Fiber Gap Analyzer
Log what you've eaten. See your gap. Close it.
Goal: 30g/day (25g for women, 38g for men). Most Americans get 10–15g.
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Quick wins
Top high-fiber foods — click to add one and see how it affects your gap.
What is a fiber gap?
A fiber gap is the difference between how much dietary fiber you actually eat and how much you need. Health guidelines recommend 25g per day for women and 38g for men — yet the average American consumes only 10–15g. That leaves a daily gap of 10–25g for most people.
Fiber matters more than most people realize. Soluble fiber slows digestion, blunts blood sugar spikes, and lowers LDL cholesterol. Insoluble fiber adds bulk to stool and keeps the digestive tract moving. Together, they feed beneficial gut bacteria, increase satiety, and reduce long-term risk of heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and colorectal cancer.
The gap exists mostly because modern diets rely heavily on processed foods, white grains, and animal products — all of which are very low in fiber. Closing it doesn't require a dramatic diet overhaul: adding one cup of lentils, a handful of chia seeds, or swapping white rice for a legume can move the needle by 10–15g in a single meal.
How to close your fiber gap
The fastest path to 30g is stacking foods from multiple categories. Here are the top performers from each group:
Want a full day planned? Try the Meal Builder or Fiber Calculator.