BUN vs Creatinine: What's the Difference?

Last updated: April 10, 2026

BUN and creatinine are both kidney function markers included in the CMP, but they measure different waste products. BUN (blood urea nitrogen) measures urea nitrogen from protein breakdown, while creatinine comes from muscle metabolism. Doctors order both tests together because comparing them — using the BUN-to-creatinine ratio — helps pinpoint whether an abnormal result is caused by a kidney problem, dehydration, or something else entirely.

Quick Comparison: BUN vs Creatinine

Feature BUN Creatinine
Full name Blood Urea Nitrogen Serum Creatinine
What it measures Urea waste from protein breakdown Creatinine waste from muscle metabolism
Normal range (adults) 7 – 20 mg/dL 0.7 – 1.3 mg/dL (men) / 0.6 – 1.1 mg/dL (women)
Part of which panel CMP, BMP CMP, BMP
Affected by diet Yes — high-protein diets raise BUN Minimally — cooked meat may cause a small temporary rise
Affected by hydration Yes — dehydration raises BUN significantly Less affected
When it’s high Kidney disease, dehydration, high protein intake, GI bleeding Kidney disease, muscle injury, certain medications
When it’s low Liver disease, malnutrition, overhydration Low muscle mass, malnutrition, pregnancy
Used to calculate GFR? No Yes

Key Differences Between BUN and Creatinine

The most important difference is where each waste product comes from. BUN originates in the liver, where protein from food and body tissues is broken down into urea. Creatinine, on the other hand, is produced at a relatively constant rate by muscles as they use creatine for energy. Both waste products are filtered out of the blood by the kidneys, which is why both rise when kidney function declines.

Because BUN is influenced by protein intake, hydration, liver function, and gastrointestinal bleeding, it is considered a less specific marker of kidney function than creatinine. A person who eats a very high-protein diet or is mildly dehydrated may have an elevated BUN without any kidney problem. Creatinine levels are more stable day to day and are less affected by diet or hydration, making creatinine a more reliable standalone indicator of how well the kidneys are filtering.

However, BUN provides valuable information that creatinine alone cannot. For example, a disproportionately high BUN compared to creatinine (a ratio above 20:1) can point toward dehydration, upper gastrointestinal bleeding, heart failure, or increased protein catabolism — none of which would be obvious from creatinine alone.

Creatinine has another important advantage: it is used to calculate the estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), which is the primary metric for staging chronic kidney disease (CKD). The eGFR formula uses creatinine along with age and sex to estimate the volume of blood the kidneys filter each minute. BUN is not used in this calculation.

The BUN-to-Creatinine Ratio

A normal BUN-to-creatinine ratio falls between 10:1 and 20:1. This ratio is a simple but powerful tool that helps healthcare providers determine the underlying cause of abnormal kidney test results. It is calculated by dividing the BUN value by the creatinine value.

Ratio Category Possible Causes
10:1 – 20:1 Normal Healthy kidney function
Above 20:1 Prerenal causes Dehydration, heart failure, GI bleeding, high-protein diet, burns, shock
Below 10:1 Liver or nutritional causes Liver disease, malnutrition, low-protein diet, rhabdomyolysis, SIADH

Prerenal, Renal, and Postrenal Causes

When BUN and creatinine are abnormal, doctors classify the cause into three categories based on where the problem originates in relation to the kidneys.

  • Prerenal causes occur before blood reaches the kidneys. Dehydration, heart failure, and shock reduce blood flow to the kidneys. BUN rises disproportionately more than creatinine, producing a ratio above 20:1.
  • Renal (intrinsic) causes involve damage to the kidneys themselves. Conditions such as acute kidney injury, chronic kidney disease, or glomerulonephritis affect the kidneys' filtering ability. Both BUN and creatinine rise together, and the ratio typically stays within the normal 10:1 to 20:1 range.
  • Postrenal causes result from obstruction of urine flow after it leaves the kidneys. Kidney stones, tumors, or an enlarged prostate can block the urinary tract. Initially, both markers may rise with a normal ratio, but prolonged obstruction can cause further kidney damage.

Why Are Both Tests Ordered Together?

BUN and creatinine are almost always ordered together because each test has limitations that the other compensates for. Creatinine is more specific to kidney function, but it can miss early kidney disease because the kidneys have significant reserve capacity. BUN is sensitive to many conditions beyond the kidneys, but when combined with creatinine, the ratio reveals important diagnostic clues.

In routine health screenings, both tests appear on the Comprehensive Metabolic Panel (CMP) and the Basic Metabolic Panel (BMP). A healthcare provider may also order these tests individually when monitoring a known condition — for instance, tracking creatinine and eGFR in someone with chronic kidney disease, or monitoring BUN in a patient with suspected dehydration or GI bleeding.

It is possible to have high BUN with normal creatinine, which often points to a prerenal cause like dehydration or a high-protein diet. Conversely, normal BUN with high creatinine is less common but may occur in people with high muscle mass, those taking certain medications (like creatine supplements), or in early rhabdomyolysis (muscle breakdown).

GFR: How Creatinine Is Used to Estimate Kidney Function

The estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) is the gold-standard metric for evaluating kidney function. It is calculated using the serum creatinine level, along with age and sex. Most labs automatically report eGFR whenever creatinine is ordered.

A normal eGFR is above 90 mL/min/1.73m². Values between 60 and 89 may be normal for some people, particularly older adults. An eGFR below 60 that persists for three or more months is one of the criteria for diagnosing chronic kidney disease. An eGFR below 15 indicates kidney failure.

BUN is not used in the eGFR calculation because it is too influenced by non-kidney factors. However, BUN still plays an important supportive role in the overall clinical picture, especially when the BUN-to-creatinine ratio suggests a prerenal or postrenal process.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between BUN and creatinine?
BUN measures urea nitrogen, a waste product created when the liver breaks down protein. Creatinine is a waste product from normal muscle metabolism. Both are filtered by the kidneys, but BUN is more sensitive to diet, hydration, and liver function, while creatinine is a more specific indicator of kidney filtering ability.
What is a normal BUN-to-creatinine ratio?
A normal BUN-to-creatinine ratio is between 10:1 and 20:1. A ratio above 20:1 may suggest dehydration, GI bleeding, or heart failure. A ratio below 10:1 could indicate liver disease or malnutrition. The ratio is calculated by dividing the BUN value by the creatinine value.
Can BUN be high while creatinine is normal?
Yes, this is quite common. BUN can rise from dehydration, a high-protein diet, gastrointestinal bleeding, or heart failure without a corresponding increase in creatinine. This pattern is called a prerenal elevation and typically produces a BUN-to-creatinine ratio above 20:1. It does not necessarily mean there is kidney damage.
Which is a better indicator of kidney function?
Creatinine is generally considered a more specific marker of kidney function because it is less affected by factors like diet and hydration. It is also used to calculate eGFR, the primary measure for staging kidney disease. However, BUN provides valuable context that creatinine misses, which is why doctors order both tests together.
What does it mean if both BUN and creatinine are high?
When both markers are elevated with a normal ratio (10:1 to 20:1), it typically suggests a kidney-related (renal) cause such as acute kidney injury or chronic kidney disease. A healthcare provider may recommend additional tests such as eGFR, urinalysis, kidney ultrasound, or a referral to a nephrologist.
Do I need to fast before BUN and creatinine tests?
Fasting is generally not required for BUN or creatinine tests alone. However, these tests are usually part of the CMP or BMP, which may require fasting if glucose is being measured at the same time. A very high-protein meal before the test may temporarily raise BUN. Follow your healthcare provider's specific instructions.
What is eGFR and how is it calculated from creatinine?
The estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) estimates how much blood the kidneys filter per minute. It is calculated using the serum creatinine level along with age and sex. Most laboratories automatically report eGFR when creatinine is ordered. A normal eGFR is above 90 mL/min, while below 60 for three or more months may indicate chronic kidney disease.

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Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Reference ranges vary by laboratory and individual factors. Always discuss results with a qualified healthcare provider.