How to Improve Your Gut Health Naturally

The gut microbiome — the trillions of bacteria, fungi, and other microorganisms living in your digestive tract — has emerged over the past two decades as one of the most significant factors in human health. It’s involved in immunity, metabolism, mood, inflammation, and even brain function. Taking care of it is one of the highest-return investments you can make in your overall wellbeing.

What Is the Gut Microbiome?

Your gut is home to approximately 100 trillion microbial cells — outnumbering your own body’s cells. This community of microorganisms (collectively the microbiome) is highly individual — as unique as a fingerprint — and is shaped by your diet, lifestyle, genetics, medications, and environment.

A diverse, robust microbiome is associated with better metabolic health, stronger immunity, reduced inflammation, improved mood and cognitive function, and lower risk of chronic disease. A disrupted microbiome (dysbiosis) — characterized by low diversity and imbalanced microbial populations — is associated with a growing list of conditions: IBD, obesity, type 2 diabetes, anxiety, depression, autoimmune disease, and more.

Signs of Poor Gut Health

  • Chronic bloating, gas, constipation, or diarrhea
  • Food sensitivities or intolerances that seem to be worsening
  • Frequent illness or slow recovery
  • Fatigue that doesn’t resolve with sleep
  • Skin conditions (eczema, acne, rosacea) — the gut-skin axis is well-documented
  • Mood instability, brain fog, or anxiety
  • Unintentional weight changes

Foods That Heal Your Gut

High-Fiber Foods

Dietary fiber is the primary fuel for beneficial gut bacteria. Fiber fermentation by gut bacteria produces short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) — particularly butyrate — which nourish colonocytes, reduce gut inflammation, maintain gut barrier integrity, and have systemic anti-inflammatory effects.

Aim for 25–38 grams of fiber daily (most Americans consume about 15g). Best sources: legumes (beans, lentils, chickpeas), vegetables (broccoli, artichokes, asparagus, garlic, onions), fruits (apples, berries, pears), whole grains (oats, barley, whole wheat).

Fermented Foods

Fermented foods contain live microorganisms that may temporarily populate the gut and produce beneficial compounds. Research published in Cell in 2021 found that a diet high in fermented foods increased microbiome diversity and reduced markers of inflammation — outcomes not seen with a high-fiber diet alone.

Best fermented foods for gut health: yogurt (with live cultures), kefir, sauerkraut (raw/refrigerated, not shelf-stable), kimchi, kombucha, tempeh, miso. Frequency and variety matters more than quantity of any single product.

Polyphenol-Rich Foods

Polyphenols — plant compounds found in colorful fruits and vegetables, dark chocolate, tea, coffee, and olive oil — feed beneficial gut bacteria and are converted into bioactive compounds by the microbiome. Dark berries, pomegranate, green tea, and extra virgin olive oil are particularly rich sources.

Probiotics vs. Prebiotics

Probiotics are live microorganisms (primarily bacteria and yeasts) that, when consumed in adequate amounts, confer health benefits. They’re found in fermented foods and supplements. Research supports specific probiotic strains for specific conditions (Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG for antibiotic-associated diarrhea; VSL#3 for IBD), but most commercial probiotic supplements have weaker evidence for general gut health improvement.

Prebiotics are non-digestible food compounds that selectively feed beneficial gut bacteria — primarily fiber, but also specific compounds in garlic, onions, leeks, asparagus, bananas, and chicory root. Prebiotics are generally considered more reliably beneficial for gut health maintenance than probiotic supplements.

The Gut-Brain Connection

The gut has its own nervous system — the enteric nervous system, with more neurons than the spinal cord. It communicates bidirectionally with the brain via the vagus nerve, the immune system, and hormonal pathways. This “gut-brain axis” means that gut health directly influences mood, cognition, and mental health.

About 90–95% of serotonin — a key mood-regulating neurotransmitter — is produced in the gut. The microbiome plays a direct role in serotonin production and regulation. This is one mechanism through which gut health affects mental health — and why anxiety and digestive issues so frequently co-occur.

Stress and Your Digestive System

Chronic stress disrupts gut motility, increases gut permeability (“leaky gut”), alters the microbiome composition, and worsens symptoms of IBS and IBD. Stress management is therefore gut health management — they’re not separate concerns.

Practical Daily Habits

  • Eat a wide variety of plant foods — aim for 30+ different plant species per week (including spices, herbs, and legumes)
  • Include fermented foods daily or near-daily
  • Minimize ultra-processed foods, artificial sweeteners, and high-fat/low-fiber diets — all disrupt the microbiome
  • Stay physically active — exercise independently supports microbiome diversity
  • Manage stress
  • Avoid unnecessary antibiotics — they have significant microbiome disruption effects
  • Prioritize sleep — the microbiome follows a circadian rhythm that sleep disruption impairs

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