IBS trigger foods are deeply personal. This guide walks you through identifying your actual IBS trigger foods so you can take back control of your meals and …
Your Gut Pain Isn't Normal.
It's Your Food.
The bloating, cramping, and urgency that control your life. What if you could finally identify what's really causing it?
Restaurant survival (without paranoia)
Most IBS flares are not about one secret ingredient—they are about stacking: onion in the base, garlic butter, a FODMAP-heavy lunch, then stress and coffee. When you log what you actually ate (not the menu title), you can see which stacks repeat instead of avoiding dining out entirely.
Why IBS feels unpredictable
Social cost
Worrying about bathrooms and bloating changes how people order, travel, and RSVP. That stress can amplify gut symptoms even when the meal was only a partial trigger.
Delayed symptoms
Fermentation and motility shifts often show up one to three days later, so same-day blame is usually misleading.
Over-broad elimination
Low-FODMAP style approaches help many people in trials, but staying on the strictest phase long-term is neither intended nor necessary once you know your personal culprits.
What trials suggest: a large share of people with IBS improve when they personalize carbohydrate fermentation loads (FODMAPs) or other triggers—but the exact percentage depends on the study and endpoint. Your goal is not a headline stat; it is a short list of foods that reliably predict your symptoms.
Why Food Triggers IBS
Your gut is reacting to foods your body can't properly digest.
FODMAPs, gluten, dairy, certain fibers, and even "healthy" foods can ferment in your gut, causing gas, bloating, and inflammation. The problem? These reactions are delayed—often appearing 24-72 hours after eating. Learn why IBS symptoms are delayed →
For FODMAP background, see e.g. Monash-led narrative reviews on PubMed. Work with a dietitian for structured elimination if you can—Sensio complements logging, it is not a prescription diet.
FODMAP quick mental model
Think in buckets: excess fructose, lactose, fructans (wheat/onion/garlic), GOS (legumes), and polyols (some sweeteners and stone fruit). You do not need to memorize every compound—Sensio is built to spot which ingredients keep appearing before your worst days—but knowing the buckets helps you read menus more calmly.
Your IBS Triggers Are Personal
The FODMAP diet lists 50+ foods to avoid. But you don't need to avoid all of them—just YOUR triggers. Without knowing which ones, you're stuck eliminating everything.
High-FODMAP staples
Onion, garlic, wheat, beans, and certain fruits ferment in the gut—often the first layer to personalize rather than avoid forever.
Lactose & dairy
Even when you are not “allergic,” lactose and dairy proteins drive gas and urgency for many IBS routines.
Caffeine, alcohol & carbonation
They speed motility and irritate the lining; combined with a big meal, they are easy to mis-attribute without a log.
Fatty or greasy meals
Large fat loads delay gastric emptying and can trigger pain or diarrhea—especially on top of FODMAP stacks.
Artificial sweeteners & polyols
Sugar alcohols in “sugar-free” gum, bars, and drinks are classic hidden IBS triggers.
Large portions & mixed triggers
A safe food becomes a problem at restaurant portions or when three mild triggers land in one day—logs reveal the stack.
The tracking challenge: With symptoms appearing two to three days after eating, tying a specific dish to a flare from memory alone is unreliable—especially when you eat varied meals. That is the problem structured logging tries to fix.
Deep dives & articles
Start with a few guides we recommend most often, then open a category for more—or see the full blog index for every IBS & gut article.
What are FODMAPs? Why do they matter for IBS? This guide breaks down FODMAP trigger foods and shows you how to identify whether they're causing your symptoms.
For many people with IBS, symptoms appear a full day, 36 hours, or even 48-72 hours after eating. Understanding delayed reactions is the key to finally ident…
Bloating after meals has many causes—FODMAPs, lactose, habits, stress, and more. Learn how to track triggers, when to see a doctor, and how AI food logging c…
The gut-brain axis explains why IBS and anxiety fuel each other—and why food triggers matter. Learn how vagus nerve signaling, serotonin, and your microbiome…
Eating out with IBS is stressful—hidden FODMAPs, big portions, and social anxiety. Learn safer cuisines, how to order and talk to staff, and how tracking rev…
Is gluten your IBS trigger—or fructans in wheat? Learn celiac vs NCGS vs wheat allergy, what studies show, and how to test properly with your doctor and symp…
Practical low-FODMAP meal templates across the day, plus personalization tips so you can identify which “safe” foods actually work for your gut.
More guides & topics (22)
- Foods That Help IBS: What to Eat When Everything Hurts
- IBS and Bloating: Why Your Stomach Swells After Eating and How to Stop It
- IBS and Dairy: Is Lactose Intolerance Behind Your Symptoms?
- IBS and Eggs: Are Eggs Safe for Your Sensitive Stomach?
- IBS and Gas: Why Certain Foods Make It Worse and How to Manage It
- IBS and Meal Timing: Does When You Eat Matter as Much as What You Eat?
- IBS and Onions: Why This Common Ingredient Might Be Your Biggest Trigger
- IBS and Probiotics: Do They Actually Help or Make Things Worse?
- IBS and Rice: Is Rice Safe for Sensitive Stomachs?
- IBS and Sugar: How Sweets Affect Your Gut
- IBS and Travel: How to Manage Gut Issues on Vacation
- IBS Diarrhea After Eating: Causes, Triggers, and What to Do
- IBS Fatigue: Why IBS Makes You So Tired and What to Do About It
- IBS Flare-Up: What Causes Them and How to Recover Faster
- IBS-Friendly Breakfast Ideas: What to Eat When Mornings Are the Worst
- IBS in Women: Hormones, Food Triggers, and the Period Connection
- IBS Nausea: Why You Feel Sick After Eating and What to Do
- Stomach Pain After Eating: When It Could Be a Food Intolerance
- IBS and Alcohol: How Drinking Affects Your Gut
- IBS and Weight Gain: Can Gut Problems Affect Your Weight?
- IBS Constipation and Diet: Foods That Make It Better and Worse
- IBS Food Diary: Why Most People Quit and What Actually Works
Specific foods & drinks (52)
- Oats and IBS: Is This Superfood Safe or Another Trigger?
- Onions and IBS: Why This Cooking Staple Destroys Your Gut
- Oranges and IBS: Can You Handle This Citrus Fruit?
- Pasta and IBS: Why Even "Healthy" Pasta Can Trigger Symptoms
- Peanut Butter and IBS: Why This Common Snack Triggers Flares
- Peppermint and IBS: Can This Herb Soothe Your Symptoms?
- Can Pizza Cause IBS Symptoms? The Hidden Triggers in Every Slice
- Popcorn and IBS: Can You Eat This Beloved Snack?
- Protein Shakes and IBS: Can You Use These Supplements Safely?
- Red Meat and IBS: Why Beef and Pork Trigger Your Worst Symptoms
- Rice and IBS: Why This "Safe" Carb Still Triggers Symptoms
- Salmon and IBS: Is This Healthy Fish Safe to Eat?
- Can Soda Cause IBS Flare-Ups? What You Need to Know
- Spicy Food and IBS: Why Capsaicin Triggers Gut Flares
- Sweet Potato and IBS: Is This Nutritious Vegetable Safe?
- Tofu and IBS: Can This Plant Protein Work for You?
- Tomatoes and IBS: Understanding the Acidic Food Trigger
- Watermelon and IBS: Can You Enjoy This Summer Fruit?
- Wine and IBS: Why This Popular Beverage Triggers Symptoms
- Yogurt and IBS: Can Probiotics Help or Do They Make It Worse?
- Alcohol and IBS: Why Drinks Trigger Symptoms and How to Drink Safely
- Apples and IBS: Why Healthy Fruit Causes Bloating and Diarrhea
- Avocado and IBS: A Superfood That May Trigger Your Symptoms
- Bananas and IBS: The Truth About This "Safe" Fruit
- Beans and IBS: Why This Protein Powerhouse Backfires in Your Gut
- Beer and IBS: Can You Drink Alcohol Safely?
- Bread and IBS: Is Gluten the Real Problem or Something Else?
- Broccoli and IBS: Why Cruciferous Vegetables Backfire in Your Gut
- Cabbage and IBS: Why This Cruciferous Vegetable Causes Problems
- Cauliflower and IBS: Managing Another Cruciferous Challenge
- Celery and IBS: Why This "Healthy" Vegetable Causes Problems
- Cheese and IBS: Why Your Favorite Dairy Might Be Triggering Symptoms
- Chicken and IBS: Why This Safe Protein Still Triggers Symptoms
- Chocolate and IBS: Why Sweets Trigger Gut Symptoms and Which Kinds Are Safer
- Coconut and IBS: Can You Safely Consume This Tropical Product?
- Coffee and IBS: Acid, Caffeine, and Hidden Drink Triggers
- Corn and IBS: Fiber, Portions, and What Else Is on Your Plate
- Eggs and IBS: When “Safe” Protein Still Causes Symptoms
- French Fries and IBS: Fat Load, Portions, and Trigger Stacking
- Garlic and IBS: Why This Common Ingredient Causes Bloating
- Ginger and IBS: Does It Soothe Symptoms or Trigger Them?
- Grapes and IBS: Can This Snack Trigger Bloating and Urgency?
- Green Tea and IBS: Helpful Habit or Hidden Trigger?
- Honey and IBS: Why This Sweetener Can Cause Symptoms
- Ice Cream and IBS: Lactose, Fat, and Additive Trigger Stacking
- Lentils and IBS: Why This Healthy Protein Still Causes Flares
- Milk and IBS: Why Dairy So Often Triggers Symptoms
- Mushrooms and IBS: Why This Healthy Food Can Still Cause Bloating
- Nuts and IBS: Which Types and Portions Are Easier to Tolerate?
- Fiber and IBS: Why the 'Eat More Fiber' Advice Can Backfire
- SIBO and IBS: The Bacterial Overgrowth Connection to Your Symptoms
- Caffeine and IBS: Does Coffee Make Your Symptoms Worse?
Finally, Find YOUR IBS Triggers
Sensio tracks your meals and symptoms, using AI to find the hidden patterns between what you eat and when your IBS flares up.
Snap Your Meals
Photo your food. AI identifies ingredients and potential IBS triggers automatically.
Log Your Symptoms
Track bloating, pain, urgency, and other IBS symptoms. Takes 10 seconds.
See Your Triggers
Get correlation percentages showing exactly which foods cause YOUR symptoms.
Elimination diets made me anxious around food. Logging in Sensio didn't fix IBS overnight, but it showed onion/garlic sneaking in on good weeks—symptoms still lagged by a day or two, which is why I never noticed before. Helpful, not magic.
— Michael R., Sensio user
What we do not replace
Red-flag symptoms (blood in stool, unintended weight loss, fever) need medical evaluation—not an app. Sensio is for people working within an IBS diagnosis who want clearer food–symptom timing, not for ruling out other conditions.
Bring data to your next appointment
If you already suspect FODMAPs or other triggers, consistent meal + symptom logs usually communicate the pattern faster than a verbal recap.
✓ Free to try • ✓ No credit card required • ✓ Useful trends often need several weeks