Understanding the Low-FODMAP Diet: A Practical Guide
The low-FODMAP diet is one of the most researched dietary approaches for managing Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), with clinical studies showing symptom improvement in roughly 3 out of 4 people who follow it correctly. Developed by researchers at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia, the protocol works by temporarily removing a group of poorly-absorbed short-chain carbohydrates — Fermentable Oligosaccharides, Disaccharides, Monosaccharides, and Polyols — that ferment in the gut and trigger bloating, gas, cramping, and altered bowel habits.
The Three Phases
A properly-implemented low-FODMAP diet has three distinct stages, and skipping any of them is one of the most common reasons people fail to get relief or unnecessarily restrict their diet long-term.
- Elimination (2–6 weeks): All high-FODMAP foods are removed. This is not a "forever" diet — it's a diagnostic tool to establish a symptom-free baseline. Read our Elimination Phase Guide for a full food list and shopping template.
- Reintroduction (6–8 weeks): Individual FODMAP groups are systematically tested to identify personal triggers and tolerance thresholds. Most people discover they only react to 2 or 3 of the six FODMAP groups. See our step-by-step Reintroduction Protocol.
- Personalization (ongoing): A modified, sustainable eating pattern is built around your specific triggers, restoring dietary variety while keeping symptoms controlled.
Common High-FODMAP Foods and Safe Swaps
You don't have to give up flavor to eat low-FODMAP. Almost every "trigger" food has a well-tolerated substitute that behaves the same way in cooking:
| High-FODMAP | Low-FODMAP Swap | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Garlic cloves | Garlic-infused oil | Fructans are not oil-soluble |
| Onion (bulb) | Green tops of spring onion, chives | Fructans concentrate in the bulb |
| Wheat bread | Sourdough spelt or gluten-free bread | Lower fructan load per serve |
| Regular milk | Lactose-free milk, almond milk | Removes the lactose disaccharide |
| Apples, pears | Oranges, strawberries, blueberries | Balanced fructose-to-glucose ratio |
| Honey | Pure maple syrup | Free of excess fructose |
Want to check a specific ingredient? Use our free FODMAP Food Checker or our Substitution Finder.
Portion Size Matters More Than You Think
FODMAP content is dose-dependent. Broccoli heads, for example, are low-FODMAP at 3/4 cup but tip into moderate territory at 1½ cups. This is why "high" and "low" labels alone can mislead — Monash publishes serving-size thresholds for exactly this reason. Our recipes follow the current Monash traffic-light system and note serve sizes where they matter.
Who Should — and Shouldn't — Try It
The low-FODMAP diet is designed for people with a formal IBS diagnosis or clinically-suspected functional gut disorders such as SIBO. It is not a weight-loss diet, and it is not recommended for people with a history of disordered eating, in pregnancy without clinical supervision, or for children without dietitian oversight. Because the elimination phase restricts several nutrient-rich food groups, we strongly recommend doing it with a registered dietitian — this site provides recipes, tools, and education, not a substitute for individual clinical care.
Written and medically reviewed by Sarah Mitchell, RDN — Monash-trained Registered Dietitian Nutritionist. Last updated: July 2026.









