IBS & FODMAP

Low-FODMAP and fiber

If you follow a low-FODMAP approach for IBS, fiber gets tricky — because some of the most fiber-rich foods (beans, wheat, onion, garlic) are also high in FODMAPs. The good news: you can absolutely get enough fiber while keeping FODMAPs in check.

What FODMAPs are

FODMAPs are fermentable carbs — Fermentable Oligo-, Di-, Mono-saccharides And Polyols — that draw water into the gut and ferment quickly. In people with IBS, that combination can trigger gas, bloating and cramping. The low-FODMAP diet is a structured, temporary tool for identifying which of these carbs are personal triggers, usually run in three phases: elimination (2–6 weeks), reintroduction, and personalisation. It's best done with a dietitian, since the elimination phase is meant to be short and diagnostic — not a long-term way of eating.

Why fiber and FODMAPs collide

The trouble is that several fiber all-stars are also high-FODMAP:

  • Beans and lentils — high in GOS (galacto-oligosaccharides)
  • Wheat and rye — high in fructans
  • Onion and garlic — high in fructans
  • Apples and pears — excess fructose and sorbitol

Cutting these during elimination can accidentally cut your fiber intake along with them, so the goal isn't to eat less fiber — it's to swap deliberately toward low-FODMAP sources that still deliver it.

Low-FODMAP, high-fiber foods

Plenty of foods thread the needle: real fiber, low FODMAP load in a typical serving.

FoodFiber /100 gNotes
Chia seeds34 gSoak first; 1–2 tbsp serving
Flaxseed27 gGround; ~1 tbsp
Oats10 gRolled; ½ cup serving
Quinoa2.8 gCooked; naturally low-FODMAP grain
Firm/under-ripe banana2.6 gRipens toward higher FODMAP — eat firm
Kiwi3 gLow-FODMAP fruit staple
Orange2.4 gWhole fruit, not juice
Raspberries6.5 gSmall serving
Carrots2.8 gRaw or cooked
Spinach2.2 gLow-FODMAP leafy green
Potato with skin2 gKeep the skin on
Walnuts & peanuts~7 gSmall handful
Canned lentils4–5 gRinsed, small portion

Note that portion size is doing a lot of the work here — many of these foods are low-FODMAP at a modest serving but tip into moderate or high territory at a larger one.

Favour soluble fiber during the strict phase. Oats, chia, flax, carrots and oranges lean soluble, which tends to be gentler on a sensitive gut — and pair them with water. Portion matters more than the food itself: a small serving of a food can be low-FODMAP while a large one tips to high.

A note on doing this safely

The low-FODMAP diet isn't meant to be permanent. The goal of elimination is always to move on to reintroduction and personalisation — figuring out your specific triggers and thresholds, then widening your diet back out around them. Because eliminating whole food groups can affect both fiber intake and overall nutrition, it's best done with a registered dietitian. loam supports general wellness and education and is not a substitute for medical advice.

How loam helps

Low / moderate / high FODMAP labels, built in

loam tags catalog foods with low / moderate / high FODMAP labels, based on published Monash-style cutoffs, so you can raise fiber while staying mindful of FODMAPs — and still see your soluble, insoluble and prebiotic split each day. Free, no account, private by design.

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Frequently asked

Can you eat fiber on a low-FODMAP diet?

Yes — choose low-FODMAP fiber sources like oats, chia, flax, quinoa, carrots and firm bananas instead of high-FODMAP staples like beans, wheat, onion and garlic.

What are the best low-FODMAP high-fiber foods?

Chia and flaxseed, oats, quinoa, firm banana, kiwi, oranges, carrots, and small servings of nuts are among the best low-FODMAP, high-fiber choices.

Is oatmeal low-FODMAP?

Yes, in typical servings — around ½ cup of rolled oats — and it's rich in soluble fiber, making it a gentle option during a low-FODMAP approach.

Sources: low-FODMAP framework (Monash University); FODMAP thresholds per Varney et al. 2017; work with a dietitian. loam supports general wellness and education — it is not medical advice.

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