Here’s how to make the macronutrient work harder for your brain.

Written by: Ed Cooper
Written on: May 13, 2026
Ask most people what fibre does, and you'll likely hear some variation of the same answer: it helps keep you regular. While that’s certainly true, it's a bit like describing a good night's sleep as something that stops you feeling tired. The fuller picture is considerably more complex — and more relevant to anyone who cares about keeping their brain sharp as they age.
Research has increasingly pointed to the idea that what your diet doesn’t just feed your stomach. It feeds the trillion-strong community of microbes living in your gut, and those microbes — or their absence — have measurable effects on your cognition, mood, and long-term risk of neurodegeneration. Fibre is the nutrient at the centre of that relationship, and despite that fact, most of us aren't getting nearly enough of it.
The gap between recommended and actual fibre intake in the UK is, frankly, striking. While the government recommends 30g per day, the National Diet and Nutrition Survey details that the average adult consumes around 18 to 19g daily — roughly 60% of that target. What’s more, only 4% of adults are meeting the recommendation, according to the Food Foundation's analysis of the most recent data.
That’s partly because we have a persistent misconception of what fibre does in the body. Namely, it’s gastrointestinal impacts. "In reality, it influences metabolism, immune function, heart health, and brain health too,” says Paul Garrod, IOPN Dip. SENr, nutritionist at True Food. “Another misconception is that fibre supplements can fully replace food sources, but whole foods offer a wider range of nutrients and compounds that work together synergistically."
The signs of insufficient fibre aren't always obvious either. Beyond the digestive symptoms most people would recognise — constipation, bloating, poor gut health — Garrod points to energy dips, increased hunger between meals and less stable blood sugar as common indicators. The longer-term cognitive consequences, by their nature, are harder to attribute to any single dietary habit. Which is precisely why the 30g target matters more than it might appear.
In practice, hitting 30g doesn't require a dramatic dietary overhaul. Garrod's framework is straightforward: aim for plants at every meal and rotate through whole grains, legumes, vegetables, fruit, nuts and seeds across the day. A rough sketch of that looks like porridge with berries and seeds at breakfast, lentils or whole grains at lunch, fruit and nuts as snacks and plenty of vegetables with dinner.
Add to that a supplement, like Momentous’ Fiber+, a Healf favourite which provides 6g of dietary fibre per serving through a diverse blend of psyllium husk, rice bran and resistant potato starch, and you’re all set. The powder, which comes in unflavoured and cinnamon flavours, mixes easily into water, smoothies, and food, making it incredibly simple to up your dietary fibre intake each day and hit your goals.
The gut-brain axis — the bidirectional communication highway between your gastrointestinal tract and your central nervous system — has become one of the more exciting areas of nutritional research in recent years. And fibre's role within that complex network is fundamental.
"Fibre acts as fuel for beneficial gut bacteria," explains Garrod. "When these bacteria ferment certain fibres, they produce compounds called short-chain fatty acids, which help reduce inflammation, strengthen the gut lining and support communication along the gut-brain axis. A healthier gut environment is increasingly linked with better brain health, including lower risk of cognitive decline over time."
Short-chain fatty acids (particularly butyrate, propionate and acetate) are the key mechanism here. Produced when gut bacteria break down fermentable fibre, they cross the blood-brain barrier, reduce neuroinflammation, and support the health of the cells lining the gut. This, in turn, affects how effectively the gut and brain communicate. A 2021 study found that a fibre-deprived diet caused cognitive impairment in animals by disrupting the gut microbiota-hippocampal axis — the hippocampus being the brain's primary memory centre. The implications for how we feed our own gut bacteria are hard to ignore.
"Fibre supports more than digestion," says Garrod. "Higher fibre diets are associated with steadier blood sugar levels, improved mood, better concentration and potentially better memory as we age. This is likely because fibre helps regulate inflammation, supports healthy blood flow and influences neurotransmitters through the gut microbiome."
Chronic low-grade inflammation has emerged as one of the more significant and modifiable risk factors for cognitive decline. When inflammation is a constant background state rather than a short-term response to injury, it gradually damages blood vessels and brain cells in ways that accumulate over decades.
When diets are low in fibre and high in ultra-processed foods, Garrod points out, they’re often linked with higher inflammatory markers. And that is important to understand because “research suggests systemic inflammation may accelerate cognitive decline and increase the risk of conditions such as dementia,” he adds.
A large-scale study following over 3,500 adults for nearly two decades found that higher dietary fibre intake was associated with a significantly reduced risk of developing dementia — with soluble fibre showing the strongest protective effect. More recently, a 2025 analysis found that inflammatory markers directly mediated the relationship between fibre intake and cognitive function, providing further evidence for the mechanism Garrod describes.
The gut microbiome is central here. A fibre-rich diet supports the kind of microbial diversity that keeps inflammatory signals in check. Deplete that diversity — through ultra-processed foods, low plant variety or insufficient fibre — and the gut's ability to regulate systemic inflammation is compromised. Decades later, the brain pays the price.
There's no single fibre "superfood" to lean on, and research consistently points to fibre diversity as an essential element. In other words, a microbiome fed by a wide variety of plant fibres is more resilient and more functionally effective than one dependent on a narrow range of sources.
"The best high-fibre foods for long-term cognitive health are usually minimally processed plant foods," says Garrod. "Beans, lentils, oats, berries, leafy greens, nuts, seeds and whole grains consistently show benefits because they provide fibre alongside antioxidants, polyphenols and healthy fats that support brain and vascular health."
Fibre won't transform your brain overnight. Its benefits are cumulative, playing out over years and decades rather than days — which is exactly the point.
This article is for informational purposes only, even if and regardless of whether it features the advice of physicians and medical practitioners. This article is not, nor is it intended to be, a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment and should never be relied upon for specific medical advice. The views expressed in this article are the views of the expert and do not necessarily represent the views of Healf
Ed is a freelance journalist and former Men’s Health digital editor, with bylines in Red Bull, BBC StoryWorks, Guardian Labs, Third Space, Natural Fitness Food and Form Nutrition, among others. Having run marathons, conducted sleep experiments on himself and worked with some of the world’s most in-demand experts — from sleep scientists and strength athletes to high-performance trainers and elite-level nutritionists — one thing remains clear for The Healf Source contributor: fitness trends come and go, but as long as you keep turning up for yourself, consistency will win every time.