Quick Summary: A prediabetes diet is built around minimally processed foods, non-starchy vegetables, lean proteins, high-fiber carbohydrates, and healthy fats. The goal is not perfection, but creating a way of eating that helps stabilize blood sugar, improve insulin sensitivity, and support habits you can realistically maintain over time. In people at high risk, a structured lifestyle approach that includes at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity physical activity per week and modest weight loss can significantly reduce the risk of progressing to type 2 diabetes.
Last reviewed & updated: March 27, 2026
If you’ve been told your blood sugar is higher than normal but not yet in the diabetes range, you are far from alone. In the United States, an estimated 115.2 million adults have prediabetes, and about 8 in 10 do not know they have it. That is part of what makes prediabetes so tricky: it often causes no obvious symptoms. The encouraging news is that this is also a stage where lifestyle changes can make a meaningful difference.
A prediabetes diagnosis does not mean type 2 diabetes is inevitable. Many people can improve their blood sugar and, in some cases, return to the normal range through consistent changes in eating habits, physical activity, sleep, and weight management. This guide explains what to eat, what to limit, and what matters most in a practical, sustainable way.
Understanding Prediabetes
Prediabetes means your blood glucose is higher than normal, but not yet high enough to meet the criteria for diabetes. It is commonly associated with insulin resistance, which means your muscle, fat, and liver cells do not respond to insulin as effectively as they should. Over time, this makes it harder for your body to keep blood sugar within a healthy range.
According to the American Diabetes Association, prediabetes is typically defined by one of the following: an A1C of 5.7% to 6.4%, a fasting blood glucose level of 100 to 125 mg/dL, or a 2-hour blood glucose level of 140 to 199 mg/dL during an oral glucose tolerance test.
The good news is that prediabetes often responds well to lifestyle changes. The landmark Diabetes Prevention Program found that an intensive lifestyle intervention reduced the incidence of type 2 diabetes by 58%. Long-term follow-up also showed that the benefits of lifestyle intervention persisted over 21 years.
The Foundation of a Prediabetes Diet
There is no single perfect “prediabetes diet.” The ADA notes that several eating patterns can be effective, including Mediterranean-style, plant-based, DASH, and low-carbohydrate approaches. What these patterns tend to have in common is a greater emphasis on whole foods and fiber, with less reliance on refined and highly processed foods.
That matters because blood sugar management is not just about counting carbohydrates. It is also about the quality of the food you eat, the portions you consume, and how consistently you can maintain your routine. An overly restrictive diet that is difficult to sustain is usually less helpful than a balanced eating pattern you can follow over the long term.
A practical place to start is the ADA’s Diabetes Plate. It uses a nine-inch plate divided into three simple sections: half non-starchy vegetables, one-quarter protein, and one-quarter quality carbohydrates. Pair that with water or another low- or zero-calorie drink, and you have a meal structure that works well for many people.
Foods to Focus On
Non-starchy vegetables
Non-starchy vegetables should be the foundation of most meals. Think leafy greens, broccoli, cauliflower, bell peppers, tomatoes, mushrooms, zucchini, cucumbers, and green beans. These foods add fiber, volume, vitamins, and minerals without causing a large rise in blood sugar.
Protein-rich foods
Protein helps make meals more satisfying and may reduce the urge to snack on refined carbohydrates later. Good options include chicken, turkey, fish, Greek yogurt, eggs, tofu, tempeh, edamame, beans, lentils, and cottage cheese if you tolerate dairy well. Protein is especially helpful when paired with carbohydrates because it can make a meal feel more balanced and satisfying.
For a deeper dive into protein-rich foods that support weight management, our comprehensive guide to the best foods for weight loss covers the science behind smart protein choices.
High-fiber carbohydrates
Carbohydrates do not need to disappear from a prediabetes diet. A more helpful shift is moving away from refined carbs and toward higher-fiber, less processed sources. That means foods like beans, lentils, oats, quinoa, brown rice, fruit, sweet potatoes, and whole grains that you tolerate well. These options tend to digest more slowly and fit more easily into a blood-sugar-friendly eating pattern than highly refined grains and sugary foods.
Healthy fats
Healthy fats can improve both meal quality and staying power. Olive oil, nuts, seeds, avocado, and fatty fish fit well into many evidence-based eating patterns used for prediabetes and diabetes prevention. The goal is not to add large amounts of fat to everything, but to use these foods to build satisfying meals based on real, minimally processed ingredients.
Fiber-rich foods
Fiber deserves special attention. The ADA notes that people with diabetes and those at risk for diabetes are encouraged to consume at least the amount recommended for the general population: a minimum of 14 grams of fiber per 1,000 calories. In practice, that usually means building meals around vegetables, legumes, whole grains, nuts, seeds, and fruit rather than relying heavily on packaged snack foods and refined starches. Our Ultimate Guide to Dietary Fiber explains in more detail how fiber supports blood sugar balance and overall health.
Foods and Drinks to Limit
If your goal is to improve blood sugar, the biggest wins usually come from cutting back on foods and drinks that are easy to overeat and quickly absorbed.
Sugar-sweetened beverages are a major one. Soda, sweet tea, energy drinks, and many coffee drinks can deliver a large amount of sugar without providing much fullness. Juice can also raise blood sugar quickly because it contains far less fiber than whole fruit.
Refined carbohydrates are another common issue. White bread, sugary cereals, pastries, crackers, chips, desserts, and many ultra-processed snack foods tend to be less filling and easier to overconsume than meals built around minimally processed foods. You do not need to be perfect, but replacing some of these foods with higher-fiber alternatives can make a meaningful difference over time.
This is also a good time to pay attention to portions of foods that are technically “allowed” but easy to overdo, especially when eaten on their own. A large bowl of cereal, a plain bagel, or a rice-heavy meal without enough protein or vegetables may lead to less stable blood sugar than a more balanced plate.
A Simple Way to Build Meals
If you feel overwhelmed by conflicting nutrition advice, start here:
Fill half your plate with non-starchy vegetables, add a palm-sized portion of protein, and include a moderate portion of quality carbohydrates such as beans, fruit, oats, potatoes, or whole grains. Add a small amount of healthy fat if it helps make the meal more satisfying. Keep drinks simple. Water, sparkling water, unsweetened tea, or coffee without a lot of added sugar are usually better choices for everyday drinking.
This kind of structure is often more helpful than trying to memorize a long list of “good” and “bad” foods. It also makes meals easier to repeat, and consistency usually matters more than intensity when you are trying to improve blood sugar patterns.
Preparing meals in advance can take some of the guesswork out of day-to-day eating decisions. Our Complete Meal Prep Guide walks through practical strategies for planning and preparing balanced meals for the week.
If meal prep feels overwhelming, Clean Eatz Kitchen offers portion-controlled, nutritionally balanced meals designed to support blood sugar management.
The Role of Exercise
Diet matters, but movement matters too. The ADA recommends that adults at high risk be referred to a diabetes prevention program that aims for at least 5% to 7% weight loss and 150 minutes or more of moderate-intensity physical activity per week.
Exercise helps because it improves the way your body handles glucose. It does not have to be extreme. Walking, cycling, swimming, dancing, and other forms of moderate activity all count. Better yet, you do not have to save it all for the gym. Evidence suggests that post-meal movement can help reduce glucose excursions after eating, so a short walk after meals may be a practical strategy for some people.
For evidence-based strategies on incorporating exercise into your routine, our Complete Exercise Guide for Weight Loss explains how different types of physical activity can affect blood sugar and body composition.
Weight Loss and Prediabetes
Not everyone with prediabetes needs to lose the same amount of weight, but for people living with overweight or obesity, even modest weight loss can make a meaningful difference. The ADA’s current prevention guidance recommends a target of at least 5% to 7% of initial body weight and notes that, for some people, greater benefits may occur with a 7% to 10% reduction.
More recent evidence supports that point. A 2024 systematic review and dose-response meta-analysis found that lifestyle-based weight loss interventions increased the likelihood of returning to normoglycemia and reduced the risk of progressing to type 2 diabetes. Importantly, the benefit increased in a roughly linear pattern across 1% to 9% weight loss, suggesting that even smaller, realistic changes can be worthwhile.
Long-term follow-up from the DPP also showed that lifestyle intervention continued to reduce the development of diabetes over 15 years, reinforcing the idea that sustainable habits matter more than short bursts of intensity.
The Bottom Line
A prediabetes diagnosis is serious, but it is also something you can act on. You do not need a trendy cleanse, a punishment-style meal plan, or a perfect diet. What tends to work best is an eating pattern built around vegetables, protein, higher-fiber carbohydrates, and minimally processed foods, along with regular physical activity and realistic weight goals when weight loss is appropriate.
For many people, the real goal is not to “eat perfectly.” It is to make blood sugar more stable, reduce the risk of progression, and build habits that feel sustainable in real life. If you are not sure where to start, working with a registered dietitian or joining a diabetes prevention program can help turn general advice into a plan you can actually follow.
FAQs
What is a prediabetes diet?
A prediabetes diet is an eating pattern designed to help stabilize blood sugar and improve insulin sensitivity. In practice, that usually means eating more non-starchy vegetables, more minimally processed foods, enough protein, higher-fiber carbohydrate sources, and fewer refined, sugary, ultra-processed foods.
Can prediabetes be reversed with diet?
Prediabetes often improves with sustained lifestyle changes, and some people return to the normal glucose range. Diet plays a major role, but physical activity, sleep, and weight management also matter.
What foods should I avoid with prediabetes?
The main foods and drinks to limit are sugar-sweetened beverages, refined grains, sweets, and ultra-processed snack foods that are easy to overeat and low in fiber.
What are the best foods for prediabetes?
A strong foundation includes non-starchy vegetables, beans and lentils, whole grains, fruit, nuts, seeds, lean proteins, and healthy fats such as olive oil and avocado. The best eating pattern is one you can follow consistently.
How much exercise helps with prediabetes?
Current ADA guidance recommends at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity physical activity per week, usually alongside nutrition changes and weight goals when appropriate. Even light movement after meals may help reduce glucose spikes.
Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and does not replace personalized professional advice.
References
- American Diabetes Association Professional Practice Committee for Diabetes. Prevention or Delay of Diabetes and Associated Comorbidities: Standards of Care in Diabetes-2026. Diabetes Care. 2026 Jan 1;49(Supplement_1):S50-S60.
- Jayedi A, et al. Efficacy of lifestyle weight loss interventions on regression to normoglycemia and progression to type 2 diabetes in individuals with prediabetes: a systematic review and pairwise and dose-response meta-analyses. Am J Clin Nutr. 2024 Nov;120(5):1043-1052.
- CDC. National Diabetes Statistics Report. Jan. 21, 2026.
- CDC. Diabetes. A U.S. Report Card. Mar. 16, 2026.
- National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases. NIH. Insulin Resistance & Prediabetes. March, 2025.
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