Colourful, nourishing, and versatile: fiber-rich produce belongs at the center of every meal.

Top 20 High-Fiber Fruits and Vegetables for Fullness and Gut Health

5 Min Read

Top 20 High-Fiber Fruits and Vegetables — With Fiber, Calories, and How I Eat Them

Note: All nutrition info is based on USDA averages and may vary depending on how the food is cooked (steamed, roasted, raw) or the variety used.

When I shifted to a high-protein, high-fiber lifestyle, my meals changed completely. I don’t eat much bread, rice, or pasta anymore. Instead, I rely on fruits and vegetables as my main source of carbohydrates — and the benefits have been incredible: more energy, fewer cravings, and consistently great digestion.

Below are the top high-fiber fruits and vegetables I eat every week. These aren’t just sides or toppings — they’re the core of my meals, roasted, stirred into smoothies, or eaten raw with yogurt.


High-Fiber Vegetables Chart

Vegetable Fiber (g) Calories Best Cooking Method
Sweet Potato ~4.0 g (1 medium, ~150g) ~130 kcal Oven-roasted with avocado oil
Broccoli ~5.1 g (1 cup, cooked) ~55 kcal Stir-fried or roasted
Brussels Sprouts ~4.1 g (1 cup, cooked) ~60 kcal Roasted until golden and crisp
Asparagus ~2.9 g (1 cup, cooked) ~40 kcal Light sauté or roasted
Cauliflower ~3.0 g (1 cup, cooked) ~30 kcal Roasted or mashed
Green Peas ~6.9 g (1 cup, cooked) ~115 kcal Boiled or added to stir-fries
Zucchini ~2.5 g (1 cup, cooked) ~28 kcal Sautéed or oven-roasted
Green Beans ~4.0 g (1 cup, cooked) ~40 kcal Stir-fried with onions
Carrots ~3.6 g (1 cup, cooked) ~50 kcal Roasted or blended into soups
Eggplant ~2.5 g (1 cup, cooked) ~35 kcal Roasted or grilled

High-Fiber Fruits Chart

Fruit Fiber (g) Calories Best Way to Eat
Avocado ~10 g (1 medium) ~234 kcal Mashed, sliced, or blended in smoothies
Raspberries ~8 g (1 cup) ~65 kcal Fresh, with Greek yogurt or chia pudding
Blueberries ~3.6 g (1 cup) ~85 kcal Daily smoothie base or raw with yogurt
Banana ~3.1 g (1 medium) ~105 kcal Eaten as is or added to oatmeal
Kiwi ~4.3 g (2 medium) ~90 kcal I eat 1–2 daily, often with chicken lunch
Mango ~2.6 g (1 cup) ~100 kcal Frozen or fresh, usually in dessert bowls
Apple ~4.4 g (1 medium) ~95 kcal Raw or chopped into yogurt bowls
Pear ~5.5 g (1 medium) ~100 kcal Great paired with Greek yogurt
Pineapple ~2.3 g (1 cup) ~82 kcal Frozen in smoothies or chopped in bowls
Dragon Fruit ~3 g (1 cup) ~60 kcal Raw, chilled — a fun texture and fiber win

🟫 Related Read

Fiber 101: Why I Always Recommend a High-Fiber Lifestyle
This foundational guide explains why fiber matters for satiety, hormones, gut health, and why I built my entire eating rhythm around it.


How I Use These Daily

  • Fruits are usually eaten raw — in smoothies, bowls, or with Greek yogurt.
  • Vegetables are roasted in batches or stir-fried to pair with protein.
  • I use them to build every meal, not just decorate it. This shift simplified my nutrition and boosted fullness more than any diet ever could.

Why Fiber-Rich Produce Works

Whether sweet or savoury, these plants:

When you eat this way consistently, your body gets the fiber, nutrients, and slow-release carbs it truly needs.

If you’d like to see how I build high-protein, high-fiber meals daily, follow me on TikTok: @krupaandbooks. I share simple food rhythms, grocery tips, and real meals from my kitchen.

If you’re looking for simple, practical ways to turn these fiber-rich fruits and vegetables into satisfying meals, I’ve published over 15 high-protein, high-fiber recipe books — available on Amazon in 10+ countries. They’re designed for real life: quick combinations, no calorie counting, and ingredients you actually use. You can explore them all on my Amazon Author Page.

Book cover of High-Protein High-Fiber Meal Prep Guide by Krupa and Krish
100 protein-rich, high-fiber recipes that can be used to create over 500 meals — the foundation of my everyday lifestyle

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Krupa is the Founder and Editor in Chief of Elegant & Driven, where elegant living meets purposeful ambition. With a background in strategic writing and a deep love for systems that empower creativity, she shares timeless insights on health, design, and the art of digital entrepreneurship.
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