Probiotic benefits are strain-specific, not species-specific. That means the short code at the end of the name, the “GG” in Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG or the “35624” in Bifidobacterium longum subsp. infantis 35624, matters far more than the brand, the marketing, or the billions of CFU on the front of the box. Two products can list the same species and do completely different things in your gut, because they contain different strains tested for different problems. Once that single idea clicks, choosing a probiotic stops being a guessing game.
This article explains how strains are named, why the strain code carries the evidence, and what the best-studied strains actually do. For the wider picture, start with our evidence-led guide to the best probiotics.
Why the strain, not the species, is what counts
A full probiotic name has three layers. Take Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG:
- Genus: Lactobacillus, the broad family.
- Species: rhamnosus, a group within that family.
- Strain: GG, the specific, characterised sub-type that scientists actually grew, dosed, and studied.
Think of it like dogs. “Dog” is the species. A Golden Retriever and a German Shepherd are both dogs, but you would not expect them to behave identically. Strains are the breeds of the bacterial world. The health effects, how well a strain survives stomach acid, whether it sticks to the gut lining, what compounds it produces, are properties of the individual strain, not the whole species. The International Scientific Association for Probiotics and Prebiotics is explicit that benefits shown for one strain cannot be assumed for another, even a close relative, and that a single genetic change can erase the effect entirely. You can read their plain-language explainer on what a strain is and why it matters.
This is the single most useful thing to know when reading a label. A product that says only “Lactobacillus acidophilus, 10 billion CFU” gives you the species and the dose but hides the one detail that decides whether it does anything: the strain.
Rule of thumb: if there is no letter-and-number code after the species name, you cannot look up the evidence, so treat the health claims as marketing until proven otherwise.
The best-studied strains and what they do
Below are the strains with the most credible human research behind them. Throughout, remember that evidence varies in strength, and even a well-studied strain usually shifts the odds rather than guaranteeing a result. Examine maintains a detailed, regularly updated breakdown of probiotics by strain and condition if you want to go deeper than this summary, and the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements has a balanced probiotics fact sheet that uses Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG as its own naming example.
Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG (often labelled LGG)
One of the most researched probiotics in the world. The evidence is strongest for diarrhoea: shortening acute infectious diarrhoea in children and helping prevent antibiotic-associated diarrhoea. Evidence for other uses is more mixed. It is a sensible default if you want a single, well-documented strain.
Saccharomyces boulardii
Not a bacterium at all, but a beneficial yeast. That makes it unusually robust: it tolerates warmth better than most bacterial strains and, importantly, is not killed by antibiotics, so it can be taken alongside a course. The evidence is reasonably strong for antibiotic-associated diarrhoea and traveller’s diarrhoea. It is a standout choice for use during antibiotics and for anyone who struggles to keep a product refrigerated.
Bifidobacterium animalis subsp. lactis (strains such as HN019 and BB-12)
Bifidobacterium species dominate the large intestine. B. animalis subsp. lactis strains have moderate evidence for speeding up gut transit and supporting regularity, with some work on general immune and gut markers. Useful if your main complaint is sluggish, infrequent bowel movements. Note the strain codes here: the trial evidence sits with named strains like HN019, not with every product that simply says “Bifidobacterium lactis”.
Bifidobacterium longum subsp. infantis 35624
A single strain with a respectable run of trials in irritable bowel syndrome, where it has moderate evidence for easing overall IBS symptoms such as pain, bloating, and bowel-habit trouble. If your issue is IBS rather than a one-off upset, this is one of the named strains worth knowing. Our guide to probiotics for IBS sets realistic expectations.
Lactiplantibacillus plantarum 299v
Best known for digestive comfort. There is moderate evidence for reducing IBS symptoms, particularly bloating and abdominal discomfort. If gas and a tight, swollen belly are your issue, this strain is worth knowing about, and our guide to probiotics for bloating covers the realistic expectations.
Lacticaseibacillus paracasei strain Shirota (the Yakult strain)
A single, well-documented strain delivered in a familiar sweet drink. It has been reclassified over the decades (older labels and studies call it Lactobacillus casei Shirota), but it is the same organism. Evidence points to support for regularity and general gut function. It is a pleasant way to get a real strain into your day, though the modest dose and the sugar matter if you drink it daily. We weigh this up in are probiotic drinks worth it.
Multi-strain blends
Some formulas combine many strains, and a few well-designed blends have solid trial evidence as a fixed combination. But “more strains” is not automatically better. A blend is only as trustworthy as the strain codes and doses it discloses. A list of eight species with no codes tells you almost nothing.
A quick strain-to-goal map
| Your goal | Strain(s) with the best evidence | Evidence strength |
|---|---|---|
| Prevent antibiotic-associated diarrhoea | Saccharomyces boulardii; L. rhamnosus GG | Reasonably strong |
| Shorten acute infectious diarrhoea (esp. children) | L. rhamnosus GG; S. boulardii | Reasonably strong |
| Ease IBS symptoms / bloating | B. longum subsp. infantis 35624; L. plantarum 299v | Moderate |
| Support regularity, slow transit | B. animalis subsp. lactis (HN019, BB-12); L. paracasei Shirota | Moderate |
| General daily maintenance | Fermented foods; a disclosed multi-strain blend | Limited but low-risk |
How to read a probiotic label
The strain code is the headline, but a good label gives you three things. Here is how to check them, and the order of importance most people get backwards.
- Strain code first. Find the full name, genus, species, and the letter-number code. No code means no way to look up the evidence.
- Dose, but in context. CFU (colony-forming units) tells you how many live organisms you are getting. It matters, but only once the strain is right. A precisely matched strain at a modest studied dose beats a giant CFU number from an unnamed strain.
- Viable through shelf life, not just at manufacture. The best labels guarantee the CFU count at the end of shelf life. Live cultures decline over time, so a number that was only true on the day it was made can be misleading. ISAPP’s guide to decoding a probiotic label makes the useful point that products which bother to disclose their strain are far more likely to have real evidence behind them.
A practical shortcut: the products that hide their strain codes are usually the ones with the least to show. Transparency is itself a signal. Our walkthrough on how to choose a probiotic turns all of this into a simple checklist.
Single strain or multi-strain?
This is the question that sells a lot of expensive bottles, and the honest answer is that the count is the wrong thing to optimise.
For a specific, defined problem, a single well-studied strain at the dose used in trials is often the cleaner choice. You know exactly what was tested and what to expect: S. boulardii during a course of antibiotics, B. longum subsp. infantis 35624 for IBS. Adding seven other strains does not improve that evidence and can muddy it.
For general daily maintenance, a sensible multi-strain blend is fine, and a few combinations have been trialled as a fixed formula. The trap is assuming a longer list means a better product. A blend is only as good as the codes and doses it actually names. Eight unnamed species is marketing; two named strains at a known dose is information.
A note on storage and survival
Most probiotics are live organisms, and warmth speeds up their die-off. A bottle left in a hot car, a warehouse without climate control, or a delivery parcel sitting in the sun can lose a meaningful share of its live count before it reaches you. The CFU on the box is often the count at manufacture, which is one more reason to favour labels that guarantee it through shelf life.
Strains differ in toughness. Saccharomyces boulardii (a yeast) and spore-forming Bacillus strains are relatively hardy. Many Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium strains are more fragile and are happier refrigerated. Practical moves: read the storage line on the label, buy from sellers with good stock turnover, and if a product says “keep refrigerated,” respect it. We go deeper in when to take probiotics.
Strains from food
You do not always need a capsule. Fermented foods carry live cultures and are a cheap, enjoyable foundation for general gut health: yoghurt, kefir, kimchi, sauerkraut, and tempeh all qualify. The trade-off is precision. Food rarely tells you the exact strain or the dose, so it is excellent for everyday maintenance but less suited to targeting a specific condition where a known strain at a known amount matters. For the fuller comparison, see prebiotics vs probiotics and our overview of whether probiotics actually work.
When a strain is not the answer
Honesty is the point of this publication, so: probiotics are not a fix for everything, and the right move is sometimes no supplement at all. If your symptoms are mild and occasional, sorting out fibre, sleep, and stress usually does more than any capsule. If symptoms are persistent, severe, or getting worse, or if you see blood, lose weight without trying, or run a fever, that is a doctor’s job, not a probiotic’s. The same applies if you are pregnant, seriously ill, immunocompromised, managing a chronic condition, or on medication that might interact: the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements notes that probiotics warrant caution in people who are seriously ill or have weakened immune systems, so check with a pharmacist or doctor first. A probiotic is a tool for specific situations, not a daily insurance policy everyone needs.
The bottom line
The strain code is the most important text on a probiotic label, because benefits belong to strains, not species or brands. Match a well-studied strain to your actual goal: Saccharomyces boulardii or Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG for antibiotic-related diarrhoea, B. animalis subsp. lactis HN019 for regularity, B. longum subsp. infantis 35624 or L. plantarum 299v for IBS-type discomfort. Treat CFU as secondary to the right strain, ignore products that hide their codes, respect the storage instructions, and remember that food and basic habits cover most everyday needs. Buy a specific strain when you have a specific reason, and see a doctor when symptoms are serious. This article is educational and not a substitute for personal medical advice.