

There's a number that nutrition researchers keep returning to: most adults in Western countries eat roughly half the fibre they need. In the UK, average intake sits at around 17 to 19 grams per day against a recommended 30 grams. The gap is wide, consistent, and consequential — and closing it doesn't require a wholesale dietary overhaul. It requires knowing where fibre actually lives in food, and building a few consistent habits around it.
TL;DR: Most people eat far less fibre than recommended. Adding wholegrains, pulses, fruits, vegetables, nuts, and seeds across your meals — and making the switch gradually — is the most reliable way to close the gap. Aim for around 25 to 30 grams daily for adults, drink plenty of water, and increase intake slowly to avoid digestive discomfort.
Fibre's reputation for supporting digestive regularity is well-earned, but it understates what the research actually shows. Higher fibre intake is consistently linked to a reduced risk of heart disease, stroke, type 2 diabetes, and colorectal cancer. It supports a diverse gut microbiome, the ecosystem of bacteria increasingly connected by researchers to immune function, metabolic health, and even mood regulation. It slows glucose absorption, which moderates post-meal blood sugar spikes and the energy crashes that often follow. And it contributes to satiety in a way that naturally reduces overall calorie intake without the need for active restriction.
The evidence is not contested or preliminary. A landmark 2013 meta-analysis published in the BMJ found that each additional 7 grams of fibre per day was associated with approximately a 9% reduction in risk of cardiovascular disease and chronic disease. The research on fibre is, by nutrition science standards, unusually clear.
The World Health Organization recommends a minimum of 25 grams of dietary fibre per day for adults, with greater benefit seen at higher intakes. The NHS advises 30 grams per day for adults in the UK; guidelines in the US set targets of 25 grams for adult women and 38 grams for adult men under 50. Across all of these frameworks, the consistent finding is that most adults fall significantly short — not by a gram or two, but by roughly half.
Part of the structural reason for this is that ultra-processed foods, which now account for a substantial proportion of calories in many Western diets, have had fibre refined out of them almost entirely. Fibre survives in the whole, intact parts of plants: the bran on a grain, the skin on a vegetable, the cell wall of a lentil. Processing strips it away. The fibre gap is not a failure of individual willpower; it reflects a food environment that has systematically removed fibre from the most convenient foods.
Common signs of consistently low fibre intake include infrequent or difficult bowel movements, returning hunger sooner than expected after meals, low energy, and general digestive discomfort. Tracking meals for a few days — either with a nutrition app or by reading food labels — can give a clearer picture. Foods containing 6 grams or more of fibre per 100 grams are considered high in fibre; those with 3 grams or more per 100 grams are a source of fibre.
Fibre is often discussed as a single nutrient, but it behaves quite differently depending on its type. Soluble fibre dissolves in water to form a gel in the digestive tract, which slows glucose absorption, helps lower LDL cholesterol, and softens stools. It's found in oats, barley, apples, citrus fruit, beans, lentils, and psyllium. Insoluble fibre doesn't dissolve; it adds bulk to stool and speeds transit through the gut, supporting regularity and reducing the risk of constipation. It's found in wholegrain bread and cereals, wheat bran, vegetable skins, and nuts.
Both types are valuable, and most fibre-rich whole foods contain a mixture of each. Eating a variety of plant foods naturally covers both.
Fibre supplements — psyllium husk, inulin, guar gum — can contribute to daily intake and have clinical evidence supporting their use for specific outcomes like blood sugar regulation and cholesterol. However, whole food sources are generally preferable. They deliver fibre alongside vitamins, minerals, phytochemicals, and diverse compounds that feed a broader range of gut bacteria. Supplements are a useful fallback when dietary fibre consistently falls short, but they're not a substitute for a varied, plant-forward diet. Anyone managing a digestive condition or taking medication that affects blood sugar or cholesterol should consult a healthcare professional before adding fibre supplements.
Breakfast is one of the highest-leverage moments for fibre, partly because the right choices are straightforward and partly because a fibre-rich morning meal can moderate blood sugar responses well into the afternoon. Porridge made with rolled oats is one of the richest and most accessible sources of beta-glucan, the viscous soluble fibre with particularly strong evidence for glycaemic and cardiovascular benefits. Adding a tablespoon of chia or ground flaxseeds contributes a further 3 to 5 grams with minimal effort. Topping with raspberries, a chopped pear, or a sliced banana adds another 2 to 4 grams.
Overnight oats, wholegrain toast with nut butter, or bran-based cereals with fruit are all practical alternatives that achieve similar results.
Switching from white bread to wholemeal or seeded varieties at lunch is one of the simplest single swaps available — typically adding 2 to 3 grams per serving. Including a portion of beans, lentils, or chickpeas in a soup, salad, or grain bowl can add 5 to 8 grams depending on the serving. Raw vegetables — grated carrot, sliced peppers, spinach, cucumber — added to sandwiches or bowls contribute fibre alongside micronutrients without meaningfully changing the character of the meal.
Swapping white pasta or white rice for wholegrain versions adds 2 to 3 grams per serving. Leaving the skins on potatoes and sweet potatoes preserves a meaningful fibre contribution that peeling removes. Adding lentils to a curry, bolognese, or stew is one of the most efficient ways to increase fibre at dinner — a 100-gram serving of cooked lentils provides around 8 grams. Piling vegetables generously onto the plate rather than treating them as a garnish consistently moves the dial.
A handful of unsalted nuts, a piece of whole fruit, oatcakes with hummus, or carrot and celery sticks with a dip are all reliable high-fibre snack options that require no preparation. Popcorn (air-popped, with minimal salt or sugar) is a higher-fibre choice than most packaged snack foods. Dried fruit — figs, prunes, apricots — is fibre-dense and easy to carry, though worth consuming in moderate amounts given its concentrated natural sugar content.
The most common reason people abandon higher-fibre eating is digestive discomfort — bloating, gas, and cramping — that arrives when intake increases too quickly. This happens because gut bacteria need time to adjust to fermenting larger amounts of fibre, and the fermentation process produces gas as a byproduct. Increasing fibre gradually over one to two weeks, rather than adding everything at once, gives the microbiome time to adapt.
Hydration is equally important. Fibre absorbs water as it moves through the digestive tract, and inadequate fluid intake can make the transition uncomfortable. Aiming for around 6 to 8 glasses of water per day — and increasing this as fibre intake rises — supports the process considerably.
People with IBS or other digestive sensitivities may find that certain high-fibre foods — particularly those high in fermentable FODMAPs, such as onions, garlic, beans, and some fruits — worsen symptoms even at modest intake levels. For this group, starting with lower-fermentability options (oats, carrots, courgette, peeled fruit) and building gradually tends to be more comfortable than jumping straight to legumes. Spreading fibre-rich foods across the day rather than concentrating them at a single meal also helps. If symptoms are persistent or severe, a registered dietitian can help identify which specific fibres are most problematic and design a personalised approach.
The following is a practical illustration of what 30 grams of fibre looks like across a day, with approximate values per meal:
Breakfast: Porridge with chia seeds and a handful of raspberries — approximately 9g fibre
Mid-morning snack: Oatcakes with peanut butter — approximately 3g fibre
Lunch: Wholemeal wrap with hummus, grated carrot, chickpeas, and rocket — approximately 8g fibre
Afternoon snack: An apple with skin and a small handful of unsalted almonds — approximately 4g fibre
Dinner: Brown rice stir-fry with mixed vegetables and lentils — approximately 8g fibre
Total: approximately 32g fibre
These values are approximate and vary by brand, portion size, and preparation. The underlying principle — wholegrains at most meals, a portion of pulses at least once a day, fruit or vegetables at every eating occasion — is more durable than hitting an exact number daily.
How can I increase my fibre intake quickly? The fastest single changes are swapping white bread for wholegrain, adding a portion of beans or lentils to one meal, and including a piece of whole fruit as a snack. Each of these can add 3 to 8 grams to your daily intake with minimal disruption. If you're currently eating very little fibre, build up over one to two weeks rather than making all changes at once, to give your digestive system time to adapt.
What foods are highest in fibre? Pulses — lentils, chickpeas, kidney beans, and black beans — are among the densest sources per serving. Wholegrains (brown rice, wholemeal bread and pasta, oats, barley), fruits (berries, pears, apples with skin), vegetables (broccoli, carrots, sweet potato with skin), and nuts and seeds all make strong contributions. Variety across these categories is more effective than relying heavily on a single source.
How do I avoid bloating when increasing fibre? Increase intake gradually over one to two weeks, drink plenty of water, and spread high-fibre foods across the day rather than eating them all at once. Starting with lower-gas options — oats, root vegetables, peeled fruit — before introducing larger amounts of legumes or brassicas can also help. If discomfort persists beyond the initial adjustment period, speak to a healthcare professional.
Can you eat too much fibre? For most people, the practical concern is eating too little rather than too much. Very high intakes — well above 50 to 60 grams per day — can in some cases reduce the absorption of certain minerals including iron, calcium, and zinc, and may cause persistent digestive discomfort. Hitting the recommended 25 to 30 grams daily carries no meaningful risk for healthy adults.
How do I know if I'm getting enough fibre? Regular, comfortable bowel movements and sustained fullness after meals are both reasonable indicators. For a more precise picture, keeping a food diary for a few days and checking fibre values on nutrition labels gives a clearer baseline. Most nutrition tracking apps also calculate fibre intake automatically if you log meals.
Does fibre help with weight management? The evidence supports a modest but consistent effect. Fibre increases satiety by slowing digestion and triggering fullness hormones, which tends to reduce overall calorie intake without deliberate restriction. It works best as part of a balanced diet rich in whole foods rather than as an isolated intervention.
What's the difference between soluble and insoluble fibre? Soluble fibre dissolves in water to form a gel, which slows digestion, moderates blood sugar, and helps lower LDL cholesterol. Good sources include oats, apples, beans, and psyllium. Insoluble fibre doesn't dissolve; it adds bulk to stool and speeds transit through the gut, supporting regularity. Good sources include wholegrain cereals, wheat bran, and vegetable skins. Both contribute to gut health and overall wellbeing, and most plant foods contain a mixture of each.
Edited by The Digest team