Soup season (which, really, is any time of the year!) can be comforting and nutritious with these healthy soup recipes.
44 Healthy Soup Recipes That Don’t Skimp on Flavor
Minestrone Soup
With two kinds of beans, vegetables and an herb-infused broth, you can’t go wrong with this Italian-style soup. Even without meat, this soup will fill you up and stick with you, thanks to the protein and fiber from the beans. Check these Low-Calorie Soup Recipes you’ll want to ladle up.
Crockpot Chicken Noodle Soup
This classic soup gets even easier when you let the slow cooker do the work for you. I love how flavorful each bite of chicken is after spending all day cooking with the broth, herbs and veggies. To keep the noodles al dente and prevent them from soaking up all the broth, I like to boil and store them separately, adding them to the soup just before eating.
Vegetable Turkey Soup
Soup can be notoriously high in sodium, but using low-sodium ingredients in this vegetable turkey soup helps keep things in check without sacrificing taste. Ground turkey adds flavor while keeping the fat and calories low, but you can just as easily swap in lean ground beef if that’s what you have.
White Bean and Kale Soup
Using an immersion blender to blend some of the beans gives this soup a creamy, silky texture without the need for heavy cream. Instead of extra fat and calories, the creamy base is loaded with fiber and protein.
Pumpkin Curry Soup
Warm spices and starchy vegetables make this pumpkin curry as comforting as it is good for you. The mushrooms add a wonderful earthy flavor, while canned pumpkin gives this curry an antioxidant and nutrient boost and shaves off tons of prep time. Choose from several types of mushrooms.
French Lentil and Carrot Soup
Lentils add fiber, protein and an earthiness to this soup, where only a few ingredients are needed. If you’re making a batch of this to warm up on a chilly weeknight, use rotisserie chicken to save time and effort without sacrificing flavor.
Carrot Ginger Soup
This creamy soup is vibrant and full of zesty flavor from blending sweet carrots with warming gingerroot. The low calories and digestive benefits of ginger make this soup an excellent appetizer for a more hearty meal.
Chicken Gnocchi Soup
If you love Olive Garden’s creamy chicken gnocchi, you’ll love this healthy, hearty copycat version even more. It’s loaded with fresh vegetables and gnocchi, and you have full control over the ingredients. If you want to reduce the sodium, just use low-sodium or salt-free chicken broth. Reduce the amount of heavy cream by half to cut out some of the fat.
Asian Vegetable-Beef Soup
You’ll love this hearty beef-based soup served with rice for a hearty lunch or warming dinner. While we feature carrots, bok choy, green onions and mushrooms, the soup is versatile enough that you can add whatever vegetables you have available.
Instant Pot Corn Chowder
The Instant Pot makes it as quick and easy as possible to enjoy hearty corn chowder at home. While we love using fresh corn in this soup, you can always use frozen corn if that’s what you have. Grating your own cheese is best, as there will be fewer preservatives and the cheese will melt more smoothly.
Vegan Broccoli Cheddar Soup
You don’t need dairy to make a creamy, cheesy broccoli cheddar soup! Cashew cream adds a luxuriously silky texture to this soup, while nutritional yeast gives it the cheesy flavor you love (minus the dairy and saturated fat).
Slow-Cooker Thai Butternut Squash Peanut Soup
Peanut butter and Thai seasonings are the perfect contrast to the sweet, starchy squash in this slow-cooker soup. Letting the flavors meld together in the slow cooker creates a better depth of flavor, whether you blend the ingredients to a creamy finish or leave the bite-sized squash as is.
Lasagna Soup
No matter how much I love lasagna, it’s a time-consuming and indulgent dish that’s not ideal for eating regularly. This lasagna soup, however, can be added to the rotation with its quick assembly and impressive nutrient profile. Lean ground beef adds protein and texture, while all the produce adds vitamins and minerals.
Creamy Chicken and Rice Soup
This chicken and rice soup is creamy, but not because of heavy cream. Combining flour and evaporated milk thickens this soup to a creamy texture without packing in calories or fat. You can get in a few other nutrients by swapping in brown or wild rice for the white rice.
Hearty Vegetable Soup
If you struggle to eat enough veggies, this soup solves your problems. Loaded with a mixture of fresh and frozen vegetables as well as garbanzo beans and V8 juice, this soup is a great way to “eat the rainbow.” The recipe is also one of the best soups for freezing, so make a big batch and warm it up for easy lunches throughout the week.
Beef Barley Soup
Warm up on a cold day with a hearty bowl of beef barley. Top round steak is the cut of steak used for this specific recipe, and it makes for a nice change of pace compared to soups that use ground beef. We offer tips on cooking this soup in the slow cooker or Instant Pot too. Pick any version that suits your schedule!
Slow-Cooker Split Pea Soup
This dump-and-go slow-cooker soup is soulwarming and so, so easy to put together. Dried split peas add a tender texture and a sweet, slightly earthy flavor. Smoked ham gives each bite a smoky finish. While this soup isn’t terribly high in sodium as written, you can reduce it even further by using a reduced-sodium ham and seasoning the soup as you like.
Navy Bean Soup
Dried beans are an incredibly underrated superfood. They add protein and fiber to this soup, stay fresh in the pantry and cost just pennies per serving. Since the beans will need time to soak, plan ahead for this soup.
Warm spices like cumin, thyme and smoked paprika add plenty of flavor to this wholesome soup. The longer it sits, the more the flavors meld together. We use chicken stock in this recipe, but if you’ve just made a few batches of homemade chicken broth, you can use that too.
Chicken Tortellini Soup
If you’re looking for a low-calorie, balanced soup that will keep you full for a few hours, you’ve found it. The cheesy tortellini pairs perfectly with the mixed veggies, herbs, broth and cubed chicken. A bowl of this soup will stick with you without feeling too heavy.
Tomato Soup
Forget the canned stuff and make a big batch of our favorite homemade tomato soup. This recipe sneaks in an extra layer of flavor and nutrients by combining carrots with tomatoes. In only 30 minutes, you’ll have the perfect healthy pairing for a side salad and grilled cheese sandwich.
Senate Bean Soup
Have a cup of soup with a side of history! This dish has been served every day in the Senate since the early 1900s. Mashed potatoes thicken the base of the soup, while ham hocks infuse it with briny flavor.
Creamy Corn Crab Soup
Using canned crabmeat keeps the cost of this soup low but doesn’t detract from the taste or the health benefits. The flavor is similar to seafood bisque, but the ingredients are simple. Instead of heavy cream, the soup uses whole milk and blended potatoes to add a luxurious texture.
Vegetable Lentil Soup
This vegetarian soup will stick with you thanks to the fiber-filled lentils and starchy squash. Even meat-eaters will love that you can enjoy a big bowl of this soup for just 217 calories. Use it as a side dish for a light lunch or dinner.
White Bean Soup with Escarole
This Mediterranean-style soup uses escarole, a bitter green that’s rich in nutrients, to help round out the acidity of the tomatoes. If you can’t find escarole, swap in spinach or kale.
Seafood Soup
If you’re trying to add more seafood to your diet but you don’t love it on its own, simmer it in soup! With salmon and shrimp cooked in an herb-infused tomato broth, this recipe is very tomato-forward rather than fishy.
Borscht Soup
This traditional Eastern European soup gets its vibrant red color from beets, a root vegetable loaded with antioxidants, vitamins and minerals. Simmered in beef stock and served up with vegetables like carrots, onions and cabbage, borscht soup has a rich flavor while adding less than 50 calories per cup to your meal.
Vegetable Barley Soup
This soup is low-calorie, hearty and packed to the brim with vegetables. It should be added to your meatless Monday meal rotation ASAP. While the soup has nine different ingredients, it’s pretty forgiving and customizable, so use what you have on hand.
Ham Bone Soup
It’s hard to believe that this rich and meaty soup is actually good for you! With 8 grams of fiber and 20 grams of protein in every cup, this is a hearty soup. While it does have small bits of carrot, celery and onion, you can always add a handful of baby spinach at the end to give this soup an extra nutrient boost!
Slow-Cooker Butternut Squash Soup
Squash and potatoes give this soup a creamy texture without any extra cream. It’s low in calories and high in nutrients, especially vitamin C and vitamin A, two vitamins that help support a healthy immune system. This is the perfect addition to any cold-weather meal.
Potato Leek Soup
A quick roux gives this potato soup a creamy, thick texture, which makes it hard to believe that each cup has only 193 calories. This recipe is much lighter than the traditional French classic but doesn’t sacrifice flavor.
Pressure-Cooker Black Bean Soup
Black beans add fiber, protein and iron to this soup, and a scoop of fresh corn on top adds a restaurant quality finish with a pop of sweetness. Turn up the heat with any of your favorite hot sauces.
Matzo Ball Soup
Matzo ball soup is a traditional Jewish food, but we can all enjoy the comfort it brings. The doughy matzo dumplings combined with herbed chicken broth, lean chicken and plenty of vegetables make a cold-weather soup that’s surprisingly low in calories.
Pork Chop Soup
Beef, chicken and vegetables often take center stage in healthy soup recipes, but pork is the superstar here. Low in fat and high in protein, pork loin chops are combined with sausage, veggies, chopped apples, broth and Chinese five-spice powder for a flavorful, quick dish.
General Tso's Stew
There are minor differences between soups, stews and chilis, so we’ll lope this one in with the bunch. General Tso’s stew is a fun and interesting way to use up any leftover cooked chicken or turkey and takes just 10 minutes of prep while the slow cooker does the rest of the work.
Pumpkin-Coconut Soup
If you enjoy Thai flavors, you’ll love the combo of coconut milk, pumpkin, and warm spices like ginger, cinnamon and nutmeg. With less than 100 calories per cup and a full flavor profile, this soup is the ideal side to other winter or fall recipes.
Slow-Cooker Minestrone
What’s better than a bowl of minestrone? A bowl of minestrone easily made in the slow cooker. Just a little chopping and the opening of some cans are all you need to do to prep this veggie-packed, nutrient-rich soup.
Beef Noodle Soup
For a soup that uses only six ingredients, this beef noodle soup has a deep, savory flavor that’s much more complex than the recipe. To have more control over the salt, use no-salt-added tomatoes and broth and then add the salt to your liking as the soup simmers.
Chicken Cabbage Soup
Chicken cabbage soup is loaded with ingredients to support a healthy immune system. Cabbage, carrots, celery, onions, potatoes, herbs and garlic give this soup an antioxidant and nutrient boost that will support your health all winter long if you make it regularly.
Slow-Cooker Black Bean Soup
Black beans have a meaty, savory flavor and texture that’s hard to get from other beans. Shredded cheese, sour cream, hot sauce, avocado and a squeeze of fresh lime make amazing complementary toppings.
Dill Chicken Soup
Lean chicken, whole grain pasta and vegetables give this soup its top-tier nutrition, while adding dill lends a pop of brightness in flavor and color. It’s not an herb you typically see added to soup, but we wish it were used more!
Lemon Chicken Orzo Soup
Orzo is a bit more nutrient-dense and higher in protein than other types of pasta, and it adds the perfect hearty texture to this lemon chicken soup. Each 1-2/3 cup serving has 223 calories, 5 grams of fiber and 17 grams of protein to keep you full and satisfied.
Greens and Beans Turkey Soup
Greens and beans are an incredibly nutrient-rich and satisfying side dish, so it’s not surprising that adding the combo to turkey soup is equally as healthy and delicious. Make this recipe after a turkey dinner, simmering the flavors and nutrients out of the turkey carcass that might otherwise be tossed in the trash.
Spicy Peruvian Potato Soup
Serrano peppers add a kick of heat to this soup to warm you up. They can also boost your metabolism when eaten regularly in moderation. If you want a little less heat, skip the serrano pepper or use something a bit more mild.
Healthy Soup Recipes FAQs
What are the best healthy vegetable soup recipes?
Vegetable barley or vegetable lentil soups and minestrone are all packed with vegetables for a low-calorie, nutrient-dense meal. Soups that are broth-based tend to be healthier than creamy soups, and those filled with leafy greens and lean proteins can aid your health.
Is it healthy to eat soup?
Soups can be an incredibly nutritious option, especially when they include plenty of vegetables and lean protein options like chicken, turkey, seafood, tofu or beans. As with anything, moderation is always best if you enjoy saltier, creamy soups.
How do you make soup recipes healthier?
Reducing the amount of heavy cream and cheese you use, choosing lower-sodium broth and canned foods, and adding more vegetables to your soups can make them healthier. Rather than processed ingredients, the more whole foods you can use the better.