3 simple steps to lose weight as fast as possible. Read now

A Diverticulitis Diet Meal Plan

A diverticulitis meal plan for both phases — a gentle flare-recovery progression and a 7-day high-fiber plan to prevent flares. Real meals, made simple.

Diets
Evidence-based
This article is based on scientific evidence, written by experts, and fact-checked by experts.
We look at both sides of the argument and strive to be objective, unbiased, and honest.
A Diverticulitis Diet Meal Plan
Last updated on July 7, 2026, and last reviewed by an expert on July 7, 2026.

Turning “low-fiber during a flare, high-fiber to prevent one” into actual meals is where most people get stuck. So here’s a done-for-you diverticulitis meal plan covering both phases: a gentle step-by-step progression to eat your way through a flare-up, and a full 7-day high-fiber plan to keep the next one away. Everyday food, clearly organized by phase, so you always know what belongs on your plate.

A Diverticulitis Diet Meal Plan

Quick answer: A diverticulitis meal plan has two parts. During a flare, you progress from clear liquids to low-fiber foods and then gradually back to normal as symptoms settle. For prevention, you follow a high-fiber plan — whole grains, fruits, vegetables, and legumes — since around 30 grams of fiber a day is linked to a 41% lower risk of diverticular disease.1 The plans below give you both. Always follow your doctor’s specific advice during an active flare, and increase fiber gradually.

Phase 1: the flare-recovery progression

During a flare, the aim is to rest your gut and step back up slowly as you improve. This is a rough guide — your doctor may adjust the timing.

Want a happier gut?

A calm gut starts with the right meals. Choose your goal and get your plan.

Powered by DietGenie

Stage 1 — Clear liquids (worst of the flare): water, broth, clear pulp-free juices, plain gelatin, ice pops, weak tea. Stay on this only as long as your doctor advises.

Stage 2 — Low-fiber foods (symptoms easing):

Stage 3 — Reintroducing fiber (recovering): slowly add back oatmeal, cooked vegetables with skins, soft fruit, and eventually whole grains and legumes over several days, watching how you feel.

The golden rule here is gradual — don’t jump from clear liquids straight to a high-fiber meal. More detail on each stage is in the best foods for diverticulitis.

Phase 2: the 7-day high-fiber prevention plan

Once you’re fully recovered, this is the everyday plan that lowers your risk of another flare. It’s built to be fiber-rich and mostly plant-based, with red meat kept to a minimum.

Day 1 — Breakfast: oatmeal with berries and a spoon of chia. Lunch: lentil soup with whole-grain bread. Dinner: baked salmon, brown rice, and broccoli. Snack: an apple and a few almonds.

Day 2 — Breakfast: whole-grain toast with avocado and egg. Lunch: chickpea and vegetable salad. Dinner: grilled chicken with quinoa and roasted vegetables. Snack: pear.

Day 3 — Breakfast: bran cereal with milk and banana. Lunch: black bean and brown-rice bowl with peppers. Dinner: baked white fish with sweet potato and green beans. Snack: yogurt with walnuts.

Day 4 — Breakfast: oatmeal with pear and cinnamon. Lunch: whole-grain wrap with turkey, spinach, and hummus. Dinner: vegetable and lentil curry with brown rice. Snack: a handful of popcorn.

Day 5 — Breakfast: smoothie with berries, spinach, and oats. Lunch: minestrone soup with beans. Dinner: grilled chicken, barley, and roasted carrots. Snack: orange and almonds.

Day 6 — Breakfast: whole-grain toast with peanut butter and banana. Lunch: quinoa salad with chickpeas and vegetables. Dinner: baked salmon with whole-grain pasta and salad. Snack: yogurt with berries.

Day 7 — Breakfast: oatmeal with mixed seeds and fruit. Lunch: lentil and vegetable stew. Dinner: turkey chili with beans over brown rice. Snack: apple and a few nuts.

Throughout: drink plenty of water, and enjoy the nuts, seeds, and popcorn you were once told to avoid. Notice red meat barely appears — that’s deliberate, since poultry, fish, and beans carry the protein without the added risk that comes with lots of red meat.

Your prevention grocery list

How much fiber, and how fast

The prevention plan aims for roughly 30 grams of fiber a day, the amount tied to the biggest drop in risk. But how quickly you get there matters as much as the target. If you’re coming off a flare or a typically low-fiber diet, jumping straight to 30 grams will leave you gassy and bloated — which can feel alarming even though it’s harmless. Instead, add around 5 grams every few days until you reach the goal, and pair every increase with more water. A rough sense of where the fiber comes from:

You can see how quickly a day of the meals above adds up to 30 grams without any effort or supplements.

A 7-Day Fatty Liver Diet Meal Plan
Suggested read: A 7-Day Fatty Liver Diet Meal Plan

Adjusting the plan for you

The 7-day plan is a template, not a prescription — bend it to fit you:

Tips to make it work

A plan tailored to your own tastes, phase, and fiber tolerance is far easier to stick with — which is exactly what the personalized plan below offers.

Suggested read: The Diverticulitis Diet: Flare-Up and Prevention

The bottom line

A diverticulitis meal plan is two plans in one. During a flare, move step by step from clear liquids to gentle low-fiber meals and then gradually back to fiber, following your doctor’s lead. For the long run, the 7-day high-fiber plan above — rich in whole grains, fruits, vegetables, and legumes, light on red meat, and generous with the once-forbidden nuts and seeds — is what cuts your risk of the next flare. Increase fiber gradually, drink plenty of water, and match every meal to the phase you’re in. Do that consistently and your plate becomes a genuine tool for keeping diverticulitis at bay.

Want a happier gut?
Take a free 3-minute quiz and get a weekly plan with recipes and a shopping list.
🍳 Breakfast 420 kcal
🥗 Lunch 560 kcal
🍲 Dinner 610 kcal
🔒 Snacks, recipes & shopping list
Get my meal plan
Free quiz · Takes about 3 minutes · Powered by DietGenie

  1. Aune D, Sen A, Norat T, Riboli E. Dietary fibre intake and the risk of diverticular disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis of prospective studies. Eur J Nutr. 2020;59(2):421-432. PubMed ↩︎

Share this article: Facebook Pinterest WhatsApp Twitter / X Email
Share

More articles you might like

People who are reading “A Diverticulitis Diet Meal Plan” also love these articles:

Topics

Browse all articles