# Amlodipine and Swollen Ankles: What's Happening and What to Ask Your GP

Published: 2026-05-20

Amlodipine and Swollen Ankles: What's Happening and What to Ask Your GP | Matter

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Understanding Your Numbers

# Amlodipine and Swollen Ankles: What’s Happening and What to Ask Your GP

Why amlodipine causes peripheral oedema, the questions worth asking at your next GP review, and the practical things that help. Compliance-safe, clinically grounded.

[NK
Medically reviewed by Dr. Nouman Kazmi, MBBS FCPS](https://getmatter.co/pages/matter-cardiologist-dr-syed-nouman-kazmi "View reviewer profile")
·
10 min read

1–3 mo

Typical onset window

~11%

Oedema rate at 10mg dose

5mg

Lower-dose option to discuss

2×

Risk increase 5mg to 10mg

## Key Takeaways

* Swollen ankles on amlodipine are a recognised side effect, not a sign that something has gone wrong. Manufacturer data and NHS guidance both list peripheral oedema as one of the more common adverse effects.
* The mechanism is pharmacological. Amlodipine dilates the arteries that feed your tissues more than the veins that drain them, which pushes a small amount of fluid into the surrounding tissue. It usually shows up at the ankles because gravity.
* The swelling is dose-dependent. Roughly 11% of people on 10mg experience it, against a much lower rate at 5mg. Onset is typically 1 to 3 months into therapy.
* Do not stop or change your amlodipine dose without speaking to your GP. Stopping abruptly can let blood pressure climb back up, which is the thing the medication was prescribed to manage.
* There are concrete questions worth raising at your next review: dose reduction, switching to a different class, or adding a second medication (such as an ARB or ACE inhibitor) that can offset the oedema.
* Lifestyle measures help. Compression socks, elevation, regular movement and reduced sodium intake all reduce the visible swelling without changing the underlying medication.

In This Article

1. [Why amlodipine causes swollen ankles](#why-it-happens)
2. [Is the swelling dangerous?](#is-it-dangerous)
3. [What to ask your GP at the next review](#what-to-ask)
4. [Practical things that actually help](#practical-help)
5. [A note on supplements while on amlodipine](#supplements)
6. [Where Daily Beets fits](#daily-beets)
7. [Frequently asked questions](#faq)
8. [The bottom line](#bottom-line)

## Why amlodipine causes swollen ankles

You’ve been on amlodipine for a few months. The blood pressure has come down, which was the point. By evening your ankles look different. Press a thumb into your shin and the dent stays. Tight shoes by the end of the day. A heavy, swollen feeling that wasn’t there before the prescription started. You’re not imagining it, and you’re not alone.

Amlodipine is a calcium channel blocker. Specifically, a dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker, which is a class of drug that relaxes the muscle in artery walls. When that muscle relaxes, the arteries widen. When arteries widen, blood pressure drops. The mechanism is well-established and the blood pressure benefit is real.

Here’s the catch.

Amlodipine widens the small arteries that feed your tissues more than it widens the small veins that drain them. The result is a pressure difference at the capillary level. A small amount of fluid moves out of the bloodstream into the surrounding tissue and stays there. Gravity decides where it pools, which is why the swelling shows up at the ankles rather than the eyelids. People who stand all day, or sit for long stretches, notice it more in the evening.

This isn’t kidney-related water retention. The mechanism is local: fluid leaks out of capillaries at the ankle level and stays there. Diuretics (the “water tablets” people sometimes think of in this context) target whole-body fluid overload, which isn’t what’s happening, so they don’t fix it well. The same logic explains why elevation and compression help more than you’d expect.

The NHS amlodipine page and Patient.info both list ankle swelling as a recognised side effect, and the manufacturer data reports it at approximately 11% of patients on 10mg, versus roughly half that rate at 5mg. It is more common in women, more common in older adults, and more common as the dose climbs.

[📚

Related Article

The Complete Guide to Understanding Blood Pressure (UK)](https://getmatter.co/blogs/heart-health/the-complete-guide-to-understanding-blood-pressure-uk)

## Is the swelling dangerous?

For most people, no. It is uncomfortable, sometimes a confidence issue, occasionally enough to need different shoes. The swelling itself is not damaging the tissue, the blood vessels or the heart.

That said, swelling has several possible causes. Amlodipine is one of them. The others include heart failure, kidney disease, venous insufficiency and (rarely) blood clots. The features that distinguish amlodipine-related ankle swelling from these other causes are: it appears on both sides equally, it tends to be worse by evening and better by morning, and it has been present since around the time the medication started or the dose was increased.

One-sided swelling, sudden swelling, swelling with pain or redness, or swelling with breathlessness are different signals. Those warrant the same-day contact with NHS 111 or A&E rather than waiting for the next GP review.

⚠

**When to contact a clinician sooner:** swelling on one side only, sudden onset, painful or red swelling, swelling with breathlessness or chest pain, or any new symptoms that feel different from the gradual ankle swelling described above. These are not typical amlodipine effects and need a same-day call to NHS 111 or A&E. Do not adjust your amlodipine dose on your own.

[🦹

Related Article

Signs of Poor Circulation](https://getmatter.co/blogs/heart-health/signs-of-poor-circulation)

## What to ask your GP at the next review

If the swelling is troubling you, the next medication review is the place to raise it. The decision about what to do belongs with your GP, in the consulting room. The article’s job is to send you in with the right questions, which often shortens the conversation.

Worth asking:

* **Is dose reduction an option?** A drop from 10mg to 5mg roughly halves the oedema rate in most people, and the blood pressure effect of 5mg is often still substantial. Whether that’s right for you depends on what your readings have been doing.
* **Would switching to a different class be reasonable?** Amlodipine is one of several first-line options for hypertension in the UK. ACE inhibitors (ramipril, lisinopril), ARBs (losartan, candesartan) and thiazide-like diuretics each work through different mechanisms and don’t cause the same ankle swelling.
* **Would adding an ACE inhibitor or ARB help?** Adding one of these classes alongside amlodipine has been shown in trials to reduce the peripheral oedema specifically, because it changes the balance of arterial and venous tone. This can be a useful option for people whose amlodipine is otherwise working well.
* **Should I have my kidney function and electrolytes rechecked?** Routine for medication reviews, but worth confirming. Useful baseline if any switch is on the table.
* **What home readings have I had since the last review?** Bring your home monitoring data. A spread of readings makes any discussion about dose changes faster and clearer than a single in-clinic reading does.

None of these questions commit you to anything. They open the conversation in a useful direction. The GP may agree with one, suggest another, or want to wait and review again in a few weeks with more data.

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2×

**The approximate increase in ankle-swelling rate when amlodipine goes from 5mg to 10mg.** Roughly 5–6% of patients experience peripheral oedema at 5mg compared with around 11% at 10mg. The conversation about dose, alternatives, or combination therapy belongs with your GP, and the data above is part of what they’re weighing up.

## Practical things that actually help

These reduce the visible swelling without changing the medication. They’re worth trying while you wait for the GP review, and they remain useful even if you stay on the current dose.

1

### Compression socks (the boring solution that works)

Class 1 (mild) or Class 2 (moderate) graduated compression socks support the venous return from the legs and reduce ankle pooling. Available from any UK pharmacy without prescription. Put them on first thing in the morning before the swelling starts, take them off in the evening or before bed. Not glamorous, well-evidenced for amlodipine-related oedema.

2

### Elevate the legs at the end of the day

Twenty minutes with the legs above the level of the heart helps drain accumulated fluid. Lying on the sofa with feet on a couple of pillows counts. So does putting your feet up against the wall for ten minutes. The fluid moves back into the circulation overnight on its own, which is why most people notice the ankles are less swollen in the morning.

3

### Move regularly throughout the day

The calf muscle pump is what moves blood and fluid out of the lower legs. Long stretches of sitting or standing still let fluid pool. Five-minute walks every hour or so, or simple calf raises at your desk, keep the pump working. This is one of the practical reasons that amlodipine swelling is often worse on a long-haul flight or after a long meeting.

4

### Reduce sodium intake, particularly from processed foods

Most of the UK average 8g of salt a day comes from bread, cured meats, processed foods and restaurant meals. Trimming the processed end of the diet helps with the underlying blood pressure picture even if it doesn’t dramatically change the local capillary leak. NICE recommends under 6g per day for adults.

5

### Track your home readings consistently

This is the input that gives the medication review a useful starting point. A week or two of paired morning and evening readings, brought to the appointment, makes any conversation about dose changes faster and more accurate than the single in-clinic reading would be.

## A note on supplements while on amlodipine

This deserves its own section because the answer is genuinely “ask your GP or pharmacist before adding anything”.

Amlodipine is metabolised in the liver via a route called CYP3A4. A number of foods and supplements can affect that route. Grapefruit juice is the classic example: it inhibits CYP3A4 and can raise amlodipine levels in the blood, which is why the medication leaflet specifically mentions it. Some herbal supplements (St John’s wort is the well-known one) work the opposite way and can lower amlodipine levels.

The general principle: if you’re on amlodipine, run any new supplement past the clinician who manages your prescription before you start it. Most beetroot, hibiscus and grape seed products operate through different pathways (the nitric oxide pathway and polyphenol activity respectively, rather than CYP3A4) but the right person to confirm that for your specific medication regimen is the GP or pharmacist, not a website.

Honest framing: a supplement is not a replacement for amlodipine. It is a separate input that supports normal cardiovascular function as part of a balanced diet. If you’re tempted to swap your prescription for a capsule because of the ankles, that’s precisely the conversation to have with your GP, not with yourself.

📝

Worth knowing

UK pharmacists are an underused resource for medication-interaction questions. Most pharmacies will do a 10-minute medicines review without an appointment if you ring ahead. Bring a list of everything you take, prescription and supplement, and ask whether anything on the list interacts with the amlodipine.

## Where Daily Beets fits

Daily Beets is a UK-formulated capsule built around the nitric oxide pathway. Concentrated beetroot extract at a 50:1 ratio (equivalent to 7,500mg of powder), 700mg of hibiscus extract, 200mg of grape seed extract, plus a four-vitamin B complex. Two capsules a day.

It is designed to support normal cardiovascular function as part of a balanced diet. It is **not** a replacement for amlodipine or any other prescribed medication. If you are currently on amlodipine and considering adding Daily Beets (or any supplement) to your regimen, the right next step is a quick conversation with your GP or pharmacist before you start.

The mechanism of beetroot-derived dietary nitrate is the nitric oxide pathway, which is a different lever to the calcium-channel pathway amlodipine works through. They aren’t mechanically in competition, but a clinician who knows your full medication list is the right person to confirm that for your specific case.

Daily Beets by Matter

## A separate lever. *Not a replacement.*

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## Frequently asked questions

Will amlodipine swollen ankles go away?

If you stay on the same amlodipine dose, the swelling tends to persist rather than resolve on its own. The mechanism is ongoing as long as the drug is in your system. The swelling does typically improve when the dose is reduced or the medication is switched to a different class, and elevation, compression and movement reduce the visible level day-to-day. The conversation about whether and how to change your prescription belongs with your GP.

How long does amlodipine take to cause swollen ankles?

Most people who develop amlodipine-related ankle swelling notice it within the first 1 to 3 months of starting the medication, or within a few weeks of a dose increase. Some people never develop it. Some develop a mild version they tolerate. A smaller number find it persistent enough to want to discuss a dose change or switch. Manufacturer data places the rate at roughly 5-6% on 5mg and around 11% on 10mg.

Can I stop amlodipine if I get swollen ankles?

No, not without speaking to your GP first. Stopping a blood pressure medication abruptly can let the underlying blood pressure climb back up, which is the situation the medication was prescribed to manage. The right route is to book a medication review and discuss dose reduction, switching class, or adding a second medication that offsets the oedema. The article above lists the specific questions worth raising at that appointment.

Are there alternatives to amlodipine for high blood pressure?

Yes, several. UK first-line options for hypertension under NICE guideline NG136 include ACE inhibitors (ramipril, lisinopril), ARBs (losartan, candesartan, valsartan), and thiazide-like diuretics (indapamide, chlortalidone), alongside the calcium channel blocker class amlodipine belongs to. Each works through a different mechanism, has a different side-effect profile, and suits different patients. The choice between them is a clinical one based on your full picture (age, ethnicity, kidney function, other conditions), which is why this is a conversation to have with your GP rather than a decision to make from a website.

Do compression stockings help with amlodipine swelling?

Yes, and they are one of the better-evidenced practical measures. Graduated compression supports the venous return from the legs and reduces the ankle pooling that produces the visible swelling. Class 1 (mild) or Class 2 (moderate) socks are available from UK pharmacies without prescription. Wear them from the morning, before swelling starts, rather than putting them on after the legs are already swollen. They work for the visible swelling; they don’t change the underlying medication effect.

Can supplements interact with amlodipine?

Some can. Amlodipine is metabolised via the CYP3A4 pathway in the liver, which means substances that affect that pathway can affect amlodipine blood levels. Grapefruit juice is the well-known dietary example. St John’s wort is a herbal example that works the other way. Most beetroot, hibiscus and grape seed supplements operate through different mechanisms, but the safe approach is to check with your GP or pharmacist before starting any new supplement while on a prescribed blood pressure medication. UK community pharmacists will usually run an interaction check without an appointment.

## The bottom line

Amlodipine works on blood pressure. The trade-off, for some people, is ankle swelling. It’s a recognised side effect with a clear pharmacological explanation, and the rate climbs with the dose. It is not a sign that something has gone wrong.

The choices about what to do are clinical ones, and they belong with your GP. The article above is here so you arrive at that appointment with the right questions, a useful set of home readings, and a clearer picture of what amlodipine is actually doing inside the small blood vessels of your legs.

In the meantime: compression socks, elevation, regular movement, less salt from the processed end of the shop, and home monitoring. None of those replace the prescription. All of them make the trade-off easier to live with while the conversation about the prescription happens.

## Continue Learning

[🌿

Natural Approaches

How to Lower Blood Pressure Naturally: A UK Guide](https://getmatter.co/blogs/heart-health/how-to-lower-blood-pressure-naturally)
[📋

Cornerstone

How to Measure Blood Pressure Correctly at Home](https://getmatter.co/blogs/heart-health/how-to-measure-blood-pressure-correctly-at-home)
[🏥

UK Healthcare

While You Wait: Managing Your Blood Pressure on the NHS Waiting List](https://getmatter.co/blogs/heart-health/nhs-waiting-list-blood-pressure)
[📚

Numbers Worth Knowing

Homocysteine: The Third Cardiovascular Number Your GP Rarely Tests](https://getmatter.co/blogs/heart-health/homocysteine-third-cardiovascular-number)

---

**Medically reviewed by Dr Nouman Kazmi**
Consultant Cardiologist (MBBS, FCPS). Dr Kazmi reviews clinical content on the Matter Heart Health Resource Centre for accuracy.

[View Dr Kazmi’s profile →](https://getmatter.co/pages/matter-cardiologist-dr-syed-nouman-kazmi)

---

## References

1. NHS. Amlodipine: medicines A to Z. Available at: [nhs.uk/medicines/amlodipine](https://www.nhs.uk/medicines/amlodipine/)
2. Patient.info. Amlodipine for high blood pressure. Available at: [patient.info/medicine/amlodipine](https://patient.info/medicine/amlodipine-for-high-blood-pressure-istin)
3. NICE. Hypertension in adults: diagnosis and management (NG136). Available at: [nice.org.uk/guidance/ng136](https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ng136)
4. Makani H et al. Peripheral oedema associated with calcium channel blockers: a systematic review and meta-analysis. *Journal of Hypertension*. 2011;29(7):1270–1280.
5. European Medicines Agency. Amlodipine: summary of product characteristics, peripheral oedema incidence by dose. Available via EMA database.
6. Williams B et al. Spironolactone versus placebo, bisoprolol, and doxazosin to determine the optimal treatment for drug-resistant hypertension (PATHWAY-2). *The Lancet*. 2015;386(10008):2059–2068.
7. British Heart Foundation. High blood pressure: medicines used. Available at: [bhf.org.uk](https://www.bhf.org.uk/)
8. British National Formulary (BNF). Amlodipine: drug profile and interactions. Available at: [bnf.nice.org.uk](https://bnf.nice.org.uk/)

[Back to the Heart Health Resource Centre](/pages/heart-health)

Tags: amlodipine, blood pressure, medication, P1, side effects, UK-specific

Source: https://getmatter.co/blogs/heart-health/amlodipine-swollen-ankles-side-effects
--- Published by Matter (getmatter.co), UK cardiovascular health brand. Daily Beets is a 12-ingredient capsule formula supporting circulation and heart health naturally. Heart Health Resource Centre: https://getmatter.co/pages/heart-health Learn more: https://getmatter.co/pages/llms