Probiotics are live bacteria you swallow, intended to add helpful microbes to your gut. Prebiotics are specific fibres that feed the microbes you already have. They do opposite jobs, and most people already get plenty of prebiotics from ordinary food without buying either as a supplement. A few specific situations make one of them worth considering, and we will be clear about which.

The one-letter difference, made concrete

Think of your gut as a garden. The bacteria already living there are the plants. A probiotic is a packet of new seeds you scatter in. A prebiotic is the fertiliser for whatever is already growing.

The scientific definitions back this up. The International Scientific Association for Probiotics and Prebiotics (ISAPP), which sets the consensus language, defines a probiotic as “live microorganisms that, when administered in adequate amounts, confer a health benefit on the host,” and a prebiotic as “a substrate that is selectively utilized by host microorganisms conferring a health benefit.” The key word for prebiotics is selectively: it has to feed the helpful microbes in particular, not just pass through.

So:

  • Probiotic = the live organism (for example Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG, Saccharomyces boulardii, or Bifidobacterium animalis subsp. lactis).
  • Prebiotic = the food for organisms (inulin, FOS, GOS, resistant starch).
  • Synbiotic = a product that combines both.
  • Postbiotic = a newer category: a preparation of inanimate (non-living) microbes or their components.

That is the entire vocabulary. Everything else is detail.

How prebiotics actually work

A prebiotic fibre survives your stomach acid and small intestine undigested, then arrives in your large intestine intact, where your resident bacteria ferment it. That fermentation produces short-chain fatty acids, most notably butyrate, which nourish the cells lining your colon and are linked to a healthier gut barrier and lower inflammation. Mayo Clinic describes prebiotics plainly as the high-fibre and resistant-starch foods that “feed the microorganisms in your gut.”

The best-studied prebiotic fibres are:

  • Inulin and FOS (fructo-oligosaccharides): fructose-based fibres found in chicory root, onions, garlic, leeks and asparagus. Inulin most reliably increases Bifidobacterium.
  • GOS (galacto-oligosaccharides): found in legumes and present in human and cow’s milk; these reliably feed bifidobacteria, even at modest doses.
  • Resistant starch: starch that resists digestion, found in cooked-then-cooled potatoes and rice, slightly underripe bananas, and (to a lesser degree) legumes.

What does this do for you? Examine’s review of inulin notes that regular intake fairly consistently raises Bifidobacterium and may modestly help bowel regularity, blood-sugar control and LDL cholesterol, while being honest that clinical results are inconsistent and vary a lot between people. Gut responses are individual: the same fibre helps one person noticeably and another barely at all.

How strong is the evidence, really?

For prebiotics: the mechanism is solid. Prebiotic fibres do feed beneficial bacteria and do increase short-chain fatty acids. The harder question is which health outcomes follow reliably, and there the picture is mixed. The clearest, least controversial benefit of more prebiotic fibre is the same as more fibre in general: better bowel regularity and a more diverse microbiome. Claims beyond that (mood, immunity, weight) range from preliminary to promising but not settled.

For probiotics: the NHS notes “there’s some evidence that probiotics may be helpful in some cases, such as helping to ease some symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS),” but also that “there’s little evidence to support many health claims made about them.” Benefits are strain-specific and condition-specific, not general. We cover this in do probiotics work and which strains have evidence in probiotic strains explained.

The honest summary: prebiotics rest on a simpler foundation (mostly “eat more fibre”), while probiotics require matching a specific strain to a specific reason.

The part nobody selling supplements wants to lead with

Most people do not need to buy either.

Government guidance puts recommended fibre intake at around 30g a day, and the NHS notes “most adults are only eating an average of about 20g a day.” That gap is the real story. If you are eating roughly 20g a day, the most effective, best-evidenced and cheapest move for your gut is not a prebiotic capsule. It is closing that gap with food.

And food is full of prebiotics already. The NHS list of everyday high-fibre foods, and Mayo Clinic’s list of prebiotic foods, overlap almost entirely:

  • Wholegrains: oats, barley, wholemeal bread and pasta, brown rice
  • Legumes: beans, lentils, chickpeas, peas
  • Vegetables: onions, garlic, leeks, asparagus, artichokes, leafy greens
  • Fruit: slightly underripe bananas, plus fruit generally
  • Resistant starch: potatoes cooked and then cooled

A bowl of oats, a handful of legumes and an onion in your cooking deliver prebiotic fibre at a few cents per serving, alongside vitamins, minerals and other fibres an isolated supplement does not give you. A purified inulin powder costs more and does less, nutritionally, than the vegetable it came from. So the genuine “do not buy this” verdict: if your diet has room for more fibre, fix that first. A supplement is a fallback for when food cannot get you there, not a default.

When a prebiotic can genuinely upset your gut

There is an important exception to “just eat more fibre.” The very prebiotic fibres that feed your bacteria are fermented, and fermentation makes gas. For most people that means mild, temporary wind and bloating that settles as the gut adjusts. But for people with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) or FODMAP sensitivity, these fibres can trigger real symptoms. Fructans (the prebiotic fibre in onion, garlic and added inulin) and GOS are both FODMAPs. Monash University, the team behind the low-FODMAP diet, warns that prebiotic fibres “can cause unwanted symptoms such as gas, bloating and abdominal distension” in susceptible people, and notes that companies “add ingredients such as inulin, chicory root… FOS and GOS to boost the prebiotic fibres” in processed foods, which can push the FODMAP load up sharply.

The practical takeaway:

  • If your gut is fine: increase fibre gradually and drink water. Going from 20g to 30g overnight will make anyone gassy.
  • If you have IBS or react to onion and garlic: prebiotic supplements (especially inulin and FOS) may make things worse, not better. Go slowly, or work with a dietitian. See probiotics for IBS and probiotics for bloating for the fuller picture, including why “more fibre” is not always the answer.

This is the part that separates honest advice from marketing. A prebiotic is not automatically gentle just because it is “natural fibre.”

What about synbiotics?

A synbiotic combines live microbes and a substrate they can use. ISAPP splits them in two: a complementary synbiotic is simply a probiotic plus a prebiotic packaged together, each pulling its own weight; a synergistic synbiotic is designed so the fibre specifically feeds the strain it ships with.

In theory, pairing a strain with its preferred food could help it establish. In practice, the evidence that a synbiotic outperforms taking the components separately is still limited. So treat “synbiotic” on a label as a description, not a guarantee of superiority, and do not pay a meaningful premium for the word alone.

Quick comparison

ProbioticPrebioticSynbiotic
What it isLive microbesFibre that feeds microbesBoth, combined
Best food sourcesYoghurt, kefir, kimchi, sauerkrautOats, legumes, onion, garlic, green bananas(Usually a supplement)
Strength of caseStrain- and condition-specificStrong as “eat more fibre”; outcomes mixedLimited so far
Main downsideQuality and label reliability varyGas/bloating; FODMAP issues in IBSCost; thin evidence
Do most people need a supplement?Usually noUsually noUsually no

Who each one suits, and who should see a professional

A prebiotic-rich diet suits almost everyone. It is the default. Build it from food. A prebiotic supplement is a fallback only if your fibre intake is stubbornly low and food cannot close the gap, ideally chosen with guidance and increased slowly.

A probiotic is worth considering for specific, evidence-backed reasons (certain cases of antibiotic-associated digestive upset, or some IBS symptoms with the right strain), not as a daily catch-all. If you are choosing one, how to choose a probiotic and our best probiotics guide walk through strain, dose and quality. Timing is covered in when to take probiotics, and the sugary drink question (Yakult, Vitagen and similar) in are probiotic drinks worth it.

See a doctor or pharmacist before supplementing if you have a weakened immune system, a serious illness or a central line, are critically ill, or are pregnant. The NHS advises that anyone with an existing health condition or weakened immune system should talk to a doctor before taking probiotics. And if your digestive symptoms are persistent, severe or getting worse, that is a reason to be assessed, not to buy another tub of capsules.

The good news is also the least profitable to sell: for most people, the best thing you can do for your gut is already in the kitchen.

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