⚡ Quick Answer
For most UK adults, the natural remedies that actually shift bloating are the ones the NHS already endorses: enteric-coated peppermint oil capsules (Colpermin, Mintec) before meals, and a properly run low FODMAP diet under a registered dietitian. Add in slow eating, post-meal walks, the right probiotic strain (Alflorex / B. infantis 35624) and stress hygiene, and most people see substantial change inside four weeks. See your GP if bloating runs longer than three weeks or any red flag appears.
Bloating is one of the most common reasons UK adults end up in front of their GP — or, more often, scrolling for solutions at midnight. Around 1 in 7 UK adults has irritable bowel syndrome, where bloating and gas are usually the loudest symptoms, and many more bloat occasionally without ever meeting an IBS diagnosis. The internet is awash with detoxes, charcoal drinks and apple cider vinegar shots; almost none of it has any real evidence behind it.
What the NHS, NICE, Guts UK and Monash University do back is a small, very specific list — peppermint oil capsules, a structured low FODMAP diet, and a handful of lifestyle pillars. This article walks through each of those, what they actually do, when they help, and when bloating becomes something a GP needs to look at.
What “natural remedies” actually means here
“Natural remedies” in this article means evidence-based, NHS-aligned, registered-dietitian-recommended interventions. It does not mean Instagram detoxes, charcoal drinks marketed as “pulling toxins out of the gut,” or apple cider vinegar shots. Those either don’t work or actively harm — apple cider vinegar damages tooth enamel and can worsen reflux, charcoal interferes with medication absorption, and “detox” teas often contain stimulant laxatives that make functional bloating worse over weeks.
NICE CG61 — the live UK guideline for IBS — explicitly mentions peppermint oil as a first-line antispasmodic. The NHS website lists it as a medicine in its own right. The low FODMAP diet, developed at Monash University in Australia, is now woven into NHS dietetic practice and recommended by the British Dietetic Association.
A useful way to draw the line: a natural remedy that has earned its place in this article is one that a NICE-aligned GP would recognise, that a registered dietitian might prescribe, or that Guts UK (the UK’s leading gut charity) actively recommends. Anything else is, at best, anecdote.
The reframing matters because bloating is exactly the kind of symptom that wellness influencers love. It’s invisible to anyone but you, it varies day to day, and it responds well to placebo. Sticking to evidence keeps you out of cycles of buying expensive products that work for two weeks and then stop, and into the proper, methodical process that actually fixes the underlying driver.
✅ EVIDENCE-BASED (NHS, NICE, MONASH)
| ❌ MARKETING / NO EVIDENCE
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Peppermint oil capsules — the NHS-listed natural remedy
Peppermint oil is the rare herbal remedy that has graduated to formal NHS endorsement. The active ingredient, menthol, is a smooth-muscle relaxant — it acts directly on the gut wall to ease the cramping and trapped-gas pain that drives most bloating. NICE CG61 recommends it as a first-line antispasmodic for IBS, and the NHS website lists it on the same page as conventional medicines.
Critical detail: peppermint oil for bloating means enteric-coated capsules, not peppermint tea. The enteric coating is what stops your stomach acid breaking the oil down before it reaches the small intestine, where it actually needs to act. UK pharmacies sell it as Colpermin and Mintec (and supermarket-brand equivalents), classified as a Pharmacy (P) medicine — you ask the pharmacist for it, but no prescription is needed.
Standard dose is 0.2–0.4ml (one enteric-coated capsule) taken three times a day, 30 minutes before meals. The NHS says you should give it one to two weeks of consistent use before judging whether it’s working. If you’ve taken it for two weeks and seen no change, stop and book a GP appointment to look for other causes — don’t keep self-medicating beyond two weeks without medical input.
Side effect to watch for: heartburn. Menthol can relax the lower oesophageal sphincter as well as the gut wall, which is fine for most people but a problem if you’ve already got reflux disease (GORD) or a hiatus hernia. If peppermint oil makes your reflux worse, stop it.
Worked example. A 41-year-old reader has had cyclical evening bloating for three years. She buys a pack of Colpermin from her local Boots, takes one capsule 30 minutes before breakfast, lunch and dinner. By day five she notices the post-dinner balloon sensation has eased. By day ten her partner notes the change unprompted. She continues for the recommended fortnight, sees that the relief holds, and now keeps a pack at home for flare weeks.
🔬 NHS Endorsement
How NICE-recommended peppermint oil is actually used
NICE CG61 recommends enteric-coated peppermint oil as a first-line antispasmodic for IBS-related bloating. It’s classified as a Pharmacy medicine in the UK — no prescription needed, but the enteric coating and timing matter enormously. The evidence base includes multiple trials showing meaningful reduction in bloating scores within two weeks.
- → Brands — Colpermin, Mintec, generic enteric-coated
- → Dose — 0.2–0.4ml three times daily before meals
- → Timing — 30 minutes before each main meal
- → Trial length — 1–2 weeks for full effect
- → Stop if no benefit at 2 weeks or if reflux worsens
The low FODMAP diet — the most-evidenced food approach
If peppermint oil is the medicinal lever, the low FODMAP diet is the dietary one — and the evidence base is substantially stronger. Monash University’s research consistently shows symptom improvement in 70 to 86% of IBS patients who complete the protocol. The NHS, the British Dietetic Association and Guts UK all endorse it.
FODMAP stands for Fermentable Oligosaccharides, Disaccharides, Monosaccharides and Polyols — short-chain carbohydrates that are poorly absorbed in the small intestine, ferment in the colon, draw water in, and produce gas. Sensitive guts react to that gas with bloating, cramps and altered bowel habit; calmer guts don’t notice. The diet doesn’t fix the underlying sensitivity — it identifies which specific FODMAPs your gut reacts to, so you can avoid those and eat everything else freely.
The protocol has three phases and the order is non-negotiable.
Phase 1 — strict elimination. Four to six weeks of avoiding all high-FODMAP foods: wheat (most bread, pasta), onion, garlic, beans, lentils, apples, pears, mango, watermelon, cow’s milk, soft cheese, yogurt, ice cream, honey, and the polyol sweeteners sorbitol, mannitol and xylitol.
Phase 2 — systematic reintroduction. One FODMAP group at a time, three days each, with a washout period in between. You’re testing tolerance, not preference.
Phase 3 — personalisation. You build a long-term diet that includes everything except your personal triggers in personal-trigger amounts.
The hard rule: don’t do this on your own. Solo low-FODMAP diets often turn into long-term over-restriction, which damages the gut microbiome and creates new problems. Find a FODMAP-trained registered dietitian via the British Dietetic Association website (bda.uk.com); your GP can also refer to NHS dietetics.
Worked example. A 34-year-old reader with three years of evening bloating books an NHS dietitian referral, completes a six-week elimination phase, then reintroduces FODMAPs one group at a time. By eight weeks she’s identified fructans (onion, garlic, wheat) as her main trigger. Bread and the occasional pizza moved back in once she’d swapped to sourdough; onion and garlic stayed limited. Bloating frequency dropped from daily to roughly once a fortnight.
Ginger, fennel and chamomile — the herbal teas with evidence
Three herbal teas earn a place in this list, with realistic expectations.
Ginger has the strongest evidence. NHS pregnancy guidance recommends it for nausea, and it has prokinetic properties — meaning it accelerates gastric emptying. For people whose bloating is driven by slow stomach emptying after meals, fresh ginger root grated into hot water (10g, steeped 10 minutes) or a 250mg ginger capsule before meals genuinely helps. Useful for postprandial bloating and for that “everything I ate is still sitting in my stomach” feeling at 9 p.m.
Fennel tea is the traditional carminative — herbalist’s term for “helps you pass gas.” The evidence is modest, mostly small studies and centuries of use rather than randomised trials. A cup after dinner is comforting and harmless; don’t expect it to substitute for peppermint oil if your bloating is significant.
Chamomile has mild antispasmodic and anxiolytic properties. Useful in the evening if your bloating tracks with anxious eating or stress. Pairs well with stress hygiene generally.
Realistic framing: think of these as everyday habits that nudge things in the right direction, not standalone cures. Swapping a 4 p.m. coffee for fennel or ginger tea is a sensible bloating-friendly change. Drinking three cups of fennel tea on top of a high-FODMAP diet won’t fix the underlying problem.
Probiotics — separating evidence from hype
The probiotic aisle of any UK pharmacy looks impressive and is mostly noise. Generic “broad-spectrum probiotic” supplements have surprisingly little evidence for bloating. What does have evidence is one specific strain: Bifidobacterium infantis 35624, sold in the UK as Alflorex.
Multiple randomised controlled trials and post-marketing data show this strain reduces bloating, abdominal pain and bowel habit changes in IBS. A four-to-six-week daily trial is the standard recommendation. If you’ve not noticed any change after six weeks, stop — it isn’t going to start working in week eight.
Yakult and Actimel contain different strains (Lactobacillus casei Shirota, Lactobacillus bulgaricus). The evidence for those strains is mostly around general immune health and modest effects on transit, not specifically bloating. They’re not bad — they’re just not the bloating-specific tool people sometimes assume.
Don’t combine multiple probiotic products randomly. Random strain mixing can occasionally make bloating worse, especially during the first two weeks. Pick one product, give it six weeks, and judge.
If a six-week Alflorex trial gives you genuine relief, you can stay on it. If it doesn’t, you’ve ruled out the most-evidenced UK option and can move on without feeling you’ve missed something.
Lifestyle changes that quietly do more than supplements
The least-glamorous interventions usually do the most work. Aerophagia — air-swallowing — is responsible for a surprising amount of “bloating,” and the fix costs nothing. The seven pillars below cost nothing and deliver more than most supplements.
⚡ Seven lifestyle pillars that quietly do the work
Worked example. A reader who used to scoff lunch in 8 minutes at her desk slows to 25 minutes — proper plate, proper chair, no laptop — and adds a 15-minute walk afterwards. Within a fortnight, the 4 p.m. balloon sensation is noticeably reduced, before she’s added any peppermint oil at all.
When bloating isn’t natural-remedy territory
A small but important number of bloating cases are warning signs of something needing medical investigation, and natural remedies are exactly the wrong response to those.
NICE-mandated check: a woman over 50 with persistent bloating (most days for three weeks or more), particularly with early satiety (feeling full quickly), pelvic pain, or weight loss, should be offered a CA125 blood test to rule out ovarian cancer. This is in the NICE ovarian cancer guidance and your GP will know it. Don’t soldier on with peppermint oil if you fit this picture — book the appointment.
Coeliac screen: anyone with chronic unexplained GI symptoms — bloating, intermittent diarrhoea, fatigue — should have a coeliac blood test (anti-tissue transglutaminase IgA antibodies plus a total IgA level to rule out IgA deficiency). Coeliac disease affects 1 in 100 UK adults and many are still undiagnosed. The test is cheap, the diagnosis is life-changing, and you must be eating gluten in normal amounts when tested or the test will be falsely negative.
The point is calm, not alarming. Most bloating is benign and natural-remedy territory. A small number aren’t, and the cost of being wrong about that is much higher than the cost of one GP appointment.
🚩 Bloating red flags — see your GP this week
- Persistent bloating over 3 weeks (especially women over 50 — request CA125)
- Unexplained weight loss
- Loss of appetite or feeling full quickly
- Blood in stool
- New persistent change in bowel habit over 6 weeks
- Difficulty swallowing
- Severe abdominal pain
Anyone with chronic unexplained GI symptoms should also request a coeliac blood test — it’s cheap, life-changing, and frequently missed.
Worked 4-week natural-remedy plan
A staged approach that builds without overwhelming. Bloating is a chronic complaint and it doesn’t respond well to crash interventions; it does respond to consistent, layered changes.
WEEK 1
Peppermint oil + cut fizzy drinks + post-dinner walk
Buy a pack of Colpermin or generic enteric-coated peppermint oil from your local pharmacy. Take one capsule 30 minutes before each main meal. Cut fizzy drinks for the week. Add a 10-minute walk after dinner.
WEEK 2
Ginger tea + slow eating + no chewing gum
Switch your afternoon coffee for ginger or fennel tea. Slow your meals — aim for 20 minutes minimum. Stop chewing gum. Continue peppermint oil.
WEEK 3
Start Alflorex trial + 10 min wind-down
Start a four-to-six-week Alflorex trial — one capsule daily. Add a 10-minute evening wind-down (breathing, reading, anything that isn’t a screen). Continue everything from Weeks 1–2.
WEEK 4
Evaluate + book GP if needed (FODMAP referral)
Take stock. If bloating has substantially improved, you’ve found your toolkit. If not, this is the conversation to have with your GP — ask about a coeliac screen if not done, and a referral to NHS dietetics for proper FODMAP guidance. Persistent bloating in women over 50, or any red flag, warrants a CA125 blood test as part of that conversation.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does peppermint oil take to work for bloating?
NHS guidance is one to two weeks of consistent use — three enteric-coated capsules a day, 30 minutes before meals. If you haven’t seen any change after two weeks, stop and see your GP rather than continuing self-treatment.
Is the low FODMAP diet safe long-term?
The strict elimination phase is only meant to last 4–6 weeks. Long-term restriction harms the gut microbiome and can cause nutritional deficiencies. The whole point of the protocol is to reintroduce FODMAPs systematically and end up on the most varied diet your gut tolerates. Always do this with a FODMAP-trained dietitian.
Can I take probiotics every day?
Yes — for a defined trial period of 4–6 weeks, on a single specific strain. For bloating, the most-evidenced UK option is Bifidobacterium infantis 35624 (Alflorex). If you see no improvement after six weeks, stop. Don’t randomly mix multiple probiotic brands at once.
Why does my bloating get worse before my period?
Hormones drive a real and predictable pattern. Rising progesterone in the luteal phase (the week before your period) slows gut motility and increases water retention, both of which feed bloating. Oestrogen swings also alter gut sensitivity. Tracking symptoms against your cycle for two months will show you whether this is your pattern.
When should I see a GP about bloating?
Book an appointment if bloating has lasted more than three weeks, if any red flag appears (weight loss, bleeding, change in bowel habit over six weeks, swallowing difficulty, severe pain), or if you’re a woman over 50 with new persistent bloating most days. Anyone with chronic unexplained GI symptoms should also ask for a coeliac blood test.
The natural remedies that actually shift UK bloating are short, evidence-based, and quietly endorsed by the NHS rather than blasted across Instagram: peppermint oil capsules before meals, a properly run low FODMAP diet with a registered dietitian, the right probiotic strain, and a small set of lifestyle changes that cost nothing. Most readers who give the four-week plan an honest go see substantial change.
The one thing not to do is sit on persistent symptoms — book a GP appointment if bloating runs past three weeks, if any red flag turns up, or if you’re a woman over 50 with new, daily bloating. Calm, methodical, and evidence-led is the right tone for this problem.
