SIBO daily guide
SIBO diets

SIBO diets, an honest look

These are ways of eating people try for SIBO-type symptoms. 2 honest things first: they are about easing day-to-day symptoms, not getting rid of an overgrowth, and the evidence behind them varies a lot. Most of it comes from IBS research, which overlaps heavily with SIBO; few have been studied in SIBO directly.

How to read this

Strong trial evidence

Backed by randomized trials (in IBS, which overlaps with SIBO).

Limited, emerging evidence

Early, small trials look promising, but it is not settled yet.

Expert opinion, no trials

Built on clinical experience and reasoning, not controlled trials.

Little to no evidence

Little or no trial evidence for SIBO-type symptoms.

Low-FODMAP (Monash)

Strong trial evidence

A 3-step plan: lower fermentable carbs, then add them back one group at a time to find your personal tolerances. Lab-tested by Monash University. Its strong trial evidence is for easing IBS-type symptoms.

Watch for

The strict first step is short-term only; staying on it too long can narrow your nutrition and your gut bacteria. The reintroduction step is the one most people skip, and the one that matters most.

Best for

The evidence-backed first choice for most people, and the basis of Unsibo's guided programs.

Mediterranean

Limited, emerging evidence

A whole-food pattern built around vegetables, fruit, olive oil, fish, legumes, and whole grains. Recent trials suggest it can ease IBS-type symptoms while being far less restrictive than most diets here.

Watch for

It is higher in some FODMAPs (legumes, certain fruits, wheat), so strong FODMAP triggers may need a gentler hybrid. The evidence is still early and small.

Best for

A gentler starting point, or a long-term way of eating to grow into after low-FODMAP reintroduction.

Cedars-Sinai Low Fermentation

Expert opinion, no trials

From Dr. Mark Pimentel's team: a less-restrictive food list plus meal timing, around 3 meals a day, 4 to 5 hours apart, with no snacking, since spacing meals supports your natural between-meal motility. Garlic and onion are allowed, unlike low-FODMAP.

Watch for

Built on reasoning and clinical experience rather than trials. The meal-timing discipline can be hard with a busy schedule, or if you feel shaky between meals.

Best for

People who want a SIBO-minded pattern that is livable long-term, especially if low-FODMAP felt too strict.

Bi-Phasic (Dr. Nirala Jacobi)

Expert opinion, no trials

A practitioner-designed, 2-phase plan that starts quite restrictive and gradually widens, meant to run alongside a broader plan from a SIBO-focused clinician.

Watch for

No controlled trials, and one of the more restrictive options, sometimes adding extra eliminations on top. Best done with a clinician, not solo.

Best for

People working with a naturopathic or SIBO-specialist clinician who want a structured, staged approach.

SIBO Specific Diet (Dr. Allison Siebecker)

Expert opinion, no trials

Combines the grain-free Specific Carbohydrate Diet with low-FODMAP portion limits, sorting foods by how fermentable they are.

Watch for

The most restrictive option here, since it stacks 2 strict diets, so it carries the highest risk of over-restriction. Its own author calls diet a way to ease symptoms, not a fix.

Best for

Usually a later resort for tough cases with many food intolerances, not a starting point.

Specific Carbohydrate Diet (SCD)

Little to no evidence

A grain-free, lactose-free, refined-sugar-free diet that allows only simple single-molecule carbs. It was built for inflammatory bowel disease, not SIBO.

Watch for

No SIBO trials. In inflammatory bowel disease it was not better than a Mediterranean diet, and it is harder to follow, with some nutrient gaps.

Best for

Mostly seen as the base layer inside the SIBO Specific Diet rather than used on its own.

Low-histamine

Little to no evidence

Limits high-histamine foods to lower your overall histamine load. Some people find their symptoms, like flushing, headaches, or gut upset, seem to track with these foods.

Watch for

There is no reliable test for histamine intolerance and no trials of the diet here, so it is easy to cut foods without a clear reason. Best kept short and guided, then reintroduce.

Best for

A subset of people whose symptoms seem to follow high-histamine meals.

Ketogenic / very-low-carb

Little to no evidence

A very-low-carb, high-fat way of eating. Cutting carbs also incidentally cuts FODMAPs.

Watch for

The riskiest pick here: low fiber and less gut-bacteria diversity, with possible nutrient gaps, and it can worsen constipation. Reviews find it unsuitable long-term for most people with gut symptoms.

Best for

A minority try it short-term, often for diarrhea-leaning symptoms, or because they already eat this way. Not a recommended starting point.

Low-FODMAP has the strongest research, and it is the basis of Unsibo's 3 FODMAP programs. The rest are here so you can recognize them and ask good questions, not because one is right for everyone. Talk any big change through with your doctor or dietitian.

The evidence grades reflect published research as of 2026 and are a starting point for a conversation with your doctor or dietitian, not a recommendation. Unsibo is not a medical device and does not diagnose, treat, or prevent any condition.