Quick Answer

Dietary fibre is the indigestible portion of plant food - carbohydrates the human body can't break down for energy. There are two types: soluble fibre (dissolves in water, feeds gut bacteria, lowers cholesterol) and insoluble fibre (adds bulk, speeds gut transit, prevents constipation). Both are essential. Most adults eat 15-17g per day; the evidence-based target is 25-38g. The gap between the two is one of the most consistent nutritional shortfalls in Western diets.

What Is Dietary Fibre? The Two Types, What Each Does, and Why Most People Fall Short

Dietary fibre is the part of plant food that passes through the small intestine undigested, reaching the large intestine largely intact. The human gut doesn't produce the enzymes needed to break it down the way it breaks down protein, starch, or fat.

This doesn't make it useless. The opposite - it makes it essential for gut function, microbiome health, blood sugar regulation, cholesterol management, and cancer prevention.


The Two Types of Fibre

Soluble Fibre

Dissolves in water to form a gel. This gel:

  • Slows gastric emptying - food moves more slowly from the stomach to the small intestine, reducing the rate of glucose absorption and blunting blood sugar spikes
  • Binds bile acids in the gut, which are then excreted. The liver has to make new bile acids using cholesterol - which reduces circulating LDL cholesterol. This is the mechanism behind oat beta-glucan's cholesterol-lowering effect, which has robust clinical evidence
  • Is fermented by gut bacteria into short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) - butyrate, propionate, and acetate. These are the primary fuel for colonocytes (gut lining cells) and have anti-inflammatory, immune-regulating, and metabolic functions across the whole body

Sources: oats (beta-glucan), legumes (inulin, pectin), apples and pears (pectin), psyllium husk, garlic and onions (inulin and FOS), chia seeds.

Insoluble Fibre

Doesn't dissolve in water. Adds bulk and texture to stool. Speeds intestinal transit by stimulating the gut wall mechanically.

Functions:

  • Prevents constipation - the most direct function. Adequate insoluble fibre keeps gut transit time from becoming too slow
  • Dilutes potential carcinogens in the gut by increasing stool bulk and reducing contact time with the colon wall - this is the primary mechanism behind fibre's association with reduced colorectal cancer risk
  • Feeds specific bacterial species that prefer insoluble fibre structures

Sources: wheat bran, whole grain cereals, vegetables (especially their skins), nuts, seeds, most vegetables.


Why Fibre Matters for the Gut Microbiome

Gut bacteria ferment soluble fibre into short-chain fatty acids. This is covered in depth in the gut microbiome and best foods for gut health articles, but the key point: fibre is the primary food source for beneficial gut bacteria.

Different bacterial species prefer different fibre types. Variety of fibre from varied plant sources feeds a broader, more diverse range of beneficial bacteria. The American Gut Project's 10,000+ participant study found that eating 30+ different plant foods per week - which inherently means eating many different fibre types - was the strongest predictor of gut microbiome diversity.

Gut microbiome diversity is the most consistent marker of a resilient, healthy gut.


Resistant Starch: A Third Type

Resistant starch is sometimes considered a third category. It's starch that resists digestion in the small intestine and behaves like soluble fibre in the colon - fermented by bacteria into butyrate.

Resistant starch is found in: cooked and cooled potatoes and rice (cooling increases resistant starch content), green bananas, legumes, and whole grains. It's one reason for reheating potatoes to be nutritionally preferable to eating them hot.


How Much Fibre You Need

The evidence-based recommendations:

  • US Dietary Guidelines: 25g for women, 38g for men
  • UK NHS: 30g for adults
  • WHO: 25-29g daily minimum, with higher amounts showing additional benefits

Average actual intake in Western populations: 15-17g per day.

That gap - roughly half the recommended intake - is associated with increased risk of constipation, colorectal cancer, cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and dysbiotic gut microbiome composition.

Getting to 30g daily doesn't require dramatic changes. A typical higher-fibre day might include:

  • Oats for breakfast: ~4g
  • An apple: ~3g
  • Lentil soup for lunch: ~9g
  • Mixed vegetables at dinner: ~6g
  • Handful of almonds: ~3g
  • Whole grain bread: ~3g

Total: ~28g. Achievable from whole foods without supplements. See how to improve gut microbiome for the full picture on dietary changes that support gut health.

For the relationship between carbohydrate intake and fibre, see how many carbs per day - fibre targets are tracked separately from total carbohydrate targets.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you eat too much fibre?

Yes - very high fibre intake (above 70g/day) can cause significant digestive discomfort: bloating, gas, and loose stools. More practically, increasing fibre too quickly causes temporary gas and discomfort because gut bacteria adapt to fermenting more fibre over time. Increase fibre gradually (5-10g more per week) rather than abruptly, and ensure adequate water intake - fibre needs fluid to function properly. Gradual adaptation over 3-4 weeks significantly reduces side effects.

Is fibre a carbohydrate?

Yes - chemically, dietary fibre is made of carbohydrate molecules (primarily polysaccharides). However, because humans can't digest fibre, it contributes 0-2 calories per gram compared to 4 calories per gram for digestible carbohydrates. Many countries allow fibre to be subtracted from total carbohydrate counts on food labels - "net carbs" = total carbs minus fibre - because non-digestible fibre doesn't raise blood sugar.

Do fibre supplements work as well as food?

Fibre supplements (psyllium husk, inulin, partially hydrolysed guar gum) are useful for increasing intake and have evidence for specific applications - psyllium specifically has strong evidence for cholesterol reduction and bowel regularity. But whole food fibre comes with vitamins, minerals, polyphenols, and diverse structural types that supplements don't replicate. Food first, supplements as a supplement to an already decent diet.