Among the numerous different wellness trends there are today, probably the most popular trend seen across social media in 2026 would be gut health, including probiotic sodas, large amounts of kombucha bottles lining store shelves, and products that help you test your own microbiome at home. In an interview with HT Lifestyle, Dr Shilpa Moreker, Laboratory Director, NM Medical, shared the biggest gut health trends dominating 2026, and where they actually stand from a practical health perspective.
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1. Fibremaxxing
Dr Shilpa said, “One of the loudest wellness trends this year is fibremaxxing, which essentially means consciously increasing fibre intake through foods like oats, lentils, fruits, vegetables, chia seeds, flaxseeds, and fibre supplements.”
Unlike many internet-driven health fads, this one has some real nutritional logic behind it. Most urban diets today are heavily dependent on refined and ultra-processed foods, which naturally lowers fibre intake. Increasing dietary fibre can support bowel regularity, improve satiety, and help maintain healthier gut microbial diversity.
2. Next-gen biotics
According to Dr Shilpa, gut health conversations have also moved beyond regular probiotics. Terms like prebiotics, postbiotics, synbiotics, and fermented functional foods are now everywhere, with yoghurt, kefir, kimchi, kombucha, and probiotic drinks becoming everyday wellness staples. A probiotic that may help after a course of antibiotics, for example, may not necessarily improve chronic bloating or irregular bowel habits. She highlighted that fermented foods can absolutely be part of a balanced lifestyle, but they are not substitutes for hydration, proper meals, adequate sleep, or stress management.
3. Personalised gut health
“Personalised nutrition is another rapidly growing trend in 2026,” said Dr Shilpa. AI-based meal plans, microbiome testing kits, and wearable wellness tracking devices are increasingly being marketed as the future of preventive health.
The idea sounds appealing because it promises customised health advice rather than generic dieting. But many consumer-facing microbiome tests are still ahead of practical clinical use. Different companies can sometimes generate very different interpretations from the same sample, leaving consumers confused about what their results mean. Hence, a detailed nutritional followup along with expert consultation becomes extremely essential for accurate understanding and personalised guidance.
4. Gut-brain axis wellness
Another major trend this year is the rise of gut-brain axis products linking digestive health with mood, stress, anxiety, sleep, and emotional wellbeing. The link between our brains and guts has been well-established and is the subject of many scientific studies. However, the newer wellness lifestyle trends tend to oversimplify this relationship by asserting that gut health can correct problems like anxiety, brain fog, and depression on its own through gut supplements like probiotics.
5. Clean-label functional foods
Consumers are also leaning heavily toward clean-label gut-friendly foods, including high-fibre snacks, seed mixes, yoghurt bowls, kombucha drinks, and minimally processed functional foods. Dr Shilpa said, “The shift away from ultraprocessed eating is positive. But the phrase clean-label itself is often more marketing than medical science.” Many products promoted as gut-friendly may still contain excess sugar, additives, or exaggerated wellness claims.
Note to readers: This article is for informational purposes only and not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always seek the advice of your doctor with any questions about a medical condition.
