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Heart-Healthy Eating for Children

What is heart-healthy eating?

Heart-healthy eating means eating foods that can help lower the risk of heart disease, heart attack, and stroke. It focuses on eating mostly healthy foods and limiting less healthy foods. Starting these habits in childhood can support healthy growth and development now and help protect your child’s heart as they get older.

Making healthy food choices for your family

You can help your family make healthy food choices by offering a variety of nutrient-dense foods. Include protein foods, dairy, vegetables, fruits, healthy fats, and whole grains.

  • Protein foods. Choose a variety of protein sources, such as beans, lentils, nuts, seeds, fish, poultry, eggs, and lean meats.
  • Dairy and fortified alternatives. Milk, yogurt, and cheese are examples. Fortified non-dairy alternatives, like soy milk are also good choices.
  • Vegetables. Offer a variety of types and colors of vegetables.
  • Fruits. Choose fresh, frozen, or canned in juice. Limit fruit juice.
  • Fats and oils. Include healthy (unsaturated) fats, such as those from vegetable oils, nuts, seeds, and avocados.
  • Grains. Choose whole-grain breads, cereals, rice, and pasta most of the time.

Limit highly processed foods, added sugars, and refined carbohydrates, such as packaged snacks, sugary drinks, and white bread. For heart health, experts also recommend limiting foods high in saturated fat and sodium (salt).

What is unsaturated fat?

Unsaturated fat is a type of fat in foods, mainly from plant sources. It's often liquid at room temperature. This type of fat doesn't usually increase cholesterol when eaten in moderate amounts. Choose foods high in unsaturated fats, such as:

  • Olive oil.
  • Canola oil.
  • Safflower and sunflower oil.
  • Nuts and seeds.
  • Peanut butter.
  • Corn oil and vegetable oils.
  • Avocados.

What is saturated fat?

Saturated fat is a type of fat found in foods, mainly from animal sources. It's often solid at room temperature. This type of fat may raise the body's cholesterol level more than other types of fat. Limit saturated fat in your child's diet and replace it with unsaturated fat to help decrease the risk for heart disease. Some of the main sources of saturated fat include:

  • Butter.
  • Cheeses.
  • Fatty meats (bacon, hot dogs, ribs, and sausage).
  • Chicken skin.
  • Whole milk.
  • Ice cream.
  • Pizza.
  • Grain and dairy based desserts.
  • Coconut oil.
  • Palm oil.

What is trans fat?

Trans fats are a type of fat found naturally in small amounts in some animal-based foods such as whole-fat dairy and certain meats. Trans fats used to be added to processed foods like margarine, baked goods, and fried foods, but most artificial trans fats have been removed from the U.S. food supply.

Trans fats should be avoided because they increase the risk of heart disease.

Guidelines for eating less fat

  • Eat more fresh fruits and vegetables.
  • Bake, broil, or grill foods instead of frying.
  • Choose low-fat meats, like chicken, fish, turkey, lean pork, and lean beef (meat without visible fat and without skin).
  • Limit high-fat meats, like sausage, bacon, hot dogs, salami, pepperoni, bologna, and fried meat.
  • Use fruits as dessert instead of high-fat desserts like ice cream, cake, cookies.
  • Limit amounts of added fat, like margarine, butter, oil, salad dressing, and mayonnaise.
  • Use low-fat or fat-free dairy products, like milk, cheese, sour cream, and cream cheese.

Food adjustments

Consider these examples of food for healthier eating for your family:

Food product category

Eat less

Eat more

Meat and meat substitutes, poultry, fish, dry beans, and nuts

Regular beef, pork, lamb, regular ground beef, fatty cuts of meat

Poultry with skin, fried chicken

Fried fish

Regular lunch meat (bologna, salami, sausage, hot dogs)

Beef, pork, lamb, lean cuts (90% lean, well-trimmed before cooking)

Poultry without skin

Fish, shellfish

Processed meat prepared from lean meat

Dry beans and peas

Tofu and tempeh

Nuts and seeds

Eggs

Fried eggs in butter

Eggs (not fried in butter)

Egg substitutes

Dairy products

Milk: whole and 2% milk

Yogurt: whole milk types

Cheese: Regular cheeses (American, cheddar, Swiss, blue, Monterey Jack, cream cheese)

Frozen dairy desserts: regular ice cream

Milk: nonfat (skim) or low-fat

Yogurt: nonfat or low-fat

Cheese: low-fat or nonfat types

Frozen dairy desserts: low-fat or nonfat ice cream, low-fat or nonfat frozen yogurt (watch out for added sugars)

Fats and oils

Butter, lard, shortening, bacon fat, regular mayonnaise, sour cream, cream cheese, salad dressings, coconut oil, palm kernel, palm oil, and products with trans fats

Unsaturated oils: safflower, sunflower, corn, soybean, canola, olive, peanut, avocado

Low-fat or nonfat mayonnaise, margarine, sour cream, cream cheese, and salad dressings

Grains

Refined grains (white flour, white rice), biscuits, cornbread, muffins, pancakes, breakfast pastries, doughnuts, waffles, granolas, fried rice, and packaged pasta and rice mixes

Whole-grain breads, pastas, tortillas, and cereals, brown rice, oats

Vegetables (dark green, red and orange, legumes, beans and peas, starchy vegetables, and other vegetables)

Vegetables fried or prepared with butter, cheese, cream sauce, or salt

Fresh, frozen, or canned, without added fat, salt, or sauce

Fruit (whole, cut up, pureed, and 100% fruit juice)

Fried fruit or fruit served with butter, heavy syrup, or cream sauce

Fresh, frozen, canned, or dried without added fat or sugar

Online Medical Reviewer: Brittany Poulson MDA RDN CD CDE
Online Medical Reviewer: Daphne Pierce-Smith RN MSN
Online Medical Reviewer: Sravani Chintapalli Researcher
Date Last Reviewed: 4/1/2025
© 2000-2026 The StayWell Company, LLC. All rights reserved. This information is not intended as a substitute for professional medical care. Always follow your healthcare professional's instructions.
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