Stage 3 CKD means your kidneys are filtering at 30–59% of normal — a range that sounds alarming but is also where most people can hold the line for years. This guide covers what stage 3 actually means, what you can do right now, and the latest treatment advances changing how nephrologists manage this condition.
Your kidneys are measured by a number called eGFR — short for estimated glomerular filtration rate. Think of it as a percentage of how well your kidneys are cleaning your blood. A healthy young adult typically has an eGFR above 90. Stage 3 CKD falls between 30 and 59, which doctors split into two sub-stages: Stage 3a (eGFR 45–59, mild-to-moderate loss) and Stage 3b (eGFR 30–44, moderate-to-severe loss). This matters because stage 3b carries a meaningfully higher risk of heart disease and faster progression, so your care plan needs to be more proactive. Roughly 14% of U.S. adults have CKD, and most are diagnosed for the first time right here in stage 3. The encouraging part: many people with stage 3 never advance to stage 4 or 5. Staying there — not progressing — is the primary goal of treatment.
Understanding the full staging picture helps you know how serious your situation is compared to earlier and later stages, and what to expect in terms of monitoring and treatment intensity.
| CKD Stage | eGFR Range | Kidney Function | Typical Focus |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stage 1 | 90 or aboveKidney damage present but function normal | 90–100% | Address root cause (diabetes, blood pressure), lifestyle monitoring |
| Stage 2 | 60–89Mild reduction in function | 60–89% | Blood pressure control, urine protein monitoring, lifestyle |
| Stage 3a YOU ARE HERE | 45–59Mild to moderate reduction | 45–59% | Medications to slow progression, diet adjustments, quarterly labs |
| Stage 3b YOU ARE HERE | 30–44Moderate to severe reduction | 30–44% | Nephrology co-management, anemia screening, bone health monitoring |
| Stage 4 | 15–29Severe reduction | 15–29% | Prepare for possible kidney replacement options (dialysis / transplant) |
| Stage 5 Kidney Failure | Below 15Or on dialysis | Less than 15% | Dialysis or kidney transplant required |
The questions that show up most in doctors’ offices and search engines — answered directly, without jargon. These aren’t one-size answers, but they give you a truthful starting point for conversations with your care team.
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Is stage 3 kidney disease serious? Can it be reversed? Serious but manageable · Not reversible but progression can be stopped or slowed · Many people remain at stage 3 for the rest of their lives with proper careStage 3 is the most common stage at which CKD is first detected, which tells you something important: your kidneys didn’t fail overnight, and they won’t without warning. The damage that has already occurred is not reversible — scar tissue doesn’t regenerate. But the kidneys you have now can still do a lot of work, and the evidence is clear that the right combination of medication, blood pressure control, and diet changes can halt progression for years — sometimes indefinitely. The danger in stage 3 is complacency. People feel fine, symptoms are subtle, and it’s easy to let follow-up appointments slide. That’s exactly when progression sneaks up. Stage 3b patients who let blood pressure drift or keep taking ibuprofen regularly are the ones who end up at stage 4. The people who stabilize are the ones who treat their eGFR number like a dashboard warning light — not something to panic over, but something to take seriously every single day.
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What is the life expectancy of a person with stage 3 kidney disease? Variable based on age, underlying conditions, and how well it’s managed · Under age 60 with good management: 10–20+ years is realistic · Many older adults with stage 3 never progress to kidney failureLife expectancy with stage 3 CKD is genuinely hard to state as a number, because it depends on age at diagnosis, what caused the CKD in the first place, and how aggressively it’s managed. A 70-year-old diagnosed with stage 3a who also has well-controlled blood pressure and no protein in the urine may live another 15–20 years and never need dialysis. A 55-year-old with stage 3b, uncontrolled diabetes, and significant proteinuria faces a meaningfully different trajectory. What the research consistently shows is this: CKD does not kill most people with stage 3 — heart disease does. People with any level of reduced kidney function have an elevated cardiovascular risk, which is why cardiorenal protection (medications that protect both the heart and the kidneys at the same time) has become the central focus of modern CKD treatment. Protect the heart, and you protect the prognosis.
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What are the signs that stage 3 kidney disease is getting worse? Key warning signs: eGFR dropping more than 5 points per year · New or worsening fatigue · Increased swelling in legs and feet · Shortness of breath · Increased protein in urine (your lab report will show this) · Rising blood pressure that was previously controlledSome of the most important signals that stage 3 is progressing are invisible without labs — which is exactly why quarterly blood and urine tests are essential, not optional. On the lab side, a drop in eGFR of more than 5 points per year is a flag that warrants a conversation with your nephrologist about adjusting your treatment plan. Rising albumin in the urine (called proteinuria) is an especially sensitive early warning — it means the kidney filters are becoming leaky, which accelerates damage. On the symptom side, new fatigue that isn’t explained by poor sleep, puffiness around the ankles or eyes in the morning, foamy or bubbly urine, and a metallic taste in the mouth can all indicate that waste products are building up. Many people in stage 3, especially stage 3a, have no symptoms at all — which is why the lab numbers matter more than how you feel.
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What is the best treatment for stage 3 kidney disease right now? No single drug — it’s a combination approach: blood pressure control (ACE inhibitors or ARBs), SGLT2 inhibitors for most patients, blood sugar management if diabetic, kidney-friendly diet, and avoiding medications that harm kidneysThe treatment landscape for stage 3 CKD has changed significantly in the past few years. Blood pressure control is still the foundation — targeting below 130/80 mm Hg, typically with ACE inhibitors or ARBs, which both lower pressure and reduce protein leakage in the urine. On top of that, SGLT2 inhibitors — a drug class originally created for diabetes — have now been approved to slow kidney disease progression regardless of whether a patient is diabetic. Drugs like dapagliflozin (Farxiga) and empagliflozin (Jardiance) have strong trial evidence showing they reduce the risk of kidney failure and cardiovascular death. For patients with type 2 diabetes and CKD, semaglutide (Ozempic) received FDA approval in January 2025 specifically for this indication, showing a 24% reduction in kidney-worsening events. For patients without diabetes, the SGLT2 class is now considered foundational by most U.S. nephrologists. Finerenone (Kerendia), a newer mineral receptor antagonist, is another option for patients with diabetic kidney disease. Your doctor will combine these based on your specific eGFR level, proteinuria, and other conditions.
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What is the creatinine level for stage 3 kidney disease? Creatinine is a waste product your kidneys filter — there’s no single “stage 3” creatinine number, because it varies by age, sex, and muscle mass · eGFR (30–59) is the diagnostic standard, not creatinine alone · As a rough reference: many adults in stage 3 have creatinine between 1.5 and 3.0 mg/dLCreatinine is a byproduct of muscle metabolism that healthy kidneys filter out constantly. When kidneys work less efficiently, creatinine accumulates in the blood. But the creatinine number alone doesn’t tell the full story, because a muscular 30-year-old and a petite 75-year-old woman can have the same creatinine level but very different kidney function. That’s why doctors use eGFR — which takes your creatinine, age, sex, and race into account to calculate a more accurate picture. That said, for adults with stage 3 CKD, serum creatinine typically falls in the range of about 1.5 to 3.0 mg/dL, depending on the individual. Some labs will print eGFR automatically whenever creatinine is measured, but if yours doesn’t, ask your doctor to calculate it. Creatinine trending upward over time — even within “normal-looking” ranges — can be an early warning that function is declining.
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Should I be seeing a nephrologist, or is my regular doctor enough? Stage 3a: your primary care doctor can often manage with guidelines · Stage 3b: a nephrologist co-managing your care is strongly recommended · If you have significant protein in your urine, rapidly declining eGFR, or poorly controlled blood pressure despite medications — see a nephrologist regardless of stagePrimary care doctors do a solid job managing early CKD, but stage 3b is the point where having a kidney specialist (nephrologist) in your corner makes a measurable difference. Research shows patients who see a nephrologist are more likely to have their urine protein measured, receive ACE inhibitors or ARBs, and get screened for complications like anemia and bone disease. In stage 3b, those complications — low red blood cells, calcium and phosphorus imbalances, elevated parathyroid hormone — are starting to become real possibilities, and they need to be caught before they become problems. Most nephrologists want to see stage 3b patients every three to six months. Don’t wait for your primary care doctor to refer you — if your eGFR is consistently below 45, it’s reasonable to ask directly for a nephrology referral. The wait time to see a kidney specialist in many U.S. cities has grown, so the sooner you get on that list, the better.
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What medications should I avoid with stage 3 kidney disease? Avoid or minimize: NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen, Advil, Aleve, Motrin) — these reduce blood flow to the kidneys and accelerate damage · Always tell your doctor and pharmacist about your CKD before starting any new drug or supplementThis is one of the most important and most frequently missed pieces of stage 3 management. NSAIDs — the pain relievers found in Advil, Motrin, Aleve, and countless cold and flu formulas — are damaging to kidneys at any stage of CKD. They constrict the blood vessels that supply the kidneys, reducing their filtering ability. For someone with already-reduced kidney function, even short-term NSAID use can permanently accelerate decline. Acetaminophen (Tylenol) is generally considered safe at recommended doses and is the preferred over-the-counter pain option for most CKD patients, though you should confirm this with your doctor based on your liver health. Beyond pain relievers, some supplements are problematic — high-dose vitamin C, herbal products containing aristolochic acid (found in some traditional Chinese herbs), and certain antacids high in aluminum or magnesium can also stress the kidneys. Many people don’t think to mention supplements to their doctor, assuming they’re harmless. With CKD, they’re not automatically harmless. Bring a full list of everything you take — prescriptions, over-the-counter drugs, vitamins, and supplements — to every appointment.
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Do I really need to change my diet, or do people overstate that? Diet changes are genuinely powerful in stage 3 — but “kidney diet” advice is often outdated and too generic · Potassium restriction is NOT automatic — it’s only needed if your blood potassium is actually elevated · Reducing sodium and processed food is universally helpful · Work with a renal dietitian, not a generic food listHere’s the nuance that most generic kidney disease guides miss: whether you need to restrict potassium, phosphorus, or protein depends heavily on your individual lab values, not your stage alone. Cutting potassium when your potassium level is normal can actually raise your blood pressure — one of the fastest ways to accelerate CKD progression. What is universally beneficial in stage 3: reducing sodium (aim for under 2,300 mg per day — roughly one teaspoon of salt), avoiding phosphate additives in processed foods, and being thoughtful about protein quantity and quality. For protein, the typical recommendation in stage 3 is around 0.8 grams per kilogram of body weight daily. Good protein sources at this stage include egg whites, fish, skinless poultry, and tofu. Whole grains contain more phosphorus than white rice or white bread, which sometimes surprises people. The single best investment you can make for your kidney diet is one or two appointments with a registered dietitian who specializes in kidney disease — called a renal dietitian. A personalized plan based on your actual labs beats any generic list.
Use the buttons below to locate nephrologists, kidney dietitians, CKD support groups, and dialysis centers in your area. Your care team is the single most important resource for managing stage 3 CKD.
- Step 1: Confirm your diagnosis. Stage 3 CKD requires two eGFR readings below 60, at least 90 days apart. Ask when your next confirming lab is scheduled if you were only tested once.
- Step 2: Control blood pressure to below 130/80 mm Hg. This is the single most evidence-backed action for slowing CKD progression. If you’re not there yet, talk to your doctor about adjusting your medications.
- Step 3: Ask about SGLT2 inhibitors. Medications like Farxiga and Jardiance are now recommended for most people with CKD — with or without diabetes — and reduce kidney failure risk significantly.
- Step 4: Stop NSAIDs. Switch from ibuprofen, naproxen, and Aleve to acetaminophen (Tylenol at recommended doses) for everyday pain. Report all your supplements and over-the-counter drugs to your doctor.
- Step 5: See a renal dietitian. A personalized plan based on your labs beats generic advice. Sodium reduction helps almost everyone; other restrictions depend on your individual bloodwork.
- Step 6: If your eGFR is below 45, ask for a nephrologist referral — even if your primary care doctor hasn’t suggested it. In stage 3b, kidney specialist co-management meaningfully improves monitoring and outcomes.
This guide is intended for general informational purposes only and does not replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment from a qualified healthcare provider. CKD staging, treatment recommendations, and medication approvals evolve as research advances — always confirm current guidelines and treatment options with your nephrologist or primary care physician. This page has no affiliation with any pharmaceutical company, healthcare provider, or government agency.