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Foods That Lower Cortisol: What to Eat for Stress Relief

REVIEWED BY
William Maish, MD MBA MPH
Clinical Product Lead
Published
May 30, 2026
Last updated
June 1, 2026
Key takeaway:

Specific nutrients directly influence how the adrenal glands regulate cortisol — blood sugar stability is the most powerful lever. Magnesium supports the HPA axis feedback loop and is commonly deficient in chronically stressed people; omega-3s from fatty fish are associated with lower cortisol during acute stress. Individual responses vary based on metabolic health, stress history, and gut microbiome.

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Table of contents

You've cut out the obvious stressors, improved your sleep routine, and started exercising more. But you haven't thought much about what's on your plate. Specific nutrients directly influence how your adrenal glands produce and regulate cortisol, and the right foods can shift the balance more than you'd expect.

What cortisol does in your body

Cortisol is your body's primary stress hormone, released by the adrenal glands in response to perceived threats, whether that's a looming deadline or a blood sugar crash. It mobilizes glucose from storage, suppresses non-essential functions like digestion and reproduction, and primes your muscles for action. In the short term, this response is adaptive. In the long term, when cortisol stays elevated due to chronic stress, poor sleep, or metabolic dysfunction, it drives fat storage around the abdomen, breaks down muscle tissue, disrupts insulin signaling, and suppresses immune function.

Cortisol follows a natural rhythm. It peaks in the morning to help you wake up, then gradually declines throughout the day. When this rhythm flattens due to chronic activation, you lose the metabolic flexibility that allows your body to burn fat, build muscle, and recover from stress. Diet plays a direct role in this process by influencing how much cortisol your adrenals produce, how sensitive your cells are to its signal, and how quickly your body clears it from circulation.

How diet affects cortisol production and clearance

Blood sugar regulation

Every time your blood sugar drops sharply, your adrenal glands release cortisol to mobilize stored glucose and stabilize your energy supply. This is why skipping meals, eating high-sugar foods without protein or fat, or relying on caffeine alone in the morning can trigger a cortisol spike. Protein, fiber, and healthy fats slow glucose absorption and prevent the sharp peaks and valleys that signal your adrenals to intervene.

Nutrient cofactors for adrenal function

Your adrenal glands require specific micronutrients to synthesize and regulate cortisol. Magnesium supports the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, the feedback loop that controls cortisol release. Vitamin C is concentrated in adrenal tissue and gets depleted during prolonged stress. B vitamins, particularly B5 and B6, are essential for converting cholesterol into steroid hormones, including cortisol. When these nutrients are deficient, your body struggles to regulate cortisol appropriately, leading to either excessive production or impaired clearance.

Inflammation and gut health

Chronic inflammation activates the HPA axis and keeps cortisol elevated. Omega-3 fatty acids, found in fatty fish and algae, reduce inflammatory signaling by competing with omega-6 fats for the same enzymatic pathways. Fermented foods like yogurt, kefir, sauerkraut, and kimchi support gut microbiome diversity, which influences cortisol regulation through the gut-brain axis. Research shows that certain probiotic strains can lower cortisol responses to stress by modulating vagal nerve signaling and reducing systemic inflammation.

Foods that lower cortisol through specific mechanisms

Fatty fish and omega-3 sources

Salmon, mackerel, sardines, and anchovies provide EPA and DHA, the active forms of omega-3 fatty acids that reduce cortisol reactivity to stress. Studies show that omega-3 supplementation lowers cortisol output during acute stressors and improves HPA axis resilience over time. If you don't eat fish, algae-based omega-3 supplements or flaxseeds and chia seeds offer plant-based alternatives, though they require conversion to EPA and DHA, which varies by individual.

Dark leafy greens and magnesium-rich vegetables

Spinach, Swiss chard, kale, and collard greens are among the best dietary sources of magnesium, a mineral that dampens cortisol secretion and supports parasympathetic nervous system activity. Magnesium deficiency is common and often undiagnosed, especially in people under chronic stress. Other magnesium-rich foods include pumpkin seeds, almonds, black beans, and avocados. Magnesium also improves sleep quality, which indirectly lowers cortisol by allowing the HPA axis to reset overnight.

Vitamin C-rich fruits and vegetables

Citrus fruits, bell peppers, strawberries, kiwi, and broccoli provide vitamin C, which is rapidly consumed during stress. Vitamin C supports adrenal cortex function and has been shown to blunt cortisol increases in response to psychological and physical stressors. It also acts as an antioxidant, protecting adrenal cells from oxidative damage caused by prolonged cortisol elevation.

Fermented foods and probiotics

Yogurt, kefir, miso, tempeh, and fermented vegetables introduce beneficial bacteria that influence cortisol regulation through the gut-brain axis. Specific strains like Lactobacillus rhamnosus and Bifidobacterium longum have been studied for their ability to reduce cortisol and improve stress resilience. The gut microbiome also produces short-chain fatty acids like butyrate, which reduce inflammation and support the integrity of the gut lining, preventing immune activation that can drive cortisol production.

Dark chocolate and polyphenols

Dark chocolate with at least 70% cacao contains flavonoids that lower cortisol and improve mood by increasing serotonin and dopamine signaling. The effect is dose-dependent and most pronounced in people experiencing chronic stress. Other polyphenol-rich foods include green tea, berries, and extra virgin olive oil. These compounds reduce oxidative stress and modulate inflammatory pathways that keep cortisol elevated.

Whole grains and complex carbohydrates

Oats, quinoa, brown rice, and sweet potatoes provide slow-digesting carbohydrates that stabilize blood sugar and support serotonin production, which counteracts cortisol's effects on mood and appetite. Carbohydrates also help replenish glycogen stores after exercise, reducing the cortisol spike that occurs when your body perceives energy depletion. Very low-carbohydrate diets can elevate cortisol in some individuals, particularly women and those with a history of disordered eating or chronic stress.

What drives cortisol elevation through diet

Refined sugar and processed carbohydrates

Foods high in added sugar and refined flour cause rapid blood glucose spikes followed by sharp drops, triggering cortisol release to stabilize energy. This pattern becomes self-reinforcing: high cortisol increases cravings for sugar, which further destabilizes blood sugar and perpetuates the cycle. Swapping processed snacks for whole food alternatives with protein and fat reduces this cortisol-driven feedback loop.

Excess caffeine

Caffeine stimulates cortisol secretion, especially when consumed on an empty stomach or in large amounts. For people with already elevated cortisol, caffeine can amplify anxiety, disrupt sleep, and worsen metabolic stress. Timing matters: drinking coffee after a balanced breakfast blunts the cortisol spike compared to drinking it first thing in the morning. Green tea offers a gentler alternative, providing L-theanine alongside caffeine, which promotes calm focus without the same cortisol surge.

Alcohol

Alcohol disrupts HPA axis regulation and impairs cortisol clearance, leading to prolonged elevation even after moderate consumption. It also interferes with sleep architecture, preventing the deep sleep stages that allow cortisol to reset. Chronic alcohol use depletes B vitamins and magnesium, further impairing adrenal function.

Caloric restriction and undereating

Severe calorie deficits signal metabolic stress to your body, triggering cortisol release to preserve energy and maintain blood sugar. This is why aggressive dieting often backfires, leading to muscle loss, metabolic slowdown, and rebound weight gain. Eating enough to support your activity level and metabolic needs is essential for cortisol regulation, particularly for women and anyone with a history of restrictive eating.

Why cortisol-lowering foods work differently for each person

Metabolic health and insulin sensitivity

People with insulin resistance or prediabetes experience exaggerated cortisol responses to blood sugar fluctuations. Their cells are less responsive to insulin, so the body relies more heavily on cortisol to mobilize glucose. Improving insulin sensitivity through diet, exercise, and weight loss can normalize cortisol patterns and reduce the metabolic burden on the adrenals.

Stress history and HPA axis dysregulation

Chronic stress, trauma, or prolonged illness can alter the sensitivity of the HPA axis, leading to either blunted or exaggerated cortisol responses. Some people develop a flattened cortisol curve, where levels remain elevated throughout the day and fail to drop at night. Others experience hypocortisolism, where the adrenals become less responsive to stress signals. Dietary interventions work best when combined with stress management, sleep optimization, and, in some cases, targeted supplementation or medical support.

Gut microbiome composition

The diversity and balance of your gut bacteria influence how your body responds to stress. Dysbiosis, or an imbalance in gut flora, can increase systemic inflammation and impair the gut-brain axis, leading to higher baseline cortisol and reduced stress resilience. Fermented foods, prebiotic fiber from vegetables and legumes, and avoidance of unnecessary antibiotics support a healthier microbiome and more balanced cortisol regulation.

Sex hormones and life stage

Estrogen and progesterone interact with cortisol in complex ways. Women often experience higher cortisol reactivity during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle and during perimenopause, when progesterone declines. Pregnancy, postpartum, and menopause all shift cortisol dynamics. Men with low testosterone may also experience elevated cortisol, as these hormones exist in a reciprocal relationship. Addressing sex hormone imbalances through diet, lifestyle, or medical intervention can improve cortisol regulation.

Turning dietary changes into measurable cortisol control

A low cortisol diet isn't about restriction. It's about choosing foods that stabilize blood sugar, provide the nutrients your adrenals need to function properly, and reduce the inflammatory load that keeps cortisol elevated. Prioritize protein at every meal, include healthy fats like olive oil and avocado, and build meals around vegetables, whole grains, and omega-3-rich fish. Limit added sugars, moderate caffeine intake, and consider fermented foods as a daily habit.

Tracking cortisol directly requires specialized testing, but you can monitor proxy markers like fasting glucose, hemoglobin A1c, insulin, and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein to assess how well your diet is supporting metabolic and inflammatory balance. Changes in body composition, energy levels, sleep quality, and stress resilience offer additional feedback. Cortisol regulation is a process, not a single intervention. Consistency over weeks and months produces the most meaningful shifts.

Superpower's 100+ biomarker panel gives you a complete picture of metabolic health, inflammation, and hormone balance. You'll see not just cortisol-related markers, but also thyroid function, ferritin, magnesium, and other factors that influence how your adrenals function. Tracking these markers over time helps you see whether dietary changes are moving the needle, so you're adjusting based on data, not guesswork.

FAQs

No food "flushes" cortisol, but certain foods support the body's natural regulation of cortisol production and clearance. Omega-3-rich fish, magnesium-rich leafy greens, vitamin C-rich fruits and vegetables, and fermented foods all help modulate cortisol through nutrient-driven pathways. Stable blood sugar from balanced meals with protein, fat, and fiber is one of the most effective dietary strategies for lowering cortisol over time.
Yes, but indirectly. High cortisol promotes abdominal fat storage, increases appetite, and impairs insulin sensitivity. A diet that lowers cortisol by stabilizing blood sugar, reducing inflammation, and providing adrenal-supportive nutrients can improve body composition and make fat loss easier. However, cortisol is only one factor in weight regulation, and individual results depend on metabolic health, activity level, and overall calorie balance.
Acute changes in blood sugar and inflammation can affect cortisol within hours to days, but meaningful shifts in baseline cortisol and HPA axis function typically take weeks to months. Consistency matters more than perfection. Tracking subjective markers like energy, sleep quality, and stress resilience can help you gauge progress before lab values change.
No. Very low-carbohydrate diets can actually raise cortisol in some people, particularly women, athletes, and those under chronic stress. The key is choosing complex carbohydrates like oats, quinoa, sweet potatoes, and legumes, which stabilize blood sugar and support serotonin production. Refined carbohydrates and added sugars are the problem, not carbohydrates as a macronutrient.
Not necessarily. Whole foods provide the nutrients your adrenals need, and dietary changes alone can significantly improve cortisol regulation. However, targeted supplementation with magnesium, vitamin C, omega-3s, or ashwagandha may be helpful if you have documented deficiencies or persistent HPA axis dysregulation. Testing helps determine whether supplementation is warranted.
Yes, through the gut-brain axis. Certain probiotic strains found in fermented foods have been shown to reduce cortisol responses to stress and improve mood. The effect is most pronounced in people with gut dysbiosis or chronic inflammation. Fermented foods also support overall gut health, which influences systemic inflammation and HPA axis function.

References

  1. Schutten, J. C., Joris, P. J., Minović, I., Post, A., van Beek, A. P., de Borst, M. H., Mensink, R. P., & Bakker, S. J. L. (2021). Long-term magnesium supplementation improves glucocorticoid metabolism: A post-hoc analysis of an intervention trial. Clinical endocrinology, 94(2), 150-157. https://doi.org/10.1111/cen.14350
  2. Madison, A. A., Belury, M. A., Andridge, R., Renna, M. E., Rosie Shrout, M., Malarkey, W. B., Lin, J., Epel, E. S., & Kiecolt-Glaser, J. K. (2021). Omega-3 supplementation and stress reactivity of cellular aging biomarkers: an ancillary substudy of a randomized, controlled trial in midlife adults. Molecular psychiatry, 26(7), 3034-3042. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41380-021-01077-2
  3. Brody, S., Preut, R., Schommer, K., & Schürmeyer, T. H. (2002). A randomized controlled trial of high dose ascorbic acid for reduction of blood pressure, cortisol, and subjective responses to psychological stress. Psychopharmacology, 159(3), 319-24. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00213-001-0929-6

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