Golden potatoes hold onto a bright, creamy dressing in a way that makes every bite taste balanced instead of heavy. The lemon keeps the salad lively, the dill gives it that clean fresh-herb finish, and the red potatoes stay firm enough to toss without turning mushy. It’s the kind of side dish that disappears first at a picnic, then gets requested again because it lands right between comforting and crisp.
The trick here is letting the potatoes cool before they meet the dressing. Warm potatoes absorb flavor better, but if they’re steaming hot, they can break down and turn the salad pasty. The other piece that matters is the ratio of mayo to sour cream: enough richness for body, enough sour cream and lemon to keep the dressing loose and bright.
Below you’ll find the small details that keep this potato salad from getting dull or watery, plus a few simple ways to adjust it for different tables and timelines.
The dressing clung to every potato and the lemon-dill combo tasted fresh even after chilling overnight. I usually have trouble with potato salad getting bland in the fridge, but this held its flavor and stayed creamy.
Lemon dill potato salad with a creamy dressing and fresh herb bite belongs on every warm-weather table.
The Reason This Salad Stays Creamy Instead of Gummy
The biggest mistake in potato salad is beating it like mashed potatoes. Once the potatoes are tender, they need to be handled gently so the cubes keep their shape and the dressing stays clinging to the outside instead of turning into a starchy paste. Red potatoes help here because their waxy texture holds together after boiling, which gives you a salad with definition, not sludge.
Chilling also matters more than people think. The dressing needs time to settle into the potatoes, and the lemon needs that rest to soften into the mayo and sour cream. If you serve it right away, it tastes sharp and a little disjointed; after a couple of hours in the fridge, the flavor smooths out and the dill reads fresher.
What the Lemon, Dill, and Mustard Each Bring to the Bowl

- Red potatoes — These are the right choice because they stay intact after boiling and hold the dressing on their surface. Yukon Golds work in a pinch, but they’re a little softer and can give you a silkier, less defined salad.
- Mayonnaise and sour cream — Mayo gives the salad body, while sour cream keeps it from feeling too heavy. If you want a lighter finish, you can swap part of the sour cream for plain Greek yogurt, but expect a tangier flavor and a slightly tighter texture.
- Fresh lemon juice and zest — The juice sharpens the dressing, and the zest carries the lemon aroma that makes the salad taste brighter than it looks. Bottled juice won’t give the same clean finish, so use fresh lemons here.
- Fresh dill — Dill is what makes the salad taste fresh instead of just creamy. Dried dill works only in a pinch, and it should be used sparingly because the flavor comes across flatter and more one-note.
- Dijon mustard — Dijon adds depth and helps the dressing emulsify so it coats the potatoes evenly. Yellow mustard won’t give the same backbone; it tastes sharper and less rounded.
- Red onion — The onion brings crunch and a little bite. Dice it finely so it blends in instead of taking over a forkful.
Building the Dressing Before the Potatoes Go In
Whisk the Creamy Base Until It Looks Smooth
Start with the mayonnaise, sour cream, lemon juice, lemon zest, dill, and Dijon in a large bowl. Whisk until the mixture looks fully blended and glossy, with no streaks of sour cream left behind. If the dressing seems too thick, a teaspoon or two of lemon juice will loosen it without thinning the flavor. This is the moment to season lightly, because the potatoes will mellow it later.
Cook the Potatoes Until They’re Tender but Not Falling Apart
Boil the cubed potatoes just until a fork slides in with little resistance. If they go too far, the edges will crumble and the salad will lose its shape when you toss it. Drain them well, then let them cool until they’re no longer steaming. That cooling step keeps the dressing creamy instead of watery.
Toss Gently, Then Let the Fridge Do the Work
Add the cooled potatoes and the finely diced red onion to the dressing, then fold everything together with a soft hand. You want every piece coated, but you don’t want to mash the potatoes into the bowl. Cover and chill for at least two hours before serving. The flavor gets better as it sits, and the lemon and dill settle into the potatoes instead of sitting on the surface.
How to Adjust This Potato Salad for Different Tables
Make it dairy-free
Swap the sour cream for a dairy-free plain yogurt or vegan sour cream, then check the seasoning after chilling. The salad still comes through as creamy and bright, but the texture will be a little looser and the tang a touch more pronounced.
Make it lighter without losing the creamy finish
Replace half the mayonnaise with plain Greek yogurt. You’ll get a brighter, tangier salad with a little less richness, which works well if the rest of the meal is already heavy.
Add extra crunch
Fold in chopped celery or thin-sliced scallions right before serving. They add a fresh snap that plays well with the soft potatoes, but add them too early and they’ll lose some of their bite in the fridge.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 4 days. The potatoes will soak up a little more dressing as it sits, so the salad may look thicker on day two.
- Freezer: Don’t freeze it. The mayonnaise and sour cream separate, and the potatoes turn grainy after thawing.
- Reheating: This salad is meant to be served cold. If it’s been chilled hard, let it sit at room temperature for 15 to 20 minutes before serving so the dressing loosens and the lemon flavor wakes up.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Lemon Dill Potato Salad
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Bring a Dutch oven of water to a boil over high heat, then add the cubed red potatoes and cook until tender, about 10–15 minutes. You should be able to pierce a cube easily with a fork without resistance.
- Drain the potatoes and spread them on a sheet pan to cool to room temperature, about 15–20 minutes. They should feel warm-not-hot before dressing so the mayo doesn’t loosen.
- Whisk mayonnaise and sour cream together in a bowl until smooth, about 30–60 seconds. The mixture should look creamy and evenly combined.
- Whisk in fresh lemon juice, lemon zest, chopped dill, and Dijon mustard until glossy and thick, about 45–60 seconds. The dressing should be bright yellow-green flecked with dill.
- Combine the cooled potatoes and finely diced red onion in a bowl and toss gently until evenly distributed. The onion pieces should be visible throughout the potato cubes.
- Pour the lemon-dill dressing over the potatoes and toss gently until the cubes are coated, about 1–2 minutes. Everything should look lightly sauced, not swimming.
- Season with salt and pepper to taste and toss again for even flavor. Taste one potato to confirm it’s bright and balanced.
- Cover and refrigerate the potato salad for at least 2 hours before serving. It should look thicker as the dressing chills and clings to the potatoes.