Kiwifruit
Kiwifruit (Actinidia) is, alongside pears, one of the two most effective fresh fruits for constipation and reliable bowel movements. This is not folklore: in a large international multicenter randomized controlled trial, eating two green kiwis a day improved constipation and abdominal comfort. Kiwi gets things moving through a gentle combination of dietary fiber, a lot of water, and a natural protein-digesting enzyme called actinidin — and because it is lower in FODMAPs than prunes, it tends to be gentler and cause less gas, which makes it a good choice for sensitive guts. On top of all that, kiwifruit is exceptionally high in vitamin C — more, gram for gram, than an orange.
Table of Contents
- Nutritional Profile
- Digestion, Bowel Movements & Constipation
- Immune Support & Vitamin C
- Sleep
- Heart Health
- How to Choose & Eat It
- Considerations
- Research Papers
- Connections
- Featured Videos
Nutritional Profile
Kiwifruit is mostly water (about 83%) and low in calories — roughly 60 calories per 100 grams, or about 45–55 calories for a medium green kiwi. For that small calorie cost it delivers an unusually good mix of vitamin C, fiber, and minerals.
- Vitamin C — the headline. Kiwifruit is one of the richest common fruits for vitamin C: a single green kiwi covers most of a day's needs, and gold (SunGold) varieties carry even more. Gram for gram, kiwi beats an orange. Two kiwis can supply well over a full day's vitamin C.
- Dietary fiber — roughly 2–3 grams across two fruit (about 3 grams per 100 grams of green kiwi). The mix is part soluble fiber, which holds water and gels, and part insoluble fiber, which adds bulk — central to how kiwi supports regularity.
- Actinidin — a natural protein-digesting enzyme found in kiwifruit (more abundant in green than gold). It helps break down protein in the stomach and small intestine and is part of why kiwi aids digestion.
- Potassium — a useful amount (roughly 300 mg per 100 grams), the heart- and blood-pressure-relevant mineral.
- Vitamin K — a meaningful contribution, supporting normal blood clotting and bone metabolism.
- Folate and vitamin E — modest but genuine amounts, unusual for a fruit (most fruit is low in vitamin E).
- High water content — about 83%, which adds to the gentle, stool-softening effect and makes kiwi refreshing.
One practical point sets kiwifruit apart from prunes: it is lower in FODMAPs than many fruits. It contains little sorbitol and is generally well tolerated in moderate amounts, so it tends to relieve constipation with less gas and bloating than prunes or large servings of pears — a real advantage if your gut is sensitive.
Digestion, Bowel Movements & Constipation
This is what kiwifruit is best known for, and the evidence behind it is unusually strong for a single food. Kiwi ranks among the top fresh fruits for constipation relief and supporting regular bowel movements, and it does so gently.
The strongest evidence comes from a large international multicenter randomized controlled trial (Gearry and colleagues, 2023). Across study sites in several countries, adults with constipation who ate two green kiwifruit a day had more complete spontaneous bowel movements and reported better abdominal comfort — less straining, bloating, and discomfort — compared with a fiber comparator. A randomized trial like this is the most reliable kind of evidence, which is why kiwifruit has moved from folk remedy to a genuinely recommended dietary option for constipation. Earlier trials pointed the same way: an earlier study in adults with constipation (Chan and colleagues, 2007) found that adding kiwifruit increased stool frequency and eased symptoms, and a study in older adults (Rush and colleagues, 2002) found kiwifruit promoted laxation.
How does kiwi get things moving? Three ingredients work together as a gentle, natural laxative:
- Soluble fiber — holds water. Kiwi fiber, especially its soluble fraction, absorbs and retains water in the gut, which softens the stool and increases its bulk so it is easier and more comfortable to pass. Kiwi fiber is notably good at holding water.
- Water. At about 83% water, kiwi adds fluid that keeps stool soft — part of why it works so reliably.
- Actinidin — the enzyme. The protein-digesting enzyme actinidin appears to help speed the movement of food through the stomach and upper intestine, supporting overall transit. Together with the fiber and water, this combination softens stool and helps it move through the colon at a healthier pace.
How to use kiwifruit for constipation: eat about two kiwifruit per day — the dose used in the research — and drink water through the day, since fiber works best with fluid. You can eat them green or gold, with or without the skin (the skin adds extra fiber). Effects are usually gentle and build up over days; as with pears and prunes, the benefit is most reliable as a regular daily habit rather than a one-time fix.
Why kiwi is often the gentler choice. Prunes and large servings of pears rely heavily on sorbitol, a sugar alcohol that pulls water into the gut but can also cause gas, bloating, and cramping. Kiwifruit is lower in FODMAPs and low in sorbitol, so it tends to relieve constipation with fewer of those side effects. That makes it a good first choice for people with sensitive digestion — including many people exploring a low-FODMAP approach, where kiwi is often tolerated in moderate portions. For the underlying problem, see Constipation, and for a ranked list of foods, see Natural Constipation Relief.
Immune Support & Vitamin C
Beyond digestion, kiwifruit's standout nutrient is vitamin C. Kiwi is one of the most concentrated common fruit sources — a single green kiwi covers most of a day's vitamin C, and gold varieties carry even more, so two kiwis easily exceed a full day's requirement. Gram for gram, kiwi outdoes citrus.
Vitamin C is essential for the immune system: it supports the function of immune cells, acts as an antioxidant that protects cells from oxidative stress, and is required to make collagen for healthy skin, blood vessels, and wound healing. Diets rich in vitamin C from whole foods are linked to better resistance to infection, and getting it from a food like kiwi means you also receive fiber, potassium, folate, vitamin E, and a range of plant antioxidants in the same bite — a package a supplement cannot match. Research on gold kiwifruit in particular has looked at its role in supporting immune defenses and recovery from upper-respiratory symptoms; the most honest summary is that kiwi is an excellent everyday source of immune-supporting nutrients, not a treatment that prevents or cures any specific illness. For more on the nutrient itself, see Vitamin C.
Sleep
Kiwifruit has a reputation as a bedtime snack that may help with sleep, and there is some research behind it — but it should be read honestly. The best-known study was small and not blinded: adults with sleep complaints who ate two kiwifruit about an hour before bed for several weeks reported falling asleep faster and sleeping longer. More recent work, including a 2024 study (Noorwali and colleagues), has continued to explore kiwifruit, sleep quality, and fatigue.
The proposed reasons are plausible — kiwifruit contains serotonin and antioxidant compounds, and serotonin is part of the body's sleep chemistry — but the studies so far are small and preliminary, several lack a proper placebo, and the effect has not been firmly established by large, rigorous trials. The fair takeaway: eating a kiwi or two in the evening is a harmless, healthy habit that some people find helpful for sleep, but the evidence is early and you should not expect it to fix a real sleep disorder. Good sleep habits and addressing underlying causes matter far more.
Heart Health
Kiwifruit fits naturally into a heart-healthy diet. Several of its nutrients pull in the right direction:
- Potassium helps balance sodium and supports healthy blood pressure.
- Soluble fiber gently supports healthier cholesterol levels and steadier blood sugar.
- Vitamin C and other antioxidants protect blood vessels from oxidative stress and support normal vascular function.
Small studies have also looked at kiwifruit and markers such as blood pressure, blood fats, and platelet activity, with some encouraging results — but these are mostly small and short, so they are best read as supportive, not proof. The bigger picture is the dependable one: kiwi is a low-calorie, high-fiber, antioxidant-rich whole fruit, and eating more of that kind of food is consistently linked to better heart health. As one good fruit among many, kiwifruit earns its place in a heart-friendly eating pattern.
How to Choose & Eat It
Getting the most out of kiwifruit is simple.
- Pick ripe ones. A ripe kiwi yields to gentle pressure when you cradle it in your palm and press lightly — like a ripe pear or peach. Firm, hard kiwis are under-ripe and tart; let them sit at room temperature for a few days to soften, and speed ripening by keeping them near apples or bananas. Refrigerate once ripe to slow them down.
- Green vs gold. Green kiwi (the classic fuzzy-skinned fruit) is tangier and a bit higher in fiber and actinidin — the variety used in the constipation trials. Gold kiwi (smooth, bronze-skinned, sweeter) is even higher in vitamin C and milder in flavor. Both are excellent; choose by taste.
- Eat the skin or scoop the flesh — your choice. The skin is edible and adds extra fiber and nutrients; just wash it well, and rub off the fuzz on green kiwis if the texture bothers you (gold skin is smoother and easier to eat). If you prefer, cut the kiwi in half and scoop out the flesh with a spoon, or peel and slice it.
- Easy ways to enjoy it: eaten fresh and whole, sliced into yogurt or oatmeal, added to fruit salad, or blended into a smoothie. For digestion, aim for about two a day as a regular habit.
- A note on dairy: the actinidin enzyme can give blended kiwi-and-dairy mixes (like a kiwi yogurt smoothie) a slightly bitter taste over time, and it will keep gelatin from setting — harmless, just useful to know.
Considerations
Kiwifruit is very safe for almost everyone. A few practical points:
- Allergy can be significant. Kiwifruit is a recognized food allergen, and reactions range from a mildly itchy mouth to, rarely, more serious whole-body reactions. People with a known kiwi allergy should avoid it, and anyone with a history of serious reactions should talk with their doctor.
- Oral-allergy / latex-fruit syndrome. Some people who are allergic to birch pollen or to latex get an itchy or tingly mouth and throat when eating raw kiwi, because proteins in the fruit resemble those allergens (the so-called latex-fruit syndrome, which also links kiwi with banana and avocado). It is often mild and limited to the mouth, but take any reaction seriously.
- Tingling from actinidin. Separate from true allergy, the protein-digesting enzyme actinidin can cause a harmless tingling or mild stinging sensation on the lips and tongue in sensitive people, especially with very ripe fruit or large amounts. It is not dangerous, but if it is unpleasant, eat less or choose gold kiwi (lower in actinidin).
- Too much can loosen stools. The same fiber, water, and enzyme that ease constipation can cause loose stools or mild cramping if you eat a lot at once. Build up gradually and find the amount that suits you.
- Choking hazard for young children. As with any firm fruit, cut kiwi into small, age-appropriate pieces for toddlers and young children.
Research Papers
- Richardson DP, et al. The nutritional and health attributes of kiwifruit: a review. European Journal of Nutrition. 2018. doi:10.1007/s00394-018-1627-z — A comprehensive review of kiwifruit's nutrients (notably vitamin C and fiber) and its documented effects on digestion, immunity, and metabolic health.
- Gearry R, et al. Consumption of 2 green kiwifruits daily improves constipation and abdominal comfort — results of an international multicenter randomized controlled trial. American Journal of Gastroenterology. 2023. doi:10.14309/ajg.0000000000002124 — The flagship trial: two green kiwifruit a day improved constipation and abdominal comfort across multiple countries.
- Chan AOO, et al. Increasing dietary fiber intake in terms of kiwifruit improves constipation in Chinese patients. World Journal of Gastroenterology. 2007. doi:10.3748/wjg.v13.i35.4771 — An earlier study showing kiwifruit increased stool frequency and eased constipation symptoms.
- Rush EC, et al. Kiwifruit promotes laxation in the elderly. Asia Pacific Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 2002. doi:10.1046/j.1440-6047.2002.00287.x — A study in older adults finding that kiwifruit promoted laxation and more comfortable bowel movements.
- Noorwali E, et al. The effect of kiwifruit consumption on sleep quality, fatigue, and BMI. Nutrire. 2024. doi:10.1186/s41110-024-00297-0 — Recent (small, preliminary) research exploring kiwifruit, sleep quality, and fatigue.
- Skinner MA, et al. Wellness foods based on the health benefits of fruit: gold kiwifruit for immune support. Journal of Food and Drug Analysis. 2020. doi:10.38212/2224-6614.2095 — A review of gold kiwifruit's vitamin C and other compounds in the context of immune support.
- Anderson JW, et al. Health benefits of dietary fiber. Nutrition Reviews. 2009. doi:10.1111/j.1753-4887.2009.00189.x — A broad review of why dietary fiber, the kind kiwifruit supplies, supports bowel regularity, heart health, and blood sugar.
PubMed Topic Searches
- PubMed: Kiwifruit, constipation & bowel
- PubMed: Kiwifruit, actinidin & digestion
- PubMed: Kiwifruit, vitamin C & immune
- PubMed: Kiwifruit & sleep quality
Connections
- Natural Constipation Relief (Foods Ranked)
- Pears
- Prunes
- Constipation
- Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
- Vitamin C
- Apples
- All Foods