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Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Natural Remedies / Why the Candida Diet Doesn’t Work Long-Term

Why the Candida Diet Doesn’t Work Long-Term

by Sarah Pope / Updated: Jan 6, 2025 / Affiliate Links ✔

Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • What is Candida Anyway?
  • What Causes Fungal Overgrowth?
  • Symptoms
  • The Candida Diet
  • Temporary Improvement But No Healing
  • 3 Reasons Why the Candida Diet Fails+−
    • Reason #1
    • Reason #2
    • Reason #3
  • Anti-Candida Diet Shortfall
  • Undigested Food Nourishes Pathogenic Yeast
  • Biggest Candida Diet Benefit
  • What is the Best Diet for Candida?

Review of the Candida Diet also known as the Anti-Candida Diet and why it typically does not produce desired results long-term with only short-term alleviation of symptoms.

candida diet food list

Thinking of going on the Candida Diet to heal your gut and stop sugar and carb cravings?

While this may seem like a logical idea at first, be warned that it likely won’t heal you over the long term.

The article below explains why as well as my personal experience with it.

What is Candida Anyway?

Candida is a term that refers to a large family of yeasts, or one-celled fungi. Under normal circumstances, these organisms harmlessly inhabit the tissues of humans. This is because a balanced intestinal tract from mouth to colon contains a preponderance of beneficial bacteria that keep Candida in check.

When not enough beneficial bacteria are present in given body tissue to keep pathogenic yeasts under control, it transforms from a harmless state into an invasive species. In this rapidly growing state, Candida puts out long stringy hyphae or “roots”.

They have the ability to embed and penetrate through the gut wall and eventually cause leaky gut.

Candida overgrowth can occur in many tissues of the body. Well-known examples are oral candidiasis known as thrush, the scalp as dandruff, and vaginal yeast infections.

What Causes Fungal Overgrowth?

Candida is an opportunistic pathogen that can rapidly take over when a person is under a course of antibiotics. Antibiotics decimate beneficial gut flora but have little effect on Candida. This gives this normally harmless yeast the chance to take over dominance of the gut environment very quickly.

Many women don’t realize it, but oral contraceptives imbalance the gut in the same way as antibiotics. Again, this gives pathogenic strains of yeast an open door to take control.

A diet of processed foods high in sugars and simple carbohydrates also encourages Candida overgrowth as yeasts thrive on sugars.

Babies born via C-Section or to mothers who were treated with IV antibiotics during labor are especially vulnerable.

The reason is that they are not exposed to Mom’s healthy flora in the birth canal prior to birth.

Symptoms

Symptoms of Candida overgrowth are many the most common being fogginess in the morning upon waking (brain fog), digestive complaints of all kinds and a myriad of skin issues.

Many women plagued by yeast infections don’t realize that the source of the problem is actually their diet.

Over time, this leads to a pathogenic state in the gut environment. Using drugs and creams to resolve the problem is only a temporary solution when the source of the problem – gut imbalance – is not addressed head-on.

The Candida Diet

My husband and I tried the Candida Diet to resolve gut imbalance many years ago that had been exacerbated by our stressful and overworked lifestyle at the time.

It failed miserably!

Why?

The Candida Diet only goes part of the way in doing what is necessary to resolve gut imbalance.

It also did not include foods and supplements that help repair the intestinal damage caused by the overgrowth of pathogenic yeast.

For example, the Candida Diet removes sugar from the diet in all forms…even maple syrup and honey. Fresh fruit, however, is commonly allowed.

Candida overgrowth can frequently trigger an allergy to molds and other types of fungi. Hence, beneficial fermented foods including cheese are also eliminated along with any bread and other foods containing yeast.

Other foods excluded from the Candida Diet include vinegar, mushrooms, tea, coffee, dried fruit, and any form of fruit juices.

Temporary Improvement But No Healing

The typical scenario for a person who goes on the Candida Diet goes something like this:

  • They feel better almost immediately primarily because all the sugar has been removed from their diet.
  • They continue on the diet for some time perhaps many months or even a year. Pleased to see that symptoms diminish considerably during that time, they are convinced that the diet has “worked”.
  • After a period of time, they try to reintroduce some of the foods that were removed. Sadly, they usually discover that their symptoms come raging back with full force.
  • They realize that it is going to be next to impossible to continue the Candida Diet indefinitely. It is simply too hard to give up cheese and any and all sweets forever.
  • They get discouraged, give up and stop the Candida Diet for good.

3 Reasons Why the Candida Diet Fails

The paradox of the Candida Diet is that symptoms greatly diminish. However, the patient doesn’t actually heal from the root cause of the problem which is a breach in the integrity of the gut lining.

Long-term healing is prevented on the Anti-Candida Diet for the following key reasons:

Reason #1

The Candida Diet allows starchy vegetables and tubers like sweet potato, cassava, yams, and arrowroot.

Note that some anti-candida diet practitioners recommend caution with these foods, but others do not.

Reason #2

The Candida Diet doesn’t include a small cup of traditional bone broth with every single meal. This is an incredibly necessary food for proper healing/sealing of the gut wall caused by candida overgrowth.

For more severe cases, short-cooked meat stock needs to be used and NOT bone broth. Some people cannot tolerate the glutamate in long-cooked broths.

Long-term gut healing is quite simply NOT going to occur without using the correct form of stock or broth.

Thus, any candida diet benefits will usually be temporary.

Reason #3

More important than the allowance of starch in the Candida Diet is the inclusion of grain-based foods. Some practitioners recommending the Candida Diet misguidedly include gluten-free grains.

Others recommend none at all (in an apparent scramble to mimic diets that actually work to fix the gut like GAPS and to a lesser extent the bone broth diet).

The bottom line is that there is no uniformity to what is recommended, hence, the protocol’s unreliability in providing relief over the long-term.

Anti-Candida Diet Shortfall

Even if the Candida Diet is used in conjunction with a gluten-free, casein-free diet, it fails in the majority of instances.

The reason is that disaccharides, or double sugars, are present in many carbohydrates including ALL grains – not just gluten-containing ones.

An inflamed, imbalanced gut overridden with Candida is unable to digest double sugar molecules completely. This occurs because the lack of beneficial gut flora has compromised the function of the enterocytes.

According to Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride MD, author of Gut and Psychology Syndrome and one of the key scientists at the forefront of gut restoration research today, the enterocytes are the cells that reside on the villi of the gut wall and produce the enzyme disaccharidase.

This enzyme breaks down the disaccharide molecule into easily absorbed monosaccharide molecules.

When the enterocytes are not nourished and strengthened properly by adequate beneficial flora, they become weak and diseased and may even turn cancerous. They do not perform their duties of digesting and absorbing food properly.

Undigested Food Nourishes Pathogenic Yeast

Weak and diseased enterocytes also have trouble digesting starch molecules. They are very large with hundreds of mono sugars connected in long branchlike strands.

People with weak digestion due to Candida overgrowth and messed up enterocytes have a terrible time digesting these complex molecules.

The result is a large amount of undigested starch in the gut. The putrefying matter is the perfect food for pathogenic yeasts, bacteria, and fungi like Candida to thrive upon.

Even the starch that manages to get digested results in molecules of maltose, which is — you guessed it — a disaccharide! This maltose also goes undigested due to a lack of the enzyme disaccharidase and becomes additional food for Candida.

Biggest Candida Diet Benefit

We’ve established that the Candida Diet usually fails miserably in resolving gut imbalance problems over the long haul.

However, it does include and recommend one fantastic herb that is very helpful for keeping Candida under control if only temporarily…Pau d’Arco tea.

I’ve found this herb is especially helpful during traveling (when the diet is less than optimal) or for a few days after you get home to get back on the wagon.

What is the Best Diet for Candida?

In conclusion, it is best not to waste your time with the Candida Diet. It doesn’t work in the majority of cases and you will ultimately feel frustrated in your efforts to heal over the long term.

The best diets for healing and sealing the gut wall and permanently rebalancing the gut environment are the GAPS Diet or the very similar SCD (Specific Carbohydrate) Diet.

To read more about the GAPS Diet and what the food list includes, check out this introductory post on using GAPS to heal autoimmune disease.

Also, this post The Five Most Common GAPS Diet Mistakes is a review of the most common pitfalls of this approach to gut healing.

anti-candida diet protocol on a notepad

Reference

Gut and Psychology Syndrome, Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride MD

More Information

Macrobiotic Diet and Extreme Vitamin D Deficiency
Biofilms: Overlooked Step in Treating Candida
Can Candida Sufferers Drink Kombucha?
How to Take Probiotics

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Category: Natural Remedies
Sarah Pope

Sarah Pope MGA has been a Health and Nutrition Educator since 2002. She is a summa cum laude graduate in Economics from Furman University and holds a Master’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

She is the author of three books: Amazon #1 bestseller Get Your Fats Straight, Traditional Remedies for Modern Families, and Living Green in an Artificial World.

Her four eBooks Good Diet…Bad Diet, Real Food Fermentation, Ketonomics, and Ancestrally Inspired Dairy-Free Recipes are available for complimentary download via Healthy Home Plus.

Her mission is dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. She is a sought after lecturer around the world for conferences, summits, and podcasts.

Sarah was awarded Activist of the Year in 2010 at the International Wise Traditions Conference, subsequently serving on the Board of Directors of the nutrition nonprofit the Weston A. Price Foundation for seven years.

Her work has been covered by numerous independent and major media including USA Today, ABC, and NBC among many others.

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Reader Interactions

Comments (490)

  1. Carolyn

    Nov 15, 2012 at 10:24 pm

    The perfect cure for me was the recovery diet in the book by Mary Enig and Sally Fallon: “Eat Fat, Lose Fat.” The menus and recipes are wonderful. Based on coconut products and traditional WAPF cooking methods, it is the only candida-related diet that did not deplete my energy and actually cured me.

    Reply
  2. Laura

    Nov 15, 2012 at 8:38 pm

    Sarah- My son was born 7 months ago via C-section and pumped full of antibiotics for ATLEAST 12hrs for the duration of the labor due to Strep B bacteria. Are probiotics, fermented foods for both mama and baby not enough? Will he one day have to do the GAPS diet to balance hi gut flora? He is breastfeeding and also I make his the raw milk baby formula from nourishing traditions plus egg yolk, raw liver, and bone broth. Please advise…

    Reply
  3. Karla Nichols via Facebook

    Nov 15, 2012 at 7:50 pm

    Thanks for this article!

    Reply
  4. Tiffany @ The Coconut Mama

    Nov 15, 2012 at 7:01 pm

    There is a KASHI add at the bottom of this post! =(

    I am at a fork in the road when it comes to GAPS. I’m not sure if it is right for a lot of people (I know it works well for some). I’m still researching it at the moment.

    Here is some food for thought from Lita Lee, Ray Peat and Josh Rubin…

    Candidiasis Myths
    I wrote an article years ago on Candidiasis and Other Parasites. It’s available on my website. There are many myths about candidiasis. Below are some of them.
    Systemic candidiasis is a myth: According to Dr. Ray Peat, most of what people believe about candida is wrong, but candida can become a problem for sick people. IgA is the main type of antibody on surfaces and secretions and should protect against candidiasis. But IgA is deficient in hypothyroidism, so hypothyroid people have more susceptible membranes, and the yeasts thrive on sugar that can appear in the secretions in diabetes/stress, but they adhere to any cell with estradiol in it, thinking they have found a fertile yeast. Eating sugar and fruit is helpful, rather than harmful as the cultists say, because well nourished yeasts aren’t harmful in the intestine. But starved yeasts need sugar and so they project invasive filaments into the intestinal wall, and can get into the blood stream, at which point – if they aren’t quickly destroyed by white blood cells – they can grow and quickly kill the person. In a typical year, a few people in the world get invasive candida and quickly die, but millions of Americans will insist that they ‘have candida in the bloodstream.’ Eating sugar (fruits, fruit juices) lowers cortisol, keeping the white cells working, helps to increase thyroid, and keeps the yeast from becoming invasive. PUFA (polyunsaturated fatty acids or omega-3 and -6 oils) are yeast stimulants, unlike saturated fats. The white film on grapes is a layer of yeast cells, that live there because of the PUFA in the waxy surface of the grape.” (Source: Dr. Ray Peat; http://www.raypeat.com)

    The anti-candida diet is unhealthy. In fact the sugars in fruits as indicated above by Dr. Ray Peat, the yeast in bread and many other foods on this list have nothing to do with candidiasis. The pro-thyroid diet would be excellent for preventing candidiasis, plus the enzymes and nutritional supplements listed below.

    Many people who believe they have candidiasis do not really have it. Many clients who come to me believe that they have candidiasis and that it is the cause of all of their health problems. I disagree. Candidiasis isn’t the cause of illness. It is the outcome of a suppressed immune system from a bad diet, overuse of antibiotics or serious illness. Candidiasis is not quite as common as many people believe. Why? Many of the symptoms of candidiasis overlap with those of poor digestion. Also, parasites other than Candida albicans can have very similar signs and indications as those for candidiasis. These symptoms can include bloating, food and environmental allergies, gastrointestinal problems, constipation or diarrhea, itchy skin, skin rashes and so on.

    A nutritional support program for candidiasis:
    SmI – contains cellulase which digests unwanted species of yeast plus probiotics required to establish healthy intestinal flora.
    TRMA – a high protease formula which is for nutritional support of the immune system.
    Citricidal Tabs – a botanical formula for many kinds of parasites.

    References: from http://www.litalee.com: April 2003 To Your Health; Candidiasis And Other Parasites.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ta28jJ9e_Uc

    Reply
  5. Liz

    Nov 15, 2012 at 6:48 pm

    I’m a big fan of Traditional Chinese Medicine for treating candida.

    We have had great success with our 4 year old. She even seems to tolerate the odd bit of sugar now, although we definitely do not have it often.

    Reply
  6. Julie Zohovetz Morris via Facebook

    Nov 15, 2012 at 5:24 pm

    I TOTALLY have experienced this. Trying to contain my candida has been useless! I need to get these fillings out first!”I agree with checking for mercury too. Candida chelates mercury so as long as you have elevated levels of mercury in your body you will keep inviting candida in to sort it out. You need to remove the mercury before you can overcome the candida.”

    Reply
    • dr debbi

      Jan 7, 2014 at 11:44 pm

      http:// thanks for that tip im on a gut restoration journey and no help from my last dr tired of being lied too i asked the idiot what could be causing my weight gain and no answer, liars im n charge now jus wondering if i should sue malpractice we all should sue sic of the medical world, need some green good weed ill feel much better since im starving to death wen i jus ate feeding the candida fungus

  7. Brittany Ardito

    Nov 15, 2012 at 5:52 pm

    Sarah, how did you finally overcome your Candida? Did you try the GAPS diet after the Candida diet didn’t work?

    Reply
  8. Emily

    Nov 15, 2012 at 5:48 pm

    Tina Zanetti, thank you for that information. Where can I learn more about copper imbalances?

    Reply
  9. White Rock via Facebook

    Nov 15, 2012 at 5:12 pm

    My experience is similar to Christine Woods Stuart’s. And yes it is frustrating when people (even people that you know love you and are only trying to help you) assume you have just not done enough or done it exactly right or you would be over it by now. I think that we, in the health-conscious community, assume that because we know a person’s afliction that we also know their lifestyle and failures. Then we turn into Job’s friends.

    Reply
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