How to Make Prebiotic Soda at Home (Easy, Gut-Friendly)
Slug: how-to-make-prebiotic-soda-at-homePillar: Food and Drink > RecipesKeyword: how to make prebiotic soda at homeExcerpt: Skip the $4 cans. Make prebiotic soda at home for pennies per serving with two easy methods — no fermentation experience needed.
Prebiotic sodas are everywhere in 2026 — Olipop, Poppi, and now even Pepsi has its own prebiotic version. They're genuinely good for your gut. But they're also $3–$4 a can. Making your own at home costs roughly 30–50 cents per serving, and you can customise the flavour completely. Here's how.
Prebiotic vs Probiotic: What's the Difference?
Probiotics are live bacteria. Prebiotics are the food that feeds beneficial bacteria already living in your gut. Prebiotic sodas use ingredients like inulin, chicory root fibre, or apple cider vinegar to fuel your existing gut microbiome — rather than adding new bacteria from fermentation. Both are useful, but prebiotic sodas are easier to make at home.
Method 1: The Quick Prebiotic Soda (5 Minutes, No Fermentation)
This is what we'd recommend starting with. It's fast, predictable, and easy to flavour.
What You Need
Inulin powder is the key ingredient — a naturally sweet, soluble fibre derived from chicory root, the same ingredient in most commercial prebiotic sodas. A 500g bag from Bob's Red Mill or NOW Foods costs around $12–$15 and makes 50+ drinks. Beyond that: sparkling water, your choice of flavour, and optionally a small amount of sweetener.
Basic Recipe
Add 1 teaspoon (4g) of inulin powder to a 12-oz glass. Squeeze in half a lemon or lime. Add a pinch of sea salt. Pour sparkling water slowly — it will fizz up briefly. Stir gently. Done. The inulin provides around 4g of prebiotic fibre, the same as a can of Olipop.
Flavour Variations
Mango Turmeric: Blend 2 tbsp mango puree with 1 tsp inulin, a pinch of turmeric, and a tiny crack of black pepper. Top with sparkling water. The pepper makes turmeric's curcumin up to 20x more bioavailable.
Berry Apple: Muddle a few fresh raspberries in the glass. Add 1 tsp inulin, 1 tbsp apple cider vinegar, and top with sparkling water. ACV adds prebiotic acetic acid and a tartness that works well with berries.
Vanilla Cream Soda: Combine 1 tsp inulin, a drop of pure vanilla extract, and 1 tsp honey in a glass. Top with sparkling water. Tastes surprisingly like a commercial cream soda without the sugar.
Method 2: Fermented Prebiotic Soda With a Ginger Bug
This method takes 5–7 days to set up a ginger bug starter, then produces naturally carbonated soda with both prebiotic and probiotic properties. More involved, but the flavour is genuinely different — complex, slightly tart, with real natural bubbles.
Making the Ginger Bug (Day 1–5)
In a jar, combine 2 tsp grated fresh ginger (skin on — that's where the wild yeast lives), 2 tsp sugar, and 1 cup room-temperature water. Stir well. Leave loosely covered at room temperature. Each day, add another 2 tsp ginger and 2 tsp sugar. By day 4–5, the mixture will be visibly bubbly with a pleasantly gingery smell.
Making the Soda
Brew 1 litre of herbal tea with 3–4 tbsp sugar. Let it cool to room temperature. Add 60ml of ginger bug liquid. Pour into a flip-top glass bottle. Leave sealed at room temperature for 12–48 hours, burping the bottle once a day to release pressure. Refrigerate when bubbly and pleasantly tart.
Tips for Getting It Right
Use inulin, not just any fibre powder. Psyllium husk doesn't dissolve and tastes terrible in cold drinks. Start with 1 teaspoon per drink — some people experience digestive adjustment when first increasing prebiotic fibre intake. Starting small and building up over a week prevents bloating.
FAQ
Is homemade prebiotic soda actually good for your gut?
Inulin is a well-researched prebiotic fibre. A 2019 review in the journal Nutrients confirmed inulin supplementation supports beneficial gut bacteria (particularly Bifidobacterium) and short-chain fatty acid production. 4–8g per day is an effective dose.
Can I use a different sweetener?
Yes. Monk fruit sweetener and stevia both work well. For fermented sodas, the sugar is consumed by bacteria during fermentation, so the final drink is much lower in sugar than the recipe suggests.
Is prebiotic soda safe to drink daily?
For most people, yes. If you have IBS or digestive sensitivities, start slowly and consult your GP — inulin is a FODMAP and can trigger symptoms in some people.










