Quick answer

Prioritise fatty fish (salmon, sardines, mackerel) for omega-3s, berries and cherries for polyphenols, olive oil for oleocanthal, and leafy greens for antioxidants. The Mediterranean dietary pattern as a whole has the strongest evidence for reducing systemic inflammation and supporting connective tissue health.

Reduce alcohol, ultra-processed foods, refined sugar, and seed oils high in omega-6. These promote the chronic low-grade inflammation that impairs tissue remodelling during the later stages of recovery.

Inflammation and Healing

After an Achilles rupture, the inflammatory cascade begins within hours. Platelets aggregate, cytokines are released, and macrophages flood the injury site. This is the proliferative phase — and it is necessary. It clears debris, signals fibroblasts to begin collagen production, and initiates the vascular changes that bring nutrients to the healing tissue.

Suppressing this acute phase — with high-dose NSAIDs or ice applied excessively in the first 24–72 hours — can impair healing by blunting the signals that initiate repair. The goal in the first days is to support, not suppress, this inflammatory response.

The problem arises when inflammation becomes chronic and systemic. Beyond the first 1–2 weeks, persistent inflammatory signalling interferes with the remodelling phase — the period when the tendon's collagen structure is being reorganised into mature, load-bearing tissue. This is where diet has its most meaningful role: not by suppressing acute inflammation, but by reducing the systemic inflammatory burden that can impair the later stages of healing.

A note on NSAIDs

Ibuprofen and naproxen are commonly used for pain management during Achilles recovery. Short-term use in the acute phase (first 5–7 days) is generally considered acceptable. Prolonged use beyond 1–2 weeks may impair tendon healing by suppressing prostaglandin-mediated collagen synthesis. If pain management is a concern past the acute phase, discuss alternatives with your treating clinician rather than continuing NSAIDs long-term.

Omega-3 Fatty Acids

Omega-3 fatty acids — specifically EPA (eicosapentaenoic acid) and DHA (docosahexaenoic acid) — are the most evidence-backed dietary intervention for reducing systemic inflammation. They work by competing with omega-6 fatty acids for incorporation into cell membranes and by generating anti-inflammatory resolvins and protectins that actively resolve inflammation rather than merely suppressing it.

For tendon healing specifically, omega-3 supplementation has been shown to reduce inflammatory markers, support the anti-catabolic environment during immobilisation, and improve muscle protein synthesis efficiency — all relevant during Achilles recovery.

Evidence strength
Omega-3s have strong RCT evidence for reducing systemic inflammatory markers. Direct tendon healing outcome data is more limited but the mechanistic case and indirect evidence are both strong.

The best food sources of EPA and DHA are fatty fish. Aim for 2–3 serves per week minimum during the recovery period. Plant-based omega-3 (ALA, from flaxseed, chia, walnuts) has poor conversion to EPA/DHA — plant-based eaters should consider an algae-derived omega-3 supplement, which provides EPA and DHA directly.

Best source
Salmon
~2.3g EPA+DHA per 100g. Wild-caught tends to be higher than farmed. A 150g fillet provides a meaningful therapeutic dose.
Best source
Sardines
~1.5g EPA+DHA per 100g. Canned in water or olive oil. One of the most cost-effective omega-3 sources available.
Good source
Mackerel
~2.5g EPA+DHA per 100g. Among the highest of any fish. Smoked mackerel is a practical option that requires no cooking.
Good source
Trout
~1.1g EPA+DHA per 100g. More accessible than salmon in some markets. Good alternative if salmon is unavailable or unaffordable regularly.
Fish oil supplement (EPA+DHA) — useful when dietary intake falls short or as a concentrated source. Look for at least 1g combined EPA+DHA per serve. Triglyceride form is better absorbed than ethyl ester. Keep refrigerated to prevent oxidation.
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Algae omega-3 (vegan EPA+DHA) — for plant-based eaters, algae oil provides EPA and DHA directly without relying on the poor ALA conversion pathway. The original source of omega-3s that fish accumulate from eating algae.
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Polyphenols and Antioxidants

Polyphenols are plant compounds that modulate inflammatory pathways through multiple mechanisms — inhibiting NF-κB (a key inflammatory transcription factor), reducing oxidative stress, and directly scavenging free radicals produced during tissue damage and repair. The evidence for polyphenols in musculoskeletal recovery has grown significantly in the last decade.

Berries and dark cherries — anthocyanins in blueberries, blackberries, and tart cherries have been shown to reduce muscle damage markers and inflammatory cytokines after exercise. Tart cherry juice has the strongest evidence specifically, with multiple RCTs showing reduced inflammation and improved recovery.

Turmeric / curcumin — curcumin is the active polyphenol in turmeric with well-documented anti-inflammatory activity. The limitation is bioavailability — curcumin is poorly absorbed without black pepper (piperine), which increases absorption by up to 2000%. Cooking with turmeric and black pepper together, or taking a curcumin supplement with piperine, is more effective than either alone.

Green tea — EGCG (epigallocatechin gallate) is a potent polyphenol with anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties. 2–3 cups of green tea daily provides a meaningful dose. Green tea extract supplements provide a higher concentrated dose but are not necessary if tea is consumed regularly.

Olive oil — extra virgin olive oil contains oleocanthal, a compound with anti-inflammatory activity similar in mechanism to ibuprofen. Using olive oil as the primary cooking and dressing fat is one of the simplest dietary modifications with meaningful anti-inflammatory effect.

Curcumin with BioPerine (piperine) — the combination of curcumin and piperine is essential for meaningful absorption. Standard curcumin without piperine has very limited bioavailability. Look for at least 500mg curcumin with 5mg BioPerine per serve.
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Tart cherry juice concentrate — the most evidence-backed polyphenol intervention for recovery. Used in multiple RCTs for reducing post-exercise inflammation and muscle damage. Dilute 1–2 tablespoons in water. Avoid versions with added sugar.
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The Mediterranean Pattern

Individual foods matter, but dietary patterns have the strongest overall evidence for reducing systemic inflammation. The Mediterranean dietary pattern — characterised by high intake of vegetables, legumes, whole grains, fruits, nuts, olive oil, and fish, with moderate poultry and dairy, and low red meat and processed foods — has been extensively studied and consistently shows reduced inflammatory biomarkers and improved musculoskeletal outcomes.

Rather than thinking about anti-inflammatory eating as adding specific foods, the Mediterranean approach frames it as a baseline dietary pattern. The foods above — fatty fish, berries, olive oil, leafy greens, turmeric — are all consistent with this pattern and reinforce each other's effects when consumed together rather than in isolation.

"The goal is not to suppress inflammation but to support the body's own resolution of it — moving from acute inflammatory signalling into effective tissue remodelling."

What to Reduce

The pro-inflammatory side of the diet is at least as important as the anti-inflammatory additions. The following consistently drive systemic inflammation and impair tissue remodelling:

Alcohol Directly impairs collagen synthesis, increases gut permeability (driving systemic inflammation), and disrupts sleep — a critical recovery window. Any amount is counterproductive during active healing. Reduce or eliminate during the acute and remodelling phases.
Ultra-processed foods High in refined carbohydrates, trans fats, and additives that promote NF-κB activation and oxidative stress. Packaged snacks, fast food, processed meats, and sweetened beverages are the main culprits.
Refined sugar and high-fructose corn syrup Drive advanced glycation end-products (AGEs) that directly impair collagen cross-linking and tendon structural integrity. Reducing sugar intake during tendon healing has a specific mechanistic basis beyond general health.
Excess omega-6 seed oils Sunflower, safflower, corn, and soybean oils are high in linoleic acid (omega-6). In excess relative to omega-3 intake, omega-6 fatty acids shift the balance toward pro-inflammatory eicosanoids. Replacing with olive oil or avocado oil improves the omega-6:omega-3 ratio.
Prolonged NSAID use Not a dietary choice, but relevant here: ibuprofen and naproxen taken beyond the acute phase suppress prostaglandins involved in collagen synthesis. Manage ongoing pain with paracetamol, physical strategies, or discuss with your clinician rather than continuing NSAIDs for weeks.

A Practical Approach

The simplest framing for anti-inflammatory eating during Achilles recovery is this: eat mostly whole, minimally processed foods, with fatty fish 2–3 times per week, vegetables and fruit at every meal, olive oil as the primary fat, and limited alcohol and processed food.

This is not a restrictive or complicated dietary pattern. It does not require supplements to implement, though fish oil and curcumin provide concentrated doses of the most evidence-backed compounds when dietary intake falls short.

The simplest anti-inflammatory upgrade

If only one change is practical right now: add a 150g serve of fatty fish (salmon, sardines, mackerel) three times per week, use olive oil as your primary cooking fat, and eat a handful of berries daily. These three habits alone shift the dietary omega-6:omega-3 ratio, increase polyphenol intake, and reduce reliance on pro-inflammatory cooking fats — without requiring any major restructuring of how you eat.