 mg sodiumOften overlooked but important
In this community
Instead of asking, “Can I eat this?”A better question is:“What is the sodium content and how often is it safe?”
Small reductions in salt make a real difference to blood pressure, kidneys, and overall health.