Current treatment modalities are not effective in halting the progression of most CKD. Renal fibrosis is a pathological process common to all CKD and thereby represents an excellent treatment target. A large number of molecular pathways involved in renal fibrosis were identified in preclinical studies, some of them being similar among different organs and some with available drugs in various phases of clinical testing. Yet only few clinical trials with antifibrotic drugs are being conducted in CKD patients. Here we review those clinical trials, focusing on agents with direct antifibrotic effects, with particular focus on pirfenidone and neutralizing antibodies directed against profibrotic growth factors and cell connection proteins. We discuss the potential reasons for the poor translation in treatment of renal fibrosis and propose possible approaches and future developments to improve it, eg, patient selection and companion diagnostics, specific and sensitive biomarkers as novel end points for clinical trials, and drug-targeting and theranostics