A good cilantro lime salad dressing should taste bright, herby, and fresh, not harsh, watery, or oily. That’s why I make this version with plenty of cilantro, fresh lime juice, a little Greek yogurt for body, and just enough olive oil to round it out. It comes together fast, but it still tastes like something you made on purpose. I love it on crisp romaine, cabbage slaw, taco salads, grain bowls, and grilled chicken. If you already like avocado lime and lemon herb, this dressing lands right between those two moods: lively, creamy, and easy to keep in the fridge for the week.

Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Why This Cilantro Lime Salad Dressing Works
- It tastes balanced, not sharp. Lime brings the brightness, but Greek yogurt and olive oil keep the acid from hitting too hard.
- It takes about 10 minutes. You only chop a little, then the blender does the rest.
- It stays useful all week. You can spoon it onto salads, taco bowls, wraps, roasted vegetables, and grilled proteins.
- It feels creamy without heavy richness. Greek yogurt gives body, but the cilantro still leads the flavor.
- It adapts easily. You can make it dairy-free, spicier, thinner for greens, or thicker for dipping.
- It costs less than store-bought specialty dressing. Most of the ingredients already sit in a home kitchen.
Ingredients for Cilantro Lime Salad Dressing

Makes about 1 cup, or 8 servings at 2 tablespoons each.
- 1 packed cup fresh cilantro leaves and tender stems
Wash and dry well. Wet cilantro waters down the dressing. - 1/2 cup plain Greek yogurt
Use whole milk or 2% for the best body. This ingredient gives the dressing its creamy texture. - 1/4 cup fresh lime juice
About 2 large limes. Fresh juice matters here. - 3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
Use a mild one if your olive oil tastes peppery or bitter. - 1 small garlic clove
Raw garlic gets stronger as it sits, so start small. - 1 tablespoon honey
This softens the lime. Maple syrup works too. - 1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
This adds warmth and depth without turning the dressing muddy. - 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
Add more to taste after blending. - 1/4 teaspoon black pepper
- 1 to 2 tablespoons cold water
Add this only if you want a thinner pour. - Optional: 1 tablespoon jalapeño, roughly chopped
Add for heat. - Optional: 1 tablespoon mayonnaise
Add only if you want a richer, restaurant-style finish.
What’s essential
Cilantro, lime juice, salt, and a creamy or fatty base make the dressing work. In this version, Greek yogurt and olive oil handle that job together.
What’s flexible
You can swap honey for maple syrup. You can swap Greek yogurt for sour cream, plain skyr, or dairy-free unsweetened yogurt. If you like a stronger tang, cut the honey slightly. If you want a greener, fuller texture, try the flavor direction from tahini lemon or the sharper edge you get in apple cider.
Equipment
- Small blender or food processor
- Citrus juicer
- Measuring cups and spoons
- Rubber spatula
- Jar or airtight container for storage
A personal blender works especially well because it pulls the cilantro down into the blades faster than a wide blender jar.
How to Make Cilantro Lime Salad Dressing
1. Prep the cilantro
Pull off the thick bottom stems, but keep the tender upper stems. They carry flavor and blend well. Wash the cilantro, then dry it very well. If the leaves cling together and drip, keep drying. Excess water gives you a thin dressing and dull flavor.
2. Add the base ingredients first
Add the Greek yogurt, lime juice, olive oil, honey, garlic, cumin, salt, and pepper to the blender first. Then add the cilantro on top. This order helps the blades catch the softer ingredients before they hit the leaves.
3. Blend until the dressing turns smooth and pale green
Blend for 20 to 30 seconds, scrape down the sides, then blend again for 10 to 20 seconds. Stop when the dressing looks creamy, evenly green, and lightly speckled. It should smell bright and fresh, with lime in the lead and cilantro close behind. Don’t keep blending for minutes. Overblending can warm the herbs and make the flavor flatter.
4. Adjust the texture
Dip in a spoon. The dressing should coat the back lightly, then fall in a smooth ribbon. If it looks too thick for salad greens, blend in 1 tablespoon cold water. Add a second tablespoon only if you need it. If it looks thin already, leave it alone. It will thicken a little in the fridge.
5. Taste and balance
Taste one spoonful straight, then taste another on a leaf of lettuce or a piece of cucumber. The second taste tells you more. If it tastes too sharp, add 1 more teaspoon Greek yogurt or 1/2 teaspoon honey. If it tastes flat, add a pinch of salt. If the cilantro feels weak, add a small handful more and blend briefly.
6. Chill before serving if you have time
You can use it right away, but 15 to 20 minutes in the fridge helps the garlic settle and the texture tighten. It pours best after a stir or shake.
For safe storage of fresh homemade dressings, follow safe food handling guidance.
Pro Tips
- Use dry cilantro. This matters more than people think. Water dulls the flavor fast.
- Start with one garlic clove, not two. Raw garlic grows louder after chilling.
- Blend in short bursts. You want a fresh herbal taste, not a warm blender taste.
- Taste it on actual salad greens. Straight from the spoon, lime can taste stronger than it will on lettuce.
- Use cold ingredients. Cold yogurt and cold lime juice help the dressing stay brighter.
- Thin it only at the end. Early thinning can trick you into making it too loose.
Variations
Creamier version
Add 1 tablespoon mayonnaise or half an avocado. For a richer cousin to this dressing, salsa verde and all purpose can also give you ideas for how a small change shifts the whole mood.
Dairy-free version
Swap the Greek yogurt for plain unsweetened dairy-free yogurt. Coconut yogurt works if it tastes neutral.
Spicy version
Add 1 tablespoon jalapeño or a pinch of cayenne. Start small. Heat builds as the dressing sits.
Thinner vinaigrette version
Skip the yogurt and add 2 more tablespoons olive oil plus 1 tablespoon water. The dressing will taste more like a cilantro lime vinaigrette and less like a creamy cilantro lime dressing.
Avocado version
Blend in 1/2 ripe avocado. This version tastes best the day you make it because avocado can darken by the next day.
Extra tangy version
Add 1 teaspoon lime zest. Avoid the white pith. The pith tastes bitter.
What to Serve With It

This cilantro lime salad dressing works far beyond basic greens.
- Drizzle it over romaine, butter lettuce, or cabbage slaw
- Spoon it onto taco salads and burrito bowls
- Use it as a sauce for grilled chicken, shrimp, or salmon
- Toss it with cucumbers, cherry tomatoes, and avocado
- Spread a thicker version inside wraps or sandwiches
- Serve it with roasted sweet potatoes or corn
I like it most with taco bowls and greek bowls when I want one sauce to carry the whole meal. It also works well with shrimp bowls and this fresh chicken salad.
For general produce and nutrition details, USDA FoodData Central gives a solid ingredient reference.
Storage, Freezing, and Reheating
Storage
Store the dressing in a sealed jar in the fridge for up to 4 days. Stir or shake before each use. The top may loosen slightly while the bottom thickens. That’s normal.
Freezing
I don’t recommend freezing it. Fresh cilantro loses its clean flavor, and yogurt can split after thawing.
Reheating
Don’t reheat this dressing. Serve it cold or cool. If it thickens too much in the fridge, stir in 1 teaspoon cold water at a time.
Common Mistakes and Fixes
1. The dressing tastes too sharp
You probably need more body or a touch more sweetness. Add 1 teaspoon Greek yogurt or 1/2 teaspoon honey, then blend again.
2. The dressing tastes bitter
A bitter olive oil, too much lime pith, or too much blending usually causes this. Use a milder olive oil next time. Right now, add a little more yogurt and a small drizzle of honey to soften it.
3. The dressing looks watery
Your cilantro may have stayed wet, or you added too much water too soon. Fix it with 1 more tablespoon Greek yogurt and a brief blend.
4. The dressing feels too thick
Cold yogurt often tightens the texture. Stir in cold water 1 teaspoon at a time until it pours the way you want.
5. The garlic takes over
Raw garlic grows stronger in the fridge. Use a smaller clove next time. To fix today’s batch, add more cilantro and a spoonful of yogurt.
6. The color turns dull
Long blending, warm ingredients, or old cilantro usually causes this. Work fast and keep ingredients cold.
7. The cilantro tastes muddy
You may have used thick stems or old leaves. Stick with leaves and tender stems only.
Helpful FAQs
Can I make cilantro lime salad dressing without yogurt?
Yes. Replace the yogurt with more olive oil for a thinner vinaigrette, or use avocado for a creamy texture.
How long does cilantro lime dressing last in the fridge?
It tastes best within 3 to 4 days. Fresh herb dressings lose brightness faster than shelf-stable dressings.
Can I make it ahead?
Yes. In fact, a short chill helps the flavor come together. I like making it a few hours ahead, then stirring it before serving.
What salads work best with this dressing?
Romaine, cabbage slaw, mixed greens, taco salad, black bean salad, and corn salads all work very well.
Can I use bottled lime juice?
You can, but fresh lime juice tastes brighter and less flat. In a simple dressing like this, the difference shows.
What can I use it for besides salad?
Try it on tacos, rice bowls, grilled chicken, roasted vegetables, or as a dip for raw veggies.
Final Thoughts on This Cilantro Lime Salad Dressing
This cilantro lime salad dressing earns a spot in the fridge because it does more than dress a salad. It gives plain greens more life, turns bowls into lunch you actually want, and adds a fresh finish to tacos, chicken, and roasted vegetables. Make it once, then adjust it to your taste. A little more lime, a little less garlic, a little jalapeño heat—it all works.
If you make it, leave a comment with how you used it. Save it for your next meal-prep day, and share it with someone who loves bright homemade sauces.

Creamy Cilantro Lime Dressing
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Wash and dry the cilantro very well.
- Add the yogurt, lime juice, olive oil, garlic, honey, cumin, salt, and pepper to a blender.
- Add the cilantro and blend for 20 to 30 seconds.
- Scrape down the sides and blend again until creamy and evenly green.
- Add cold water a little at a time if you want a thinner texture.
- Taste and adjust with more salt, lime, or yogurt as needed.
- Chill for 15 to 20 minutes for the best flavor, then stir and serve.
