Want to talk fiber? It’s no longer your grandmother’s bran flakes. Fiber has expanded beyond bran and whole grains into prebiotics, and fiber is more closely aligned than ever before with overall health through digestive wellness.

The expansion into prebiotic fiber ingredients had expanded fiber use from its traditional home within grain foods to a broader range of categories, including soft drinks and confectionery. Innova Market Insights actively monitors a broad range of trends—including global macro trends, lifestyle forces, consumer insights, ingredient trends, and new food and beverage product launches—that all show the impact of fiber use on various levels.

Fiber benefits from consumer and industry focus on digestive health, the hallmark fiber benefit. We see growing understanding of the composition of the gut microbiome, its optimal nourishment, and its impact on health and wellness. Furthermore, consumers are looking to improve their gut health, seeking foods and beverages with fiber, prebiotics, probiotics, and, most recently, postbiotics that offer benefits.

Ingredients in the Spotlight

Each year, Innova Market Insights releases its top 10 trends predictions and previews factors shaping food, beverage, and supplement launches in the coming year. The top trend for 2024, “Ingredients: Taking the Spotlight,” showcases the importance of hero ingredients in product development, new product launches, and marketing to consumers.

Consumers are drawn toward specific types of ingredients, including healthy ingredients or sustainable choices. They respond to storytelling that focuses on the geographic and ethical sourcing of ingredients. As consumers become better informed, discerning, and sophisticated, they also become more critical of product ingredients. In a recent global survey, one in three consumers told us that they always check for ingredients of interest on a product label.

Natural ingredients resonate with consumers and consumers understand that natural foods and ingredients have the nutrients needed for a healthy diet. We are not surprised to see manufacturers focusing on development and on-pack promotion of natural ingredients. Consumers also are highly interested in health and how food and nutrition can improve their health. Manufacturers are responding to this interest by using on-pack communications to educate consumers on key functional ingredients.

Another trend, “Prioritizing Prevention,” describes the appeal to consumers of products such as fiber-rich foods and beverages that support personal wellbeing, lifelong heath, and healthy aging.

Defining Fiber Ingredients 

Health organizations around the world recommend fiber to improve health and reduce disease risk. They emphasize that fiber-rich diets are satiating, promote transit through the intestines, and reduce risk of heart disease, diabetes and several types of cancer.

Fiber also is the top nutrient and ingredient associated with gut health. Not long ago, fiber referred just to classic sources such as whole grains, bran, legumes, vegetables, and fruits. The type of fiber in these food sources used to be called insoluble fiber.

Food-based fibers are carbohydrates that make up the cellulose in the cell walls of plant foods. They cannot be digested in the small intestine and have several key functions in the body, including laxation, support of health blood lipid levels, improved regulation of blood glucose, improved mineral absorption, immune support, and modulation of satiety.

Today’s fiber ingredients are more likely to be prebiotics, which are soluble fibers. According to the International Scientific Association for Probiotics and Prebiotics (ISAPP), a prebiotic is “a substrate that is selectively utilized by host microorganisms conferring a health benefit.” ISAPP calls attention to two key aspects of prebiotics – their physiologically beneficial effect and their mechanism of action mediated by the microbiome. Prebiotics include chicory root, fructans, inulin, oligosaccharides, resistant starches, and other isolated fiber ingredients that cannot be digested in the small intestine and instead are metabolized by gut microbiota.

Functions of these non-cellulose carbohydrates overlap with several benefits of food-based fibers, including improved mineral absorption, immune system support, enhanced satiety, better bowel habits, relief from constipation and diarrhea, improved metabolic health through better insulin response and healthy blood lipid levels, and reduced risk of allergy.

Consumers Show Interest

Innova’s global surveys of consumer trends show support for fiber ingredients. Globally, more than half of consumers surveyed are interested in fiber as a functional food and beverage ingredient. Additionally, approximately one-third of consumers increased their fiber consumption in the past 12 months.

US consumers recently surveyed by Innova are more familiar with, interested in, and accepting of the term “fiber” than the term “prebiotics.” Approximately two in five consumers in the US report being highly interested in fiber ingredients. Innova surveys note that consumer interest in fiber increases with age, while younger generations are more interested than older generations in prebiotic ingredients. Manufacturers have the opportunity to expand understanding of prebiotics across all age group through packaging claims and storytelling.

Growth in Fiber and Prebiotics

Innova Market Insights data on new food and beverage launches around the world show that products with fiber or prebiotic claims and ingredients are growing modestly, supported mainly by growth in prebiotic claims and ingredients. In contrast, fiber claims are well established, and growth is stable.

Products with fiber and prebiotic claims often carry other types of claims too. Vegan and plant-based claims are increasingly common and demonstrate the association between fiber, prebiotics, and plant-centric product features, including in meat substitutes and dairy alternatives. Protein and gluten-free claims also are common. Sugar reduction claims frequently appear on prebiotics-supplemented, fiber-rich products such as soft drinks.

Claims regarding both fiber and prebiotics have the strongest presence in soft drinks, along with the grain-centric cereals and bakery categories. Soft drinks and meat substitutes are driving growth in claims, along with two confectionery subgroups: gummies and chocolate blocks. As demand for healthier snacking options grows, watch for fiber added to snack foods such as yogurts, confectionery, and cereal bars.

Additional benefits of prebiotic fibers include mild sweetness and humectant properties. Soluble fibers can partially replace sugar while adding fiber, so we expect to see more product launches with both high fiber and reduced sugar claims in sweet categories such as confectionery, desserts and ice cream, and bars. Digestive health claims also are likely to expand.

New product launches monitored by Innova show that tapioca fiber and agave inulin are among the fastest growing fiber ingredients. This demonstrates how soluble fiber and prebiotic ingredient sources are expanding beyond chicory root to other plants that contain inulin. In some product categories such as plant-based meat substitutes, combining fiber ingredients with starches and plant-based proteins can provide expanded functionality and stability.

What’s Next?

We expect consumers to turn to fiber as a hero ingredient for future-proofing their health. They are likely to become more familiar with prebiotics, as well as the amount of prebiotics needed for an effective dose. (Many of today’s products with added prebiotics contain only small amounts.)

Also watch for higher fiber functional beverages that offer multiple health benefits in addition to fiber.