The Complete Acid-Forming Foods List: Understanding Acidity, Foods Ranked Low to High, and How to Keep Your Body in Balance
While an alkaline-rich diet protects your bones and overall health, acid-forming foods are not the enemy — many of them are nutritious and belong on your plate. The key is balance. This guide expands on our original acid-forming foods list with a clear low-medium-high ranking and the science behind why excess acidity matters for your bones, hormones, and inflammation levels.
What Are Acid-Forming Foods?
The acid- or alkaline-forming nature of a food has nothing to do with how it tastes before you eat it. What matters is the mineral residue, or “ash,” the food leaves behind once it has been digested and metabolized. Foods high in sulfur, phosphorus, and chloride — such as most meats, dairy, eggs, and refined grains — generate an acidic ash that your body must buffer. To do so, it draws alkaline minerals like calcium, magnesium, and potassium from your bones and tissues. Over time, a chronically acid-forming diet can quietly erode your mineral reserves and weaken your skeleton.
The most acid-forming foods tend to share a few traits: they are high in sulfur-containing amino acids, rich in phosphorus relative to alkaline minerals, often refined or highly processed, and low in potassium and magnesium.
Why Your Body Cares About Acidity
Your blood pH is held in a tight, slightly alkaline range of about 7.35 to 7.45. When acid load from food and lifestyle goes up, your body compensates — first through breath and urine, and then by pulling buffering minerals from bone. Diets dominated by animal protein, refined carbohydrates, soft drinks, and processed foods drive a metabolic acid load that has been linked to bone loss, muscle wasting, kidney stress, and low-grade inflammation. Acid-forming foods aren’t off-limits, but they should make up a smaller share of the plate than alkaline-forming foods.
How to Tell If Your Diet Is Too Acid-Forming
You cannot accurately test your blood pH at home, but you can monitor how hard your body is working to neutralize dietary acid by checking your first-morning urine pH. Use pH strips with a range of 5.5 to 8.0, dip a strip into a small sample of your first urine of the day before eating or drinking, and compare the color to the chart on the package. Track results daily for one to two weeks. A consistently low reading (below 6.5) suggests your body is buffering a heavy acid load and may be tapping into your mineral reserves. For a deeper picture, ask your healthcare provider about a 24-hour urine collection or a serum bicarbonate test.
Acid-Forming Foods Ranked: Low, Medium, and High
The lists below group foods by how strongly they acidify the body. Low-acid foods are mild and fine to eat regularly as part of a balanced, plant-forward diet. Medium-acid foods add a stronger acid load and should be eaten in moderation. High-acid foods are the strongest acid-formers — keep these to occasional rather than daily.
Low-Acid Foods (Mildly Acidifying)
These foods produce only a gentle acid load and can fit easily into a balanced diet.
| Vegetables & Legumes | Fruits | Grains, Nuts & Seeds | Dairy, Protein & Other |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tomatoes | Figs | Brown rice | Butter |
| Swiss chard | Dates | Buckwheat flour | Yogurt |
| Green peas | Guava | Kasha | Curd cheese |
| Baked beans | Plums / Prunes | Sesame oil | Egg whites |
| Kidney beans | Safflower oil | Cream | |
| Split peas | Canola oil | Mayonnaise | |
| White beans | Almond oil | Maple syrup | |
| Garbanzo beans / Chickpeas | Sunflower oil | Stevia | |
| Balsamic / rice vinegar | |||
| Milk | |||
| Black tea | |||
| Tomato juice | |||
| Clams | |||
| Gelatin |
Medium-Acid Foods (Moderately Acidifying)
Enjoy these in modest portions, balanced with plenty of alkaline foods.
| Vegetables & Legumes | Fruits | Grains, Nuts & Seeds | Dairy, Protein & Other |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rhubarb | Cranberries | Whole-wheat bread (100%) | Cottage cheese |
| Spinach | Pomegranates | Rye bread (100%) | Cream cheese |
| Lima beans | Olives (ripe) | Corn tortillas | Whole eggs |
| Carrots (commercial) | Cornmeal | Soybean oil | |
| String beans (with formed beans) | Barley | Peanut oil | |
| Corn (fresh) | White rice | Red wine / white vinegar | |
| Soybeans | Peanuts | Brown or white sugar | |
| Curry powder | Walnuts | Wine | |
| Hazelnuts | Dark beer | ||
| Coffee | |||
| Rice milk | |||
| Salmon | |||
| Haddock | |||
| Duck | |||
| Tuna | |||
| Chicken | |||
| Scallops | |||
| Liver | |||
| Mackerel | |||
| Buffalo | |||
| Catfish |
High-Acid Foods (Strongly Acidifying)
Keep these to occasional treats — they place the heaviest acid load on the body.
| Vegetables & Legumes | Fruits | Grains, Nuts & Seeds | Dairy, Protein & Other |
|---|---|---|---|
| — | — | White flour | Camembert cheese |
| Bagels | American cheese | ||
| Croissants | Ice cream | ||
| Saltine crackers | Cottonseed oil | ||
| White sugar | Corn syrup | ||
| Iodized table salt | Pale beer | ||
| Espresso | |||
| Cola / soft drinks | |||
| Soy milk | |||
| Milkshakes | |||
| Shrimp | |||
| Mussels | |||
| Lobster | |||
| Steak | |||
| Bacon | |||
| Sausage | |||
| Hamburgers | |||
| Beef |
Putting It All Together
A bone-friendly, pH-balanced plate is built around plants. Aim for roughly 70 to 80 percent of your daily food from the alkaline foods list and 20 to 30 percent from the acid-forming list — favoring the low-acid column for the bulk of that 20 to 30 percent. Quality animal proteins, whole grains, and healthy fats absolutely have a place; refined sugar, white flour, soft drinks, and processed meats are the ones to crowd out. Start small: swap one cola for sparkling water with lemon, replace white bread with 100% whole-grain rye, or trade one weekly steak for wild salmon or lentils. Over time, these gentle shifts help your body stop “borrowing” from your bones to buffer dietary acid.
For more on the alkaline approach to lifelong bone health, explore our Alkaline Balance resources and the companion Alkaline-Forming Foods List.
