Yes, beet pigments can tint urine pink or red for up to two days, and this color change is often harmless after eating beets.
You eat roasted beets, a beet salad, or a glass of beet juice. A few hours later, your urine looks pink. That can feel scary the first time you see it.
The good news: beets can do this, and in many cases it’s harmless. The color shift has a name: beeturia. It happens when beet pigments pass through your body and show up in urine.
Still, pink urine is not always from food. Blood in the urine can also look pink or red. That’s why the timing, your recent meals, and any other symptoms matter.
This article walks you through what beet-related pink urine looks like, how long it can last, why it happens to some people and not others, and when to stop guessing and get checked.
What Beeturia Is And Why It Happens
Beeturia means pink or red urine after eating beets or foods made with beetroot pigment. Medical sources describe it as a color change from beet pigments, often ranging from light pink to deep red.
The pigment most people hear about is betanin, part of the betalain pigment group in beets. Your body may break down more or less of that pigment depending on your digestion, the amount of beet you ate, and your own body chemistry.
When more pigment survives digestion and gets absorbed, your kidneys can filter it into urine. That’s what creates the pink or red tint in the toilet bowl.
Why One Person Gets Pink Urine And Another Does Not
Two people can eat the same beet salad and get different results. One sees no color change. The other gets pink urine by evening. That difference is common.
Research summaries note that beeturia is seen in a minority of people in the general population. Some reports place it around 10% to 14%, with higher rates in some groups, including people with iron deficiency or malabsorption patterns.
You also may notice it more after beet juice than after a few slices on a sandwich. A larger dose tends to make the color easier to spot.
Color Can Vary More Than People Expect
Beeturia does not always look bright red. It can appear pale pink, rose, reddish-orange, or deeper red. Toilet water dilution changes what you see, too.
That’s one reason people panic. A harmless food pigment can look dramatic once it mixes with water.
Can Beets Turn Urine Pink? Timing And Color Range
Yes. If beets are the cause, the timing usually helps you connect the dots. The color shift often appears within hours after eating beets, then fades as the pigment clears from your system.
Many people notice it the same day. Some notice it the next morning. In many cases, it’s gone within 24 hours. It can last up to about 48 hours, mainly after a larger serving or concentrated beet juice.
If the color keeps showing up after you stop eating beets, treat that as a separate issue. At that point, food is a weaker explanation.
What Else Can Make Urine Pink Or Red
Beets are a common food trigger, though they are not the only one. Other foods and some medicines can also change urine color. Health issues can do the same, including blood in the urine.
Mayo Clinic lists foods like beets, blackberries, and rhubarb as causes of pink or red urine, and it also notes that blood can be the reason in some cases. That overlap is why the context matters so much.
Use food timing as a clue, not as proof.
What Beeturia Usually Feels Like
Most people with beeturia feel normal. There is no burning, no urgency, no fever, and no pain. You just notice the color.
If pain, burning, clots, fever, flank pain, or urinary urgency show up, that points away from plain beeturia and toward a urinary problem that needs medical attention.
How To Tell Beeturia From Blood In Urine
This is the part that matters most. Pink urine from beets and pink urine from blood can look similar. Your eyes alone may not settle it.
Start with a simple question: “Did I eat beets, drink beet juice, or eat a food with beet coloring in the last day?” If yes, beeturia moves up the list.
Then check the rest of the picture. Blood in urine may come with pain, clots, burning, repeated color changes, or no food trigger at all. It can also show up with no pain, which is why persistent red or pink urine should not be brushed off.
For a medical baseline on urine color shifts and warning signs, the Mayo Clinic urine color page lists both food causes and illness-related causes on the same chart. For blood-specific warning signs, Mayo Clinic’s blood in urine symptoms and causes page notes that it can be hard to tell food color from blood by sight.
| Clue | More Consistent With Beeturia | More Consistent With A Problem Needing Care |
|---|---|---|
| Recent meal | Beets or beet juice in past 24 hours | No beet intake or no clear food trigger |
| Timing | Starts within hours to next day | Random, repeated, or ongoing color change |
| Duration | Fades within about 1–2 days | Lasts beyond 48 hours after stopping beets |
| Pain or burning | Usually none | Burning, pelvic pain, flank pain, cramps |
| Clots | Not expected | Clots can point to bleeding |
| Other symptoms | Feels normal otherwise | Fever, urgency, nausea, weakness, dizziness |
| Pattern over time | Shows up after beet meals only | Keeps returning without beet intake |
| Next step | Watch for clearing and hydrate | Seek medical evaluation and urine testing |
Why Some People Get Beeturia More Often
Beeturia is not a disease by itself. It is a pigment effect. Still, it can show up more often in some people.
Clinical summaries in the NIH-hosted StatPearls review note higher rates in people with iron deficiency and some malabsorptive conditions. That does not mean pink urine after beets proves iron deficiency. It means the pattern is seen more often in those groups.
If you get beeturia often and also feel run-down, short of breath, or notice other changes, it may be worth asking a clinician if testing is needed. The urine color alone is not enough to label the cause.
The NIH/NCBI StatPearls beeturia review also notes that the pigment response can vary with digestion and stomach or gut conditions, which helps explain why the same person may get pink urine one week and not the next.
Amount And Form Matter
A few beet slices may do nothing. A large beet smoothie may turn urine pink. Cooked beets, pickled beets, roasted beets, beet juice, and beet powder can all differ in pigment load.
That’s why “I ate beets before and nothing happened” does not rule it out this time.
What To Do If Your Urine Turns Pink After Eating Beets
Most of the time, a calm check is all you need. Start with a simple routine.
Step-By-Step Check
- Think back to the last 24 hours: beets, beet juice, beet powder, or foods colored with beetroot.
- Drink water through the day and watch the next few trips to the bathroom.
- Notice whether the color fades within a day or two.
- Pay attention to pain, burning, fever, clots, or new urinary symptoms.
- If the color lasts, returns without beets, or comes with symptoms, get checked.
Cleveland Clinic’s patient education article on beet-related red urine and stool gives a plain-language explanation of the beet pigment effect and why it can surprise people even when nothing dangerous is happening. See Cleveland Clinic’s beet pigment explanation for a clinician-reviewed overview.
When Home Watching Is Not Enough
Do not wait it out if the urine looks bloody and you did not eat beets, or if you did eat beets but the color keeps showing up after the beet meal is out of the picture.
Also get checked soon if you have burning urination, severe back or side pain, fever, trouble peeing, clots, or you feel faint. Those signs need a proper workup.
| Situation | What To Do | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Pink urine after beets, no symptoms, clears fast | Watch and hydrate | Fits a common beet pigment pattern |
| Pink urine lasts more than 48 hours after beets | Schedule a medical visit | Food color is less likely at that point |
| Pink urine with burning or urgency | Get checked soon | Could be infection or another urinary issue |
| Red urine with clots, severe pain, or fever | Seek urgent care | Bleeding or a blockage may need prompt treatment |
| Color changes keep returning without beets | Medical evaluation and urine test | Needs a cause confirmed by testing |
Common Questions People Have After Seeing Pink Urine
Can Beets Make Urine Bright Red Instead Of Pink?
Yes. The shade can range from light pink to deeper red. Toilet water, hydration, and pigment load can change what you see.
Can Beets Change Stool Color Too?
Yes. Beets can also tint stool red or reddish-brown. That can look alarming too. The same meal can color urine, stool, or both.
Does Pink Urine Mean You Should Stop Eating Beets?
Not by itself. If the color change follows a beet meal, clears soon, and comes with no other symptoms, many people keep eating beets without any issue. If you are unsure, pause beet intake and watch whether the color disappears.
Can Kids Get Beeturia?
Yes. Kids can also pass beet pigment in urine after eating beets. The same warning rule applies: if there is pain, fever, or ongoing red urine, get medical advice.
The Practical Takeaway
Beets can turn urine pink, red, or rose-colored, and that change is often harmless when it starts after a beet meal and fades within a day or two. The body is clearing beet pigment, not blood, in many of these cases.
Still, pink urine should not be shrugged off when the timing does not fit a beet meal, when the color stays around, or when symptoms show up. A urine test can sort out food pigment from bleeding or infection fast.
If you want a simple rule: beet meal plus short-lived pink urine and no symptoms often points to beeturia; anything else deserves a check.
References & Sources
- NCBI Bookshelf (StatPearls).“Beeturia – StatPearls – NCBI Bookshelf.”Defines beeturia, notes color range, prevalence estimates, and higher frequency in some iron deficiency or malabsorption settings.
- Mayo Clinic.“Urine color – Symptoms and causes.”Lists food-related urine color changes, including beets, and outlines other medical causes of pink or red urine.
- Mayo Clinic.“Blood in urine (hematuria) – Symptoms and causes.”Explains that red urine may be blood or food-related and advises medical evaluation when urine looks bloody.
- Cleveland Clinic.“Why Beets Turn Poop and Pee Red.”Provides a clinician-reviewed explanation of beet pigments, why some people notice beeturia, and when the color change can happen.
