Quick answer: evening bloating after 40 is usually some mix of slower digestion (gut motility genuinely declines with age), a food intolerance you didn't have at 30 – fading lactose tolerance is the classic – eating too fast, and a gut microbiome that's drifted. Most of it is fixable in weeks once you find your trigger. Persistent bloating with weight loss, blood or pain is a doctor visit, not a guide.
Why your 40s changed the rules
The digestion you had at 25 forgave everything. Three things change after 40:
- Motility slows. Food spends longer in the gut, which means more time for fermentation – and fermentation is gas.
- Enzyme production drifts down. The headline example is lactase: a large share of adults gradually lose the ability to digest milk sugar, and it often only becomes obvious in midlife. The cheese and lattes didn't change; you did.
- Your microbiome shifts. Less diversity, fewer of the species that handle fiber gracefully – especially after years of antibiotics, low-fiber eating or stress.
Find your trigger (the 80/20 of de-bloating)
- Test the dairy question first. It's the most common single culprit in men our age. Two weeks fully dairy-free is the free test; if you want a definitive answer without the elimination diet, an at-home lactose intolerance genetic test settles it from a cheek swab.
- Rule out gluten properly, not vibes-ly. Celiac disease is underdiagnosed in men and can surface in midlife as bloating and fatigue. A celiac genetic test can rule out the predisposition – useful because if you don't carry the genes, you can stop suspecting bread. (If you do, talk to a doctor before cutting gluten, or the follow-up blood test goes blind.)
- Slow the first ten minutes. Eating fast means swallowed air plus poorly chewed food arriving in a slower gut. Putting the fork down between bites is comically effective.
- Adjust fiber gradually, not heroically. Going from low fiber to a bran-heavy diet overnight guarantees a gassy fortnight. Add one fiber source at a time and let the microbiome catch up.
- Watch the sugar-free trap. Sorbitol, xylitol and friends (gum, protein bars, "diet" anything) are famous bloaters.
- Support the microbiome. Fermented foods daily is the food-first route; a targeted gut formula like Emma Gut Health or NVNQA's Gut Harmony is the supplement route – built around regularity and gas reduction rather than the vague "balance" claims most probiotics make.
The patterns that need a doctor
See a doctor promptly for bloating that is persistent rather than meal-related, or comes with unintended weight loss, blood in the stool, a persistent change in bowel habit, pain that wakes you, vomiting, or a family history of bowel or stomach cancer. These are uncommon causes of bloating – but they're exactly the ones worth catching early, and bowel-cancer screening from your 40s onwards is sensible regardless of symptoms.
Frequently asked questions
Why am I suddenly bloated all the time in my 40s?
Usually a combination of slower gut motility, a newly surfaced intolerance (lactose is the classic), and a less diverse microbiome. Track meals against symptoms for two weeks – the pattern is usually visible – then test the leading suspect properly.
Can you become lactose intolerant in your 40s?
Yes – lactase production declines with age in most of the world's population, and the symptoms often first become noticeable in midlife. A two-week dairy-free trial or an at-home genetic test will tell you whether it's your trigger.
When is bloating serious?
When it's persistent rather than tied to meals, or paired with weight loss, blood in the stool, a lasting change in bowel habit, or pain that wakes you at night. Those combinations need a doctor, not a supplement.