I used to think my skin and my gut were two completely separate systems. If my face was breaking out, I'd reach for a new cleanser. If my digestion was off, I'd think about what I'd eaten. It took studying nutrition at a postgraduate level — and dealing with my own gut condition — to understand that these two systems are in constant, intimate conversation.
The gut-skin axis is one of the most fascinating and clinically relevant areas of nutrition science right now. And once you understand it, you start to see skin conditions in a completely different way — not as surface problems to be managed, but as internal signals worth listening to.
What Is the Gut-Skin Axis?
The gut-skin axis refers to the bidirectional communication network between your gastrointestinal system and your skin. This connection operates through multiple pathways: the immune system (roughly 70% of which resides in the gut), the nervous system, the endocrine system, and the bloodstream. What happens in the gut does not stay in the gut — it ripples outward, and the skin is one of the most visible places it surfaces.
Your gut is home to roughly 38 trillion microorganisms — bacteria, fungi, viruses, and other microbes — collectively known as the microbiome. When this ecosystem is diverse and balanced, it regulates inflammation, supports immune function, produces key vitamins, and maintains the integrity of the gut lining. When it's disrupted, the downstream effects can be significant — and one of the most visible is changes in the skin.
"What happens in the gut does not stay in the gut. The skin is one of the most visible places it surfaces."
Leaky Gut and Systemic Inflammation
The term "leaky gut" — or intestinal hyperpermeability — refers to a breakdown of the tight junctions that normally control what passes through the intestinal wall into the bloodstream. When these junctions loosen (due to poor diet, chronic stress, alcohol, certain medications, or dysbiosis), bacterial fragments and undigested food particles can cross into circulation.
The immune system treats these as foreign invaders and mounts an inflammatory response. This isn't localised — it's systemic. And systemic inflammation is a key driver of multiple skin conditions: acne, rosacea, eczema, psoriasis, and accelerated skin ageing. If you have any of these conditions and have never looked at your gut, you're potentially missing the root cause entirely.
The Microbiome and Specific Skin Conditions
Research is increasingly linking specific gut microbiome imbalances to specific skin presentations:
- Acne — Studies show that people with acne tend to have reduced gut microbial diversity and higher levels of pro-inflammatory bacteria. Probiotic interventions have shown measurable reductions in acne lesion counts in multiple trials.
- Rosacea — There is a well-established association between rosacea and SIBO (small intestinal bacterial overgrowth). One study found that treating SIBO with antibiotics led to complete remission of rosacea in the majority of participants.
- Eczema (atopic dermatitis) — Reduced diversity of the gut microbiome in infancy is a significant risk factor for developing eczema. Probiotic supplementation in pregnancy and early infancy has been shown to reduce eczema risk.
- Psoriasis — People with psoriasis show distinct gut microbiome profiles compared to those without, with reduced populations of anti-inflammatory bacterial species.
A 2022 meta-analysis found that probiotic supplementation significantly improved acne severity scores compared to placebo, with both oral probiotics and topical applications showing benefit — supporting the gut-skin axis as a therapeutic target.
What Damages the Gut-Skin Axis
Several common dietary and lifestyle patterns disrupt gut health and, by extension, skin health:
- Ultra-processed foods — High in emulsifiers, additives, and refined ingredients that disrupt microbial diversity and promote intestinal permeability
- Excess sugar and refined carbohydrates — Feed pro-inflammatory bacteria and yeasts, promoting dysbiosis
- Alcohol — Directly damages the gut lining and alters microbial composition
- Chronic antibiotic use — Depletes beneficial bacteria broadly and can take months to years to fully recover from
- Chronic stress — Alters gut motility, increases intestinal permeability, and reduces microbial diversity through the gut-brain axis
- Low fibre intake — Starves the beneficial bacteria that produce short-chain fatty acids, which maintain gut barrier integrity
What Heals the Gut-Skin Axis
The good news is that the gut microbiome is remarkably responsive to dietary change. You can meaningfully shift its composition within days of eating differently. Here's what the evidence supports:
Eat More Prebiotic Fibre
Prebiotic fibres are the food that beneficial gut bacteria feed on. They're found in garlic, onion, leeks, asparagus, oats, bananas, and legumes. Aim for 30+ different plant foods per week — diversity of plant intake is one of the strongest predictors of microbiome diversity.
Add Fermented Foods Daily
Fermented foods — kefir, yoghurt with live cultures, kimchi, sauerkraut, miso, tempeh — introduce beneficial bacteria into the gut and have been shown in research to increase microbiome diversity. A 2021 Stanford study found that a diet high in fermented foods increased microbiome diversity and reduced inflammatory markers significantly more than a high-fibre diet alone.
Support the Gut Barrier
Certain nutrients directly support the integrity of the intestinal lining: L-glutamine (found in bone broth, eggs, and as a supplement), zinc (oysters, pumpkin seeds, beef), vitamin D (fatty fish, sunlight, supplementation), and omega-3 fatty acids (wild salmon, sardines, walnuts) all play a role in maintaining tight junction function.
Reduce Inflammatory Inputs
This doesn't mean a restrictive diet — it means crowding out the foods that cause the most damage. Reducing ultra-processed foods, refined sugar, and alcohol while increasing whole foods creates the conditions for gut and skin health to improve together.
The skin is often the last organ to receive nutrients and the first to show signs of internal imbalance. Persistent skin conditions that haven't responded to topical treatments are frequently gut conditions in disguise. Addressing the root — the gut — is where lasting change begins.
If you're dealing with chronic skin issues, I'd encourage you to start asking a different question. Not "what do I put on my skin?" but "what is my gut trying to tell me?"