Meet the BEST lentil soup recipe! Made with dried lentils, fresh vegetables, flavorful spices, and hearty greens, it's simple, healthy, and delicious.
This easy lentil soup recipe is warming, nourishing, and delicious. It’s packed with hearty greens, tender vegetables, and fiber- and protein-rich lentils. Fresh herbs and spices fill it with complex flavor, and a splash of vinegar adds a bright, tangy kick.
It’s not just my best lentil soup recipe—it’s one of my best recipes, period. It’s been a staple in my rotation for years. Easy to make with pantry ingredients, it’s the perfect healthy dinner for a winter weeknight (save any leftovers for lunch the next day!). I hope you love this simple lentil soup as much as I do.
Lentil Soup Ingredients
Here’s what you’ll need to make this soup:
- Lentils, of course! The best types of lentils for this recipe are green lentils or French lentils, also known as Le Puy lentils. They hold their shape nicely in the soup, adding satisfying texture. Brown lentils are also a fine option. Red lentils are too mushy for this recipe. If you have them on hand, go check out my red lentil soup instead!
- Extra-virgin olive oil – For richness.
- Onion, garlic, carrot, and celery – They create the soup’s aromatic base.
- Fresh kale – You’ll use the whole leaves, stems and all!
- Fire-roasted diced tomatoes – I love the smoky flavor that fire-roasted tomatoes add to this soup. In a pinch, regular diced tomatoes work here too!
- Vegetable broth – Make homemade vegetable stock, or use store-bought.
- Fresh thyme – For fresh, woodsy flavor. I like to bundle whole sprigs together with kitchen twine. Then, I add the bundle to the soup like a bay leaf, removing it before serving.
- Cumin – The secret ingredient! It adds savory, earthy depth.
- White wine vinegar – It gives the soup a tangy kick.
- And salt and pepper – To make all the flavors pop!
Find the complete recipe with measurements below.
Recipe Variations
Don’t have these exact ingredients on hand? These swaps work nicely:
- Replace the kale with another leafy green like fresh spinach or Swiss chard.
- Use 1 teaspoon dried thyme instead of the fresh sprigs.
- Replace the celery with 1 small fennel bulb, diced.
- No vinegar? Finish the soup with a squeeze of fresh lemon juice instead!
How to Make Lentil Soup
This lentil soup recipe is easy to make! Here’s how it goes:
First, sauté the aromatics. Heat the olive oil in a large pot or Dutch oven over medium heat and add the onion, carrots, celery, kale stems, and cumin. Cook until they soften, about 8 minutes.
Next, simmer the soup. Add the garlic, tomatoes, lentils, vinegar, thyme, and broth.
Tip: Rinse the lentils before cooking to remove any stones or debris.
Cover and cook until the lentils are tender, 25 to 30 minutes. Adjust the heat as needed to maintain a gentle simmer.
Finally, add the greens. Cook until they wilt, about 5 minutes, and then season to taste.
Serve the lentil soup topped with garnishes like fresh parsley, grated Parmesan, and/or red pepper flakes. Enjoy with crusty bread!
Love cooking soup in the Instant Pot? Check out this Instant Pot Lentil Soup for pressure cooker instructions!
How to Store Lentil Soup
Store leftover soup in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 4 days. Simply reheat in the microwave or on the stovetop.
I actually like this soup better leftover. The flavor only improves as it sits in the fridge!
Can you freeze lentil soup?
Yes, this vegan lentil soup is freezer-friendly! Allow it to cool to room temperature, and then seal it in airtight containers or jars, leaving an inch for the soup to expand at the top. Freeze for up to 3 months.
More Favorite Soup Recipes
If you love this lentil soup, try one of these nourishing soup recipes next:
- Minestrone Soup
- Vegetable Soup
- Butternut Squash Soup
- Vegetarian Chili
- Black Bean Soup
- Tomato Soup
- Or any of these 35 Best Soup Recipes!

Best Lentil Soup
Ingredients
- 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
- 1 medium yellow onion, chopped
- 4 medium carrots, chopped (2 cups)
- 2 celery stalks, chopped
- 6 small or 3 large kale leaves, stems finely diced, leaves chopped (8 cups)
- Heaping ½ teaspoon ground cumin
- 1½ teaspoons sea salt
- Freshly ground black pepper
- 4 garlic cloves, grated
- 1 (14-ounce) can fire-roasted diced tomatoes
- ¾ cup dry green lentils, rinsed
- 2 tablespoons white wine vinegar
- 12 fresh thyme sprigs, bundled
- 6 cups vegetable broth
- ½ cup chopped fresh parsley, for garnish
- Red pepper flakes
- Grated Parmesan cheese, for serving, optional
Instructions
- Heat the olive oil in a large pot over medium heat. Add the onion, carrots, celery, kale stems, cumin, salt, and several grinds of pepper, and cook, stirring occasionally, for 8 minutes, or until the vegetables begin to soften.
- Stir in the garlic, tomatoes, lentils, vinegar, thyme, and broth. Cover and simmer for 25 to 30 minutes, or until the lentils are tender. Add the kale leaves and cook for 5 minutes, or until wilted.
- Remove the thyme bundle and season to taste. Serve topped with the parsley, red pepper flakes, and Parmesan, if desired.
Notes









I made this last night and it is fantastic. My husband, a few bites in, stopped to tell me to make sure I saved this recipe and I received several more compliments the rest of the evening. A definite winner. My only change was I added .5 cup less water.
Hi Lily, ha ha, I’m so happy to hear it was such a hit!
We love this recipe! Definitely will become a regular in my house. I added some chopped carrots and kale to bump up the vegetables, but otherwise wouldn’t change a thing.
I’m so glad you loved it!
Hi!
Are you able to substitute the green lentils with any other lentils ?
Thanks !
Hi, black lentils are a great sub. Red lentils will also work here, though they’ll be much softer and create a thicker soup than the green lentils would.
We make this lentil soup weekly, and love it for many of the same reasons already mentioned. Quick and easy prep, simple ingredients and delicious leftovers! Thanks for sharing!
I’m so glad you’ve loved it!
Did that one yesterday and everyone loved it! That recipe is definitely joining my everyday notebook! Thanks
I’m so glad you love the recipe!
Thank you for this versatile, easy to make recipe. Like others I bulked it up with a few extra veggies: sweet potato, carrot, red bell pepper. Added G Masala spice and turmeric for the heck of it, but wow. WOW! Thank you, thank you for a fantastic, adaptable, one dish family meal. Everyone was happy with this one!
Hi Mel, I’m so glad you love the recipe!
This soup is delicious ?
Do you have the nutritional value for this recipe?
Hi, we don’t calculate nutrition info for our recipes. If you like, you can plug it into an online nutrition calculator like MyFitnessPal. So glad you enjoyed it!
What can I substitute for lime in this recipe? I have variety of vinegars and lemon.
This is delicious! Thanks so much for the recipe. I did add some additional odds and ends from my veggie drawer, finely diced butternut squash and Lacinto kale. I also did not thin it down and served it with basmati rice. My family loved it.
SOOOO good! I added sweet potato, carrots, & jalapeño. So good. Will def make at least once every fall!
Yum! I’m so glad you enjoyed.
This soup was so wonderful!! Thank you!!
LOVE this lentil soup recipe–thank you! I use black lentils and fresh tomatoes and it turns out amazingly every time.
This is so so so good! I added Trader Joe’s croissant croutons and a touch of garlic yogurt. Fall is making me want to put some pumpkin in it. Fantastic recipe!
I’m so glad you enjoyed it!
Question: I have cooked lentils on-hand, what would the recipe call for with cooked lentils?
I can’t stop making this, and that is saying a lot for a lentil soup! Sooo good!
Ha ha, I’m glad you’ve loved it so much!
I can’t find fire roasted tomatoes where I live, what would be the best substitute? Sundried, regular tomatoes? What do you think? The recipe looks awesome!
Hi Ingela, just regular canned diced tomatoes will work great.
I cooked the soup for at least an hour but my lentils turned out crunchy. Any advice?
Hi Nat, oh wow, an hour should be plenty. When beans and legumes are older they can take much longer to cook (or sometimes just never soften). It’s sometimes hard to know how long they’ve been on the shelf at a store. I would just keep simmering, they should soften.
It may also depend on your altitude. Anything dense will take much longer to cook. I live in Denver at 5,300 ft, and I usually have to double or triple the cooking time for lentils. (And larger beans take so long most people here use a pressure cooker or canned.)
I find lentils don’t soften when salt is added, try adding salt at the end
Delicious soup; so quick, easy and tasty. Definitely will be a favorite quick and hearty dinner!
Such a delicious and easy recipe. I should have added a bit more water but yummy thicker too!
Loved this soup, so easy and didn’t need to sit for a day for all the flavor