Excellent 4.6 out of 5
Kidney Health

Blood Testing for BUN/Creatinine Ratio

The BUN/creatinine ratio is a comparison of two common blood wastes: urea nitrogen and creatinine. Urea nitrogen (BUN) comes from urea made in the liver as it detoxifies ammonia generated when proteins are broken down (urea cycle). Creatinine is formed at a steady rate as muscles use and renew creatine phosphate. Available at 2,000+ lab locations and at-home (select states). See FAQs below

BUN/Creatinine Ratio Blood Test — Get the Superpower Panel
Cancel anytime
HSA/FSA eligible
Results in a week
Physician reviewed

Every result is checked

·
CLIA-certified labs

Federal standard for testing

·
HIPAA compliant

Your data is 100% secure

Key Benefits

  • Check kidney waste balance and hydration status via the BUN/creatinine ratio.
  • Flag dehydration or low kidney blood flow when the ratio rises.
  • Flag possible upper GI bleeding or high protein intake with high ratios.
  • Suggest kidney damage when the ratio stays low relative to creatinine.
  • Clarify causes of fatigue, nausea, or reduced urine by linking to kidney status.
  • Guide medication review when results hint at dehydration or reduced kidney blood flow.
  • Track hydration and treatment response over time, especially with creatinine and eGFR.
  • Best interpreted with creatinine, eGFR, BUN, electrolytes, urinalysis, and your symptoms.

What is a BUN/Creatinine Ratio blood test?

The BUN/creatinine ratio is a comparison of two common blood wastes: urea nitrogen and creatinine. Urea nitrogen (BUN) comes from urea made in the liver as it detoxifies ammonia generated when proteins are broken down (urea cycle). Creatinine is formed at a steady rate as muscles use and renew creatine phosphate. Both molecules enter the bloodstream and are removed mainly by the kidneys through filtration. Looking at them together, as a ratio, puts their different biological sources into a single, simple snapshot.

This ratio reflects how the body is producing nitrogen waste and muscle by-product relative to how well the kidneys are clearing them (renal filtration). Because BUN depends on liver urea production and protein breakdown, while creatinine tracks muscle turnover and is more constant, their relationship helps indicate whether changes in blood levels are aligned or out of proportion. In plain terms, it gauges the balance between production and clearance across liver, muscle, blood volume, and kidneys, giving context to each number and clarifying what a single value alone cannot.

Why is a BUN/Creatinine Ratio blood test important?

The BUN/Creatinine ratio compares two waste products—urea from protein metabolism and creatinine from muscle—giving a window into liver urea production, kidney filtration and reabsorption, blood flow to the kidneys, hydration status, and the balance between protein breakdown and muscle mass. It’s a systems check that links metabolism, circulation, and renal handling in one number.

Most labs consider a typical range roughly 10 to 20, with “healthy” values often sitting mid-range. Muscle mass and age matter: muscular people (often men) can run lower; older adults and smaller-bodied people can run higher at baseline. In pregnancy and childhood, absolute BUN and creatinine are lower, so ratios must be read with population-specific norms.

When the ratio is below range, it often means urea is low relative to creatinine—seen with reduced hepatic urea synthesis (advanced liver disease) or very low protein intake—or creatinine is higher from greater muscle mass or acute muscle injury. In intrinsic kidney injury (like acute tubular necrosis), reduced urea reabsorption also pulls the ratio down. Clues can include jaundice or easy bruising (liver), muscle pain and dark urine (rhabdomyolysis), or fatigue.

When the ratio is above range, the kidney is often conserving water and reabsorbing more urea (dehydration, heart failure, low renal perfusion). It also rises with increased urea load (upper GI bleeding, high catabolic states) or low creatinine from low muscle mass. Symptoms may include thirst, dizziness, edema, shortness of breath, or black stools.

Big picture: this ratio integrates liver function, protein turnover, kidney perfusion, and filtration. Tracked with BUN, creatinine, eGFR, and urinalysis, it helps flag prerenal strain, intrinsic renal disease, or hepatic impairment—signals tied to cardiovascular, renal, and metabolic outcomes over time.

What insights will I get?

The BUN/Creatinine ratio compares two filtered waste products: urea nitrogen from liver handling of protein and creatinine from muscle energy use. It integrates how much nitrogen waste you produce and how well the kidneys are perfused and reabsorbing, linking metabolism, muscle turnover, and cardiovascular circulation to renal filtration.

Low values usually reflect reduced urea generation or relatively higher creatinine. This pattern appears with impaired liver urea cycle (liver disease), low protein production or dilution from excess body water, or increased creatinine from large muscle mass or acute muscle injury. In pregnancy and in young children, lower ratios are common because urea runs low with higher glomerular filtration.

Being in range suggests balanced protein turnover and muscle metabolism, adequate kidney blood flow and filtration, and stable hydration. Many labs place the healthy ratio in the low teens to around twenty, with the mid-range typically most stable.

High values usually reflect proportionally higher urea, most often from reduced kidney blood flow (prerenal azotemia) where kidneys conserve water and reabsorb urea. The ratio also rises with upper gastrointestinal bleeding, catabolic states with high protein breakdown, and medicines that increase protein catabolism. In older adults with low muscle mass, lower creatinine can push the ratio higher even with modest BUN increases.

Notes: Hydration status, recent illness, protein load, gastrointestinal bleeding, and muscle mass materially shift this ratio. Glucocorticoids and some antibiotics can raise BUN. Pregnancy lowers BUN and the ratio. Intrinsic tubular kidney injury often shows a lower ratio than reduced renal perfusion.

Superpower also tests for

See more blood diseases

Frequently Asked Questions About

What is BUN/Creatinine Ratio testing?

BUN/Creatinine Ratio testing compares blood urea nitrogen to creatinine to show whether these kidney-filtered waste products are in balance, offering context about hydration, protein metabolism, and kidney perfusion.

Why should I test my BUN/Creatinine Ratio?

Testing helps interpret changes in BUN and creatinine, differentiate dehydration from intrinsic kidney issues, and understand how diet, training, heat, or supplements affect kidney-related markers.

How often should I test BUN/Creatinine Ratio?

Frequency depends on your goals and life circumstances. Periodic testing is useful when adjusting protein intake, during intense training or heat exposure, after illness, or when tracking kidney health trends.

What can affect my BUN/Creatinine Ratio?

Hydration status, protein intake, muscle mass, exercise, catabolic states, liver function, certain medications (such as diuretics, corticosteroids, tetracyclines), and gastrointestinal bleeding can influence the ratio.

Are there any preparations needed before BUN/Creatinine Ratio testing?

Most tests do not require fasting, but instructions can vary. Follow the directions provided with your test to helps support accurate results.

What states are Superpower’s at-home blood testing available in?

Superpower currently offers at-home blood testing in the following states: Alabama, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, and Wisconsin.

We’re actively expanding nationwide, with new states being added regularly. If your state isn’t listed yet, stay tuned.

What if my BUN/Creatinine Ratio is outside the optimal range?

Use context such as recent fluids, diet, training load, illness, medications, and related labs (e.g., eGFR, electrolytes, liver enzymes) to understand why it shifted and whether it is transient or persistent.

Can lifestyle changes affect my BUN/Creatinine Ratio?

Yes. Hydration practices, protein intake, training volume and intensity, recovery, and heat exposure can all move the ratio up or down.

How do I interpret my BUN/Creatinine Ratio results?

Interpret them alongside BUN, creatinine, eGFR, electrolytes, urinalysis, and recent behaviors (fluids, diet, exercise, heat). Trends over time are often more informative than a single reading.

Is BUN/Creatinine Ratio testing right for me?

It is valuable if you want to monitor kidney health, hydration, protein metabolism, or the impact of training, illness recovery, or environmental heat on your body.

How it works

1

Test your whole body

Get a comprehensive blood draw at one of our 2,000+ partner labs or from the comfort of your own home.

2

An Actionable Plan

Easy to understand results & a clear action plan with tailored recommendations on diet, lifestyle changes, supplements and pharmaceuticals.

3

A Connected Ecosystem

You can book additional diagnostics, buy curated supplements for 20% off & pharmaceuticals within your Superpower dashboard.

Superpower tests more than 
100+ biomarkers & common symptoms

Developed by world-class medical professionals

Supported by the world’s top longevity clinicians and MDs.

Dr Anant Vinjamoori

Superpower Chief Longevity Officer, Harvard MD & MBA

A smiling woman wearing a white coat and stethoscope poses for a portrait.

Dr Leigh Erin Connealy

Clinician & Founder of The Centre for New Medicine

Man in a black medical scrub top smiling at the camera.

Dr Abe Malkin

Founder & Medical Director of Concierge MD

Dr Robert Lufkin

UCLA Medical Professor, NYT Bestselling Author

Your membership

Select your assessment level

Superpower provides the most advanced health check with a plan that works. Go far beyond your annual physical.

Panels designed by

world class clinicians

2,000+ lab locations

across the country

Baseline

$199/yr

100+ biomarker blood test

Performance

Recommended

$365/yr

115+ biomarker blood test

60 biomarker follow-up retest

Complete

$649/yr

115+ biomarker blood test

60 biomarker follow-up retest

Gut microbiome analysis

Organ age breakdown

Get started
Loading...
HSA/ FSA eligible · Secure checkout

Baseline

$199

per year

Covers your metabolic, hormonal and cardiovascular baseline. The best basis for a single snapshot of your overall health.

What's included

Test Breakdown

These are the panels offered in the tiers above

100+ biomarker blood test

Heart & Vascular Health

20 markers

ApoB, LDL-Cholesterol, Triglycerides

Sex Hormones

8 markers

Testosterone, Estradiol, DHEA-S, Cortisol

Metabolic Health

7 markers

Glucose, HbA1c

Thyroid Health

4 markers

TSH, T3 Uptake, Free T4, T4 Total

Liver Health

13 markers

ALT, AST, GGT, Bilirubin

Nutrients

12 markers

Vitamin D, Total Protein, Hemoglobin

Immune System

16 markers

White blood cells, Neutrophils, Lymphocytes

Energy

5 markers

Ferritin, Iron, Cortisol

Kidney Health

9 markers

Creatinine, eGFR, Potassium, Sodium

See full list →

+21 additional

Included with every assessment

17 health areas developed by world class clinicians

Personalized clinical protocol

On-demand messaging with your care team

20% off superpower marketplace

Member pricing on add-on tests, supplements & RX

Upload past labs & wearable data for tracking

Superpower AI — a world class system trained on you

Complete

$649

per year

Normally $703 (save 8%)

Adds gut microbiome analysis and organ age surfacing, what standard blood panels may miss across energy, digestion, and immunity.

What's included

Test Breakdown

These are the panels offered in the tiers above

115+ biomarker blood test

Heart & Vascular Health

20 markers

ApoB, LDL-Cholesterol, Triglycerides, Lipoprotein(a)

Sex Hormones

11 markers

Testosterone, Estradiol, DHEA-S, Cortisol, PSA, FSH, LH, AMH

Metabolic Health

7 markers

Glucose, HbA1c, Insulin

Thyroid Health

4 markers

TSH, T3 Uptake, Free T4, T4 Total

Liver Health

8 markers

ALT, AST, GGT, Bilirubin

Nutrients

12 markers

Vitamin D, Total Protein, Hemoglobin

Immune System

16 markers

White blood cells, Neutrophils, Lymphocytes

Energy

5 markers

Ferritin, Iron, Cortisol

Kidney Health

24 markers

Creatinine, eGFR, Potassium, Urinary pH, RBC Urine, Nitrites

DNA Health

3 markers

Homocysteine, B12, Folate

Inflammation

3 markers

hs-CRP, Systemic Immune-Inflammation Index

See full list →

+8 additional

60 biomarker follow-up retest

Retesting panel

100 markers

Complete second draw — 60 biomarkers retested for longitudinal tracking.
Most biomarkers can move significantly within 3–6 months if you're actively trying to fix them.

Gut microbiome analysis

$239

Gut microbiome

300+ data points

Profiles 300 bacterial strains in your gut to map your microbial balance.
Identifies dysbiosis that may be driving symptoms like bloating, irregular digestion, skin issues, and mood changes, with actionable guidance on diet and lifestyle shifts to help restore balance.

Organ age breakdown

$99

OrganAge is the most detailed biological age test available today. Rather than showing a single number, it reveals how old each of your body's nine key systems is

Organ age breakdown

10 key systems

Circulatory, digestive, genitourinary, infectious, mental, metabolic, musculoskeletal, nervous, respiratory and systemic ages based on cutting edge longevity research

Included with every assessment

17 health areas developed by world class clinicians

Personalized clinical protocol

On-demand messaging with your care team

20% off superpower marketplace

Member pricing on add-on tests, supplements & RX

Upload past labs & wearable data for tracking

Superpower AI — a world class system trained on you

Get started
Loading...
HSA/ FSA eligible · Secure checkout

Finally, healthcare that looks at the whole you