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Fibre is the most underrated nutrient

Thirty grams a day from varied plants is the target most adults miss by half.

In brief

Fibre is the nutrient most adults eat half of what they should. The 30 g target lowers LDL, fasting glucose, and cardiovascular events. The fastest fix is breakfast: oats or barley over polished grains, plus a fistful of nuts as the morning snack.

Written by Lifefy Editorial
Last reviewed: 25 May 2026

Fibre is the only macronutrient that humans cannot digest, and that is precisely why it matters. Soluble fibre from oats, barley, and pulses forms a gel in the gut that slows glucose absorption and binds bile acids, lowering LDL cholesterol. Insoluble fibre from whole grains, vegetables, and fruit skins speeds bowel transit and feeds the bacteria that produce short-chain fatty acids. Most adults consume under 20 g per day; the target across UK, Indian, and US nutrition guidelines is 30 g.

The evidence on cardiovascular risk

Threapleton and colleagues, pooling 22 cohort studies in the BMJ (2013), found that each 7 g per day increase in fibre intake was associated with a 9 percent lower risk of cardiovascular events. The effect was independent of total energy intake and held after adjustment for fruit and vegetable consumption, suggesting fibre itself, not just plant food in general, is doing the work. The same dose-response was found for total mortality in a 2019 Lancet meta-analysis.

Where the gap usually is

In urban diets the shortfall is rarely vegetables at lunch or dinner; it is breakfast and snacks. Polished rice idli, maida paratha, white toast, biscuits, and breakfast cereals deliver near zero fibre. Switching breakfast to oats, barley porridge, or a chana chaat closes most of the gap in a single meal. Snack swaps from biscuits to a fistful of mixed nuts or chana adds another 5 g. The goal is variety as much as volume.

Key Takeaways

  • Aim for 30 g of fibre per day, roughly twice the average intake.
  • Soluble fibre from oats, barley, and pulses lowers LDL more than insoluble fibre.
  • Breakfast is the most leveraged swap: oats or barley over polished grains adds 5 to 8 g in one meal.

This article is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice. Discuss any changes to your health, medication, diet or exercise with a qualified healthcare professional. Lifefy is a preventative wellness platform and does not diagnose, treat or cure any condition.

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Eat oats or barley at breakfast

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