High-Purine Foods to Avoid With Gout

High-Purine Foods to Avoid With Gout

Most people with gout know they should “avoid purines.”

When they look at a purine food chart, it’s confusing. Some lists contradict each other. Some include foods that research has shown aren’t actually a problem.

Almost none of them tell you what to eat instead.

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Here’s the practical version. What to avoid, what to limit, what’s fine, and what might actually help.

Quick Primer: Why Purines Matter for Gout

Purines are natural compounds found in many foods. Your body breaks them down into uric acid. If you’re producing too much uric acid or not excreting enough, the excess crystallises in your joints.

That’s gout.

Here’s what most purine charts miss.

Not all purines affect gout risk equally.

Animal-based purines (meat, seafood, organ meats) have a much stronger link to gout attacks than plant-based purines. Vegetables like spinach, asparagus, and mushrooms contain purines but research consistently shows they don’t increase gout risk.

Your body also produces purines on its own (endogenous purines), which account for about two-thirds of your total purine load. Diet is only one piece, but it’s the piece you can control.

High Purine Foods (Limit or Avoid)

These have the strongest link to gout attacks. Cut back on these first.

Organ meats (worst offenders)

  • Liver (beef, chicken, pork)
  • Kidneys
  • Sweetbreads
  • Heart

Certain seafood

  • Mussels
  • Sardines
  • Anchovies
  • Herring
  • Scallops
  • Mackerel
  • Prawns (in large quantities)

Other high-purine animal proteins

  • Game meats (venison, rabbit, kangaroo)
  • Gravy and meat extracts (Oxo, Bovril)
  • Meat-based broths and stocks

Beverages

  • Beer (high in purines and blocks uric acid excretion)
  • Spirits (blocks excretion)
  • Sugary soft drinks and fruit juices high in fructose

Read more about beer and gout

Moderate Purine Foods (Eat in Moderation)

These contain purines but at lower levels. You don’t need to avoid them entirely, just be sensible about portions and frequency.

Red meat

Poultry

Fish

Other

  • Ham and bacon
  • Snags (sausages)

The key with this group is portion size and frequency. A steak two or three times a week is very different from steak every night.

Keep portions to about the size of your palm. You can still enjoy a barbie, just be smart about it.

Read more about red meat and gout

Read more about the best fish for gout

Low Purine Foods (Eat Freely)

These are safe. Build your meals around this group.

Dairy

  • Milk (especially low-fat)
  • Yoghurt
  • Cheese
  • Cream

Low-fat dairy is particularly interesting. Multiple studies associate it with lower uric acid levels. One of the few foods that actively helps with gout.

Eggs

Low in purines and a great protein source.

Most vegetables

  • Potatoes
  • Sweet potato
  • Carrots
  • Capsicums
  • Tomatoes
  • Lettuce and salad greens
  • Broccoli
  • Cauliflower
  • Cabbage
  • Onions
  • Pumpkin

Even higher-purine vegetables are fine:

Research consistently shows these don’t increase gout risk despite containing moderate purines. The plant-based purine type appears to behave differently in your body.

Grains and starches

  • Rice
  • Pasta
  • Bread
  • Oats
  • Cereals

Fruit

  • Cherries (tart cherries may actively lower uric acid and reduce gout flare risk by 35%)
  • Strawberries
  • Blueberries
  • Oranges and citrus
  • Kiwifruit
  • Bananas
  • Apples

Nuts and seeds

  • Almonds
  • Walnuts
  • Peanuts
  • Macadamias
  • Sunflower seeds

Foods That May Actively Help with Gout

These aren’t just “safe.” They may actually support lower uric acid levels and fewer gout attacks.

Food Why It Helps
Tart cherries Anthocyanins may reduce uric acid production and gout flare risk
Low-fat dairy Associated with lower uric acid levels in multiple studies
Coffee Regular consumption linked to lower uric acid
Vitamin C-rich foods Oranges, kiwifruit, capsicums, strawberries; may support kidney excretion
Water Helps kidneys flush uric acid. Aim for 2+ litres daily.

Read more about the best foods for gout

Practical Tips

You don’t need to be perfect.

The goal is to reduce the biggest offenders and make smarter choices most of the time.

Focus on the worst offenders first.

Cutting out organ meats and reducing beer will make a bigger difference than worrying about whether your salmon portion is 10 grams too large.

Fructose is the hidden enemy.

Most people focus on purines and forget about sugar. Fructose (found in sugary drinks, fruit juice, sweets, and many processed foods) directly increases uric acid production. For some people, this is a bigger factor than purines.

Combine diet with supplementation.

If you’re genetically predisposed to gout, diet alone usually isn’t enough. A targeted supplement can support what your diet can’t fully cover.

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This article is for informational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. Consult your healthcare provider before making changes to your health routine.

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