Bright, lemony potato salad like this earns its place because it stays fresh-tasting even after it chills. The potatoes are tender without falling apart, the dressing clings instead of pooling at the bottom of the bowl, and the dill gives every bite a clean herbal lift that keeps the whole dish from feeling heavy.
The trick is balancing creaminess with enough acid to wake everything up. Mayonnaise gives the dressing body, sour cream keeps it tangy and soft, and fresh lemon juice with zest makes the flavor taste sharp and alive instead of flat. Red potatoes are the right choice here because their waxy texture holds together after boiling and tossing, which matters when you want a salad that still looks good after it has been sitting for a while.
Below, I’ve included the small details that make this salad work, from when to stop cooking the potatoes to the best way to chill it so the flavor settles in instead of disappearing.
The dressing coated the potatoes perfectly after chilling, and the lemon with dill made it taste fresh instead of heavy. I loved that the potatoes held their shape and didn’t turn mushy.
Love the fresh lemon-dill dressing and tender red potatoes? Save this potato salad for the next cookout or picnic.
The Dressing Won’t Save a Mushy Potato
The biggest mistake in potato salad happens before the dressing ever goes on. If the potatoes are cooked until they collapse, no amount of lemon, dill, or mustard can pull them back together. Red potatoes hold their shape well, but they still need to be checked early and drained the moment a knife slides in with only a little resistance.
Chilling matters here too. The salad tastes sharper and more balanced after at least two hours in the fridge because the potatoes absorb some of the dressing and the lemon settles into the whole bowl. If you serve it warm, the dressing can taste loose and thin, and the dill won’t have the same clean finish.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in the Bowl

- Red potatoes — These are the backbone of the salad. Their waxy texture stays intact after boiling, which gives you neat chunks instead of a starchy mash. Yukon golds also work if that’s what you have, but avoid russets because they break down too easily.
- Mayonnaise and sour cream — This combination gives the dressing enough body to coat the potatoes without feeling heavy. Mayo brings richness, sour cream adds tang and a softer texture, and together they create a dressing that chills well.
- Fresh lemon juice and zest — Juice brings the brightness, while zest carries the lemon aroma that makes the salad taste fresh even when it’s cold. Bottled lemon juice won’t give you the same lift, so use fresh lemons here.
- Fresh dill — Dill is what makes the flavor read as clean and herbal instead of just creamy and tart. Dried dill can work in a pinch, but use less and expect a quieter flavor.
- Dijon mustard — Dijon sharpens the dressing and helps it emulsify a little so it coats more evenly. Yellow mustard will make the salad taste sweeter and less refined.
- Red onion — A small amount gives crunch and bite without overpowering the herbs and citrus. Dice it finely so it blends into the salad instead of taking over each forkful.
Boil, Toss, Chill: The Three Moves That Matter
Cooking the Potatoes Just to Tender
Start the potatoes in cold, salted water and bring them up together so the cubes cook evenly. Once they’re tender, drain them well and let the steam escape for a few minutes. If they sit in the hot pot too long, the outside softens more than the center and the salad turns uneven. You want them cooked through but still sturdy enough to hold a dressing.
Mixing the Dressing Before It Hits the Bowl
Stir the mayonnaise, sour cream, lemon juice, lemon zest, dill, and Dijon together until smooth before adding the potatoes. That gives you even seasoning in every bite instead of pockets of plain potato and pockets of dressing. The dressing should taste a little sharper than you want at this stage because the chilled potatoes will mute it slightly. If it tastes flat now, it will taste dull later.
Gentle Tossing for Clean Potato Chunks
Add the potatoes and red onion to the bowl, then fold in the dressing with a soft hand. Stirring too aggressively is what breaks the cubes and turns the bottom of the bowl into a paste. Stop as soon as everything is coated, then season with salt and pepper. The salad should look creamy and glossy, not soupy.
Chilling for the Best Texture
Cover the bowl and chill it for at least two hours before serving. This rest time lets the flavor settle and gives the dressing a better grip on the potatoes. If the salad seems a little tight after chilling, let it sit at room temperature for 10 to 15 minutes before serving so the dressing loosens up again. Cold straight from the fridge can dull the lemon and dill.
How to Adapt This Salad for a Crowd, a Picnic, or a Dairy-Free Table
Dairy-Free Version
Swap the sour cream for a plain dairy-free yogurt and use a good vegan mayonnaise. Keep the lemon juice and zest the same, since they carry the brightness that keeps the salad from tasting flat. The texture will be a little lighter and tangier, which works well if you want a sharper finish.
More Herb Forward
Add chopped chives or parsley along with the dill if you want the salad to taste greener and fresher. Keep the dill as the lead herb or the flavor starts to drift away from what makes this version distinct. This is the easiest way to stretch the salad for a bigger bowl without making it taste diluted.
Lighter Dressing
Replace part of the mayonnaise with extra sour cream if you want a less rich salad. The result will be a little looser and tangier, which is nice for a side dish that needs to sit next to grilled meat or heavier mains. Don’t cut the mayo entirely unless you’re after a much thinner dressing.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 3 days. The potatoes will absorb more dressing as it sits, so the salad gets a little thicker and more seasoned by day two.
- Freezer: Don’t freeze this one. The creamy dressing separates and the potatoes turn grainy once thawed.
- Reheating: This salad is meant to be served cold or cool. If it has been in the fridge for a while, let it sit at room temperature for 10 to 15 minutes and stir once before serving so the dressing loosens up again.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Lemon Dill Potato Salad
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Boil the cubed red potatoes in a Dutch oven until tender, 10-15 minutes, then drain and cool until no longer steaming (visual cue: potatoes are easily pierced with a fork).
- Spread the drained potatoes out to cool faster, about 5 minutes, so they don’t melt the dressing (visual cue: surface looks dry and matte rather than wet).
- Mix mayonnaise, sour cream, fresh lemon juice, lemon zest, chopped fresh dill, and Dijon mustard in a bowl until smooth and thick (visual cue: streak-free pale green flecks from the dill).
- Combine the cooled potatoes and finely diced red onion in a bowl (visual cue: onion is evenly distributed).
- Pour the lemon-dill dressing over the potatoes and toss gently until every piece is coated (visual cue: potatoes look glossy with a light, creamy sheen).
- Season with salt and pepper to taste, then toss again briefly (visual cue: seasoning coats lightly without pooling).
- Refrigerate the potato salad for at least 2 hours, covered, so the flavors meld (visual cue: chilled salad holds shape and looks set).


