These two words appear together constantly, on supplement labels, in nutrition articles, in conversations about gut health. They sound similar. They're not the same thing.
One is a living organism. The other is food. Understanding the difference changes how you approach both.
What Probiotics Are
Probiotics are live microorganisms - mostly bacteria, sometimes yeasts - that provide a health benefit when consumed in adequate amounts. They're naturally present in fermented foods and widely sold as supplements.
They work by temporarily increasing the population of beneficial bacteria in your gut microbiome, competing with harmful bacteria, and producing compounds that support gut barrier function and immune signalling.
The key thing to understand: they're not permanent residents. Most probiotic strains don't colonise the gut long-term. Their effect is more like a regular top-up than a one-off fix.
What Prebiotics Are
Prebiotics are specific types of dietary fibre that the human gut can't digest but that beneficial bacteria can. When gut bacteria ferment prebiotics, they produce short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) - compounds like butyrate, acetate, and propionate that fuel the gut lining, regulate inflammation, and support metabolic health.
The most studied prebiotics are inulin and fructooligosaccharides (FOS). These are found naturally in a wide range of plant foods and specifically feed Bifidobacteria and Lactobacilli - the same bacteria most probiotic supplements are trying to increase.
The Key Differences at a Glance
| Probiotics | Prebiotics | |
|---|---|---|
| What they are | Live bacteria/yeasts | Non-digestible fibre |
| Where they come from | Fermented foods, supplements | Plant foods, supplements |
| What they do | Temporarily increase beneficial bacteria | Feed and sustain beneficial bacteria |
| Main food sources | Yogurt, kefir, kimchi, sauerkraut, miso | Garlic, onions, leeks, oats, bananas, legumes |
| Effect duration | While you're consuming them | As long as dietary intake is maintained |
Why You Need Both
Here's the analogy that makes it click. Probiotics are seeds. Prebiotics are the soil and fertiliser.
You can plant seeds in poor soil - some might survive, but they won't thrive. You can have great soil with no seeds - the environment is right, but nothing's growing. Both working together is what creates a healthy, diverse, resilient gut microbiome.
Research consistently confirms this. A 2020 study in the ISME Journal found that combined prebiotic and probiotic supplementation (called "synbiotics") produced significantly greater improvements in gut bacterial diversity than either alone. The synbiotic group also showed lower inflammatory markers after 8 weeks.
Best Food Sources of Probiotics
- Yogurt with live cultures (look for "contains live active cultures" on the label)
- Kefir - fermented milk with a broader bacterial profile than yogurt
- Sauerkraut - raw, unpasteurised (pasteurisation kills the bacteria)
- Kimchi - fermented Korean vegetables, spiced
- Miso - fermented soybean paste used in Japanese cooking
- Tempeh - fermented soybeans, pressed into a firm block
- Kombucha - fermented tea, lower bacterial count than the above
The unpasteurised part matters for sauerkraut and kimchi. Most supermarket versions are pasteurised for shelf stability - which makes them perfectly fine to eat but eliminates the probiotic benefit. Look for refrigerated versions or make your own.
Best Food Sources of Prebiotics
- Garlic - high in inulin and FOS
- Onions and leeks - strong prebiotic content, especially raw
- Oats - beta-glucan, a well-studied prebiotic fibre with strong evidence for gut and cardiovascular health
- Green bananas (slightly underripe) - higher in resistant starch, which ferments slowly in the large intestine
- Jerusalem artichoke - one of the highest prebiotic contents of any food (can cause significant gas initially)
- Chicory root - the most concentrated natural source of inulin; the base of many prebiotic supplements
- Legumes - lentils, chickpeas, kidney beans are all high in prebiotic fibre
- Asparagus - inulin-rich, particularly when raw
- Apples - pectin (a prebiotic fibre) in the skin
Most people don't eat anywhere near enough prebiotic fibre. The target intake from research is around 5-8g of prebiotic fibre per day. A typical Western diet provides about 1-3g.
Do You Need Supplements?
For most people, getting both from food is achievable with some deliberate choices. If you're regularly eating fermented foods and getting 25-35g of total fibre a day from a variety of plant sources, you're likely doing enough without supplements.
Probiotic supplements make most sense in specific situations: recovering from antibiotics, managing IBS, or addressing a specific condition where a particular strain has clinical evidence. See the signs of poor gut health guide if you're trying to work out whether your gut needs more support.
Prebiotic supplements (usually inulin or FOS powder) are worth considering if your diet is consistently low in plant fibre and you're experiencing digestive issues. But increasing whole food intake is better than supplementing around a poor diet.

