Can I Drink Matcha with IBD? What You Should Know
Inflammatory bowel disease — Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis — affects how the digestive system responds to foods and drinks. Whether matcha is suitable depends on your specific condition, current disease activity, and individual tolerance. Speaking with your gastroenterologist matters more than any general guidance.
Potential benefits
EGCG has demonstrated anti-inflammatory properties in laboratory and animal studies. Some research on gut inflammation suggests that green tea catechins may help modulate the inflammatory response in the intestinal epithelium. A small number of human studies on green tea supplementation in IBD patients found modest improvements in disease activity markers. This research is preliminary and limited.
Potential concerns
Caffeine — during active flares, caffeine can increase intestinal motility and worsen diarrhoea. This is the most common reason IBD patients are advised to limit tea and coffee during symptomatic periods.
Tannin-like compounds — can cause stomach irritation and may aggravate gut sensitivity in some people.
Individual variation — IBD affects people very differently. What one person tolerates without issue can trigger symptoms in another.
Practical guidance
During remission with generally good gut health, many people with IBD drink matcha without difficulty. Start with a small, weaker preparation — 1g in 70ml water — with food, and assess your response. During a flare, minimise caffeine and gut irritants. Hojicha — very low caffeine and generally gentler — may be a better option then.
The key point
Do not use this as a substitute for advice from your IBD team. They can give personalised guidance based on your diagnosis, medication, and current status.