The Vidnava Lowland (, ) is a lowland and geomorphological mesoregion in Poland and in the Czech Republic. It is located in the Sudeten Foreland macroregion.
The Vidnava Lowland is a mesoregion of the Sudeten Foreland within the Bohemian Massif. It borders the Golden Mountains in the northwest, the à ½ulová Hilly Land in the southeast, the Otmuchów Depression in the north and the Gà Âubczyce Plateau in the east.
The Vidnava Lowland is located mostly in the Opole Voivodeship (Poland) and Olomouc Region (Czech Republic), only a small part in the west extends into the Lower Silesian Voivodeship. The lowland extends from Paczków in the northwestern part to Vidnava in the southeastern part.
The Vidnava Lowland has an area of about , of which is in the Czech Republic. Within the Czech Republic, it has an average elevation of .
The area consists mainly of Neogene and Quaternary deposits overlying older basement structures of the Sudeten block. Geological studies of the region focus particularly on Pleistocene glaciomarginal and sedimentary processes.
The landscape is predominantly agricultural. The only protected area is the Vidnavské mokà Âiny Nature Reserve, located in the easternmost part of the lowland. It has an area of . The subject of protection are peat and wetland meadows with endangered and protected plant species (mainly rigid bogmoss) and animals (mainly dusky large blue).