Skip over main navigation
  • Log in
  • Basket: (0 items)
  • Accessibility
  • Search
  • Become a member
  • Shop
  • 0800 169 09 36
National Kidney Federation
Donate
Call our helpline
  • Call the NKF Helpline now

    0800 169 09 36

  • Request a callback
Menu
  • About kidney disease
    • About the kidneys
    • What is kidney disease?
    • Types of kidney disease
      • Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
      • Polycystic Kidney Disease (PKD)
      • Acute Kidney Injury (AKI)
      • Other Kidney Conditions
    • Living with kidney disease
      • Anaemia
      • Diabetes
      • Kidney Pain or Urine Diseases
      • Exercise
      • Kidney Beam
      • Diet and food
      • Sex and relationships
      • Dental care
      • Your Stories
      • Share Your Story
    • Treatment for kidney disease
      • What is Dialysis
      • Kidney Transplant
      • Haemodialysis
      • Peritoneal Dialysis
      • Drugs
    • Rare Renal Conditions
    • FAQs
    • Glossary
  • Find Help
    • Helpline Information & Leaflets
      • Easy Read Information For Kidney Patients
    • Peer Support
    • Home Dialysis & Shared Care Resource Centre
    • Questions to ask your GP or Renal Consultant
    • Organ Donation and Transplantation
    • Support for children and young people
    • Bereavement
    • Mental Health
    • Financial Help
      • Benefits Information for Patients and Carers
      • Help with Financial Support
      • Your Energy Supply
    • Holiday Information
    • Compare Insurance
      • Car Insurance
      • Home Insurance
      • Pet Insurance
      • Travel & Life Insurance
    • Helpful Videos
      • Kidney Health Videos
      • Transplant medication
  • Get involved
    • Donate
    • Become a member
    • Fundraising Events
    • Leave A Gift In Your Will
    • NKF Annual Event
      • NKF Annual Event 2026
      • NKF Annual Event 2025
      • NKF Annual Patients' Event 2024
    • NKF Webinar series
    • Patient Opportunities
    • Campaigning
    • Other ways to help
  • News
    • News
    • Kidney Life magazine
    • In Touch newsletter
    • Meningitis
    • Coronavirus (Covid-19)
    • Understanding Kidney Health with ITN
  • About us
    • About the NKF
      • Who we are
      • Who's Who
      • Who we work with
      • Our Ambassadors
      • Our Industry Partners
      • Our timeline of history
    • NKF Job Vacancies
    • Our Impact
    • Our Strategy
    • Kidney Patient Associations
      • KPA DAY
        • KPA Day 2026
        • KPA Day 2025
        • KPA Day 2024
        • KPA Day 2023
    • NKF Fundraising Heroes
    • Your Kidney Anniversary
    • Policy Statements
    • Contact us
  • Admin
    • Log in
    • Accessibility
    • Search
    • Become a member
    • Shop
    • 0800 169 09 36
  • Basket: (0 items)
  • Who we are
  1. About us
  2. About the NKF
  3. Who we are

Who we are


The National Kidney Federation (NKF) are proud to be the largest kidney patient charity in the UK. Run by kidney patients, for kidney patients.

The National Kidney Federation was founded in 1978 after independent charities, more commonly known now as Kidney Patient Associations (KPAs), after they realised that they needed a national organisation to fight their cause and extreme demand to improve renal provision.

The NKF Executive Committee is made up of patients and carers who generally belong to Kidney Patient Associations.

For over 47 years, the aim of the charity continues to have two main roles:

  • To provide an array of National Patient Support Services
  • And to campaign for improvements to renal provision and treatment

With an estimated 3.25 million people living in the UK with kidney disease (this represents people at stages 3 to 5 CKD), the National Kidney Federation are a lifeline of support and hope to patients and families. They work tirelessly to persuade the Government, the Department of Health, NHS Blood and Transplant, and the NHS to provide better treatment and services for kidney patients.

It is vital that we continue to offer our support to those in need as well as to continue to pull the lever of change and transformation within the renal world.

The Support of the Kidney Community
We can’t do the work and continue to support and change kidney patients' lives without you.


The NKF raises money directly from the public and is also supported in its work by the renal industries surrounding and supporting care of the disease. It exists solely because of the generosity of those sponsors and supporters; money is always tight, and much more could be done with greater sponsorship.

To donate please click here. Your help means everything to patients and loved ones who use our services as a lifeline of support.

Patient Support Services the NKF Provide…

NKF Freephone Helpline
The NKF Freephone Helpline is the only free UK Helpline service dedicated to kidney patients, their families, renal units and health care professionals. The Helpline is manned by two fully trained, experienced advisers.

The NKF Helpline is available Monday to Thursday 08:30 am - 5:00 pm and Friday 8.30 am – 12.30 pm on 0800 169 09 36 or email [email protected].

NKF Helpline Information Leaflets
Whether an individual may be newly diagnosed with kidney disease or a renal unit requires an amount of NKF Helpline anaemia information leaflets, our Helpline can support you.


We can create and distribute hundreds of Helpline information leaflets specifically for kidney patients throughout the UK, from travel insurance, dialysis, dietary advice, transplantation and living donors. Simply call the NKF Helpline on 0800 169 09 36 and they can download the information for you and post that very same day or visit: www.kidney.org.uk/Pages/Category/online-help-resources

NKF Peer Support Service 
The NKF Peer Support Service expanded in 2024, it is open to everyone impacted by kidney disease. People can connect with our 'peers' to converse about lived experiences and are there to support you. This might be over the phone, online, or in person. Topics may include caring for somebody with kidney disease, CKD & diabetes, dialysis, transplantation, wanting to donate or more. 


Our Website
This website is viewed by thousands of patients, carers, renal professionals, doctors and nurses worldwide every year.


If the subject is renal, the answer is on this fantastic website. Above all the website has brought patients real information about their condition, and it has put patients in touch with our Helpline Advisers. It has given kidney consultants, doctors and nurses a chance to talk with each other, and with patients, about issues and concerns that before the website they may have been completely unaware of.

Annual NKF Events
The National Kidney Federation organise an annual
National Patient’s Event which more than 250 renal patients attend over a two-day period.

 It unites patients and renal industries to network and to use their voice and showcase to the NKF where the shortcomings are in renal provision. Frequently, Government ministers and healthcare professionals are on hand to hear for themselves the issues, but above all it is an opportunity for a thorough exchange of views.

KPA Day
The KPA Day is an annual event which takes place to share the opportunity of best practice, a platform for KPAs to showcase its successes and exchange insights with like-minded KPAs, it also is a day for the NKF AGM and the council meeting to take place. 


Campaigning for Change
The National Kidney Federation are the secretariat for the
 All Party Parliamentary Kidney Group of over 70 MPs and Lords established in Parliament and they feed that group on a day to day basis with the information needed to keep renal disease in the eye of the Government.

The NKF have produced five manifestos along with the APPKG including:

  • A manifesto to increase transplantation
  • A home dialysis manifesto
  • A manifesto to increase BAME transplantation
  • A dialysis manifesto
  • A transplant manifesto

For more information on the All-Party Parliamentary Kidney Group please visit here.

The NKF also have also campaigned on:

  • Increasing Home Dialysis in the Context of COVID-19 in the UK with a January 2021 Report

  • A year on from the January 2021 Report created a One Year On Report (2022) on increasing home dialysis. The Report was launched and showcased at the NKF’s Parliamentary Reception at Westminster on Wednesday 6th July 2022 sponsored by Brendan Clarke-Smith MP and was a great success.

  • In 2022  launched a campaign called Meeting the Cost of Home Dialysis Treatment – Together We Can to make home dialysis affordable for patients, giving patients the freedom of choice to dialyse at home and be reimbursed suitably to cover the costs of treatments.

  • In 2023 hosted a Parliamentary Reception this time pre World Kidney Day, amongst other APPKG meetings and published the Increasing Home Dialysis in the Context of COVID-19 in the UK Two Years On - March 2023 Report.

  • In 2024 published the Increasing Home Dialysis in the UK - Three Years On Report to increase home dialysis. The purpose of the report is to share outcomes from the campaign and to encourage the kidney community to take further action. 

Kidney Patient Associations (KPAs)

Currently there are 51 Kidney Patient Associations (KPAs) and they come together as the controlling Council of the National Kidney Federation, the KPAs are both the ears and the eyes of the NKF and its controlling force.

Kidney Patient Associations (KPAs) provide support for kidney patients on a local level. They are charities in their own right and they are often located in hospital renal units.

The main purpose of a KPA is to support patients on a local scale either pre-dialysis, dialysis or transplanted and they are also there to support their families and loved ones in any way they can.

KPAs can offer varied support but could include anything from the below:

  • Website materials and newsletters to the local kidney community.
  • Organisation of events such as coffee mornings, bake sales, holidays.
  • Supporting their local renal units with donations for anything from blood pressure monitors to dialysis bikes to blankets to wristbands, etc.
  • Social support groups to provide moral and peer support to people within the kidney community.

Our Impact
Our Impact Report for 2024 is now available. Our report showcases all the hard work and achievements we have made over the last year for the millions of people living with kidney disease. You can take a read of the
Impact Report here.

Plans for the Future
The NKF continues to forge closer relationships with other kidney charities to ensure that resource is used effectively and that different groups don’t keep reinventing the same wheel.

A large number of kidney patients come from ethnic backgrounds and this presents separate difficulties which have to be faced, translation of leaflets, involvement in the patient organisations, shortages of donor organs, cultural views toward transplantation.

The Kidney Patient Associations (KPAs) themselves need strengthening and in the coming years the NKF intends to focus on providing real help to these groups of patients who are struggling to maintain their local service within their own units. 

In Europe the Renal Patients organisation is called the European Kidney Patients Federation (EKPF), and the NKF is already a full and active member taking the fight for better treatment and resource both to the European Parliament and to individual countries as necessary and bringing back to the UK the successful ideas practiced abroad.

The National Kidney Federation is constantly aware that the earlier renal disease can be detected and treated, the better the outcome for the patient. Much effort is to be put in, to try to identify these groups at high risk who are unaware of the danger to their health and the possibility of them entering End Stage Renal Failure.

Whilst there clearly have been many advances in renal care since the foundation of the NKF in 1978, it remains true that the period started with a shortage of renal provision and resource and ends in exactly the same plight. The NKF hopes passionately that over the coming years we will see real strides being made in adequate provision of health care to the current estimated 3.25 million CKD patients in the UK (this represents people at stages 3 to 5 CKD). 

Click here to see the Policy Statements of the NKF

Click here to read of a copy our Memorandum and Articles of Association

Back to top

Latest

  • KPA Day 2026

    KPA Day 2026

  • Colin's Story

    Colin's Story

  • ‘She gave us our family back’ NKF Helpline Advisor, Linda Pickering, retires after more than 30 years of supporting kidney patients

    ‘She gave us our family back’ NKF Helpline Advisor, Linda Pickering, retires after more than 30 years of supporting kidney patients

  • Hilary's Story

    Hilary's Story

Most read

  • Sexual relationship in kidney failure for men

    Sexual relationship in kidney failure for men information leaflet

  • Can Kidney Patients eat fruit and vegetables

    Can Kidney Patients eat fruit and vegetables

    Can Kidney Patients eat fruit and vegetables information leaflet

  • Medication for immunosuppression and prevention of infections in kidney patients

    Medication for immunosuppression and prevention of infections in kidney patients

    Medication for immunosuppression and prevention of infections in kidney patients

  • Pain in Kidney or Urine Diseases

    Pain in Kidney or Urine Diseases

    Pain is one of the more common reasons to go to a doctor.

  • Chronic kidney disease

    Chronic kidney disease

    Kidney disease is a term used by doctors to include any abnormality of the kidneys, even if there is only very slight damage.

  • Fistula Care

    Fistula Care

    Care of your fistula information leaflet

  • Acute kidney injury

    Acute kidney injury

    What is acute kidney injury? information leaflet

  • Small or Single Kidney

    Small or Single Kidney

    The kidneys play an important role controlling the amount of water in the body.

  • Healthy eating for people with chronic kidney disease (CKD) Stages 1 to 3

    Chronic Kidney disease is a long – term condition where the kidneys do not work well. It does not usually cause symptoms until later stages. CKD is normally found at earlier stages by blood and urine tests. Your GP can tell you what stage of kidney disease you have.

  • Stage 3 Chronic Kidney Disease

    Don’t panic! We explain what CKD Stage 3 means for you and how you can keep your kidneys healthy.

Tag cloud

Cholesterol donate donation kidney disease

Keep up to date with latest events, blog posts and news from the NKF and be part of our growing community

Useful links

  • Contact us
  • Careers
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy policy

Get in touch

Email: [email protected]

Telephone: (01909) 544999

HELPLINE: 0800 169 09 36

(free from UK Landlines and mobiles)

Follow us

  • LinkedIn
  • X
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Youtube
Information on this website is intended for UK Residents only
Registered Office: The National Kidney Federation, The Point, Coach Road, Shireoaks, Worksop, Notts S81 8BW (c) 2019 - 2023 | Registered in England and Wales as a Company limited by guarantee, Company No 5272349 and awarded charitable status, England and Wales Charity Number 1106735 Scottish Charity Number SC049431 | Give as You Earn contributions No. CAF GY511
*** We use essential cookies to ensure our site functions properly. Please note that by declining these cookies, some features, such as live chat and our accessibility tool, will not work. With your consent, we may also use non-essential cookies to enhance your experience and analyse website traffic. By clicking “Accept,” you agree to our use of cookies as outlined in our Cookie Policy. You can adjust your cookie preferences at any time by clicking “Preferences.”

Manage Cookie Preferences