StoolSense

Unusual Findings

Floating stool: steatorrhea or just trapped gas?

Why does my poop float?

Most floating stool is caused by trapped gas, often after a high-fiber meal or a bout of diarrhea. If it floats and also looks oily/greasy, smells unusually foul, or keeps happening for weeks, it can be a sign of fat malabsorption (steatorrhea) and is worth discussing with a clinician.

Key takeaways

  • If it happens once in a while and your stool otherwise looks normal, floating is usually not a problem.
  • Fatty stool (steatorrhea) often looks pale or greasy, may leave an oily sheen, and can be hard to flush.
  • Persistence matters more than drama: weeks of change, weight loss, or ongoing diarrhea deserve a check-up.
  • A simple log of meals, symptoms, and stool changes makes patterns (and appointments) easier.

Safety notes

  • Seek medical care if floating stool is persistent (lasting >2 weeks), greasy/oily, or accompanied by unexplained weight loss.
  • Pale, clay-colored, or white stool alongside yellowing skin/eyes (jaundice) is an emergency—seek care immediately.

What to track

  • Frequency: Is it every time or just after certain meals?
  • Appearance: Is it just buoyant, or does it look oily/greasy?
  • Smell: Is it noticeably worse than your usual baseline?
  • Diet: Did you eat high-fiber foods (beans, brassicas) or a very high-fat meal recently?

How StoolSense helps

Track “floating + greasy?” together with meals and meds so you are not relying on memory.

Use a quick tag for “high fiber”, “high fat”, “dairy”, or “gluten” and see what repeats.

Next step

Keep the next move simple and trackable

Pick one action: download the checklist, run the experiment, or join the beta when you want the app to do the counting for you.

Quick answer

If your stool floats once in a while but looks otherwise normal (brown, formed), it is usually just trapped gas.

If it floats and also looks greasy, shiny, pale, or leaves an oily film, it may be fatty stool (steatorrhea) and is worth checking out.

What floating actually tells you

Floating is mostly about density. Gas lowers density. Fat can lower density too. So “floating” is a clue, not a diagnosis.

The common pattern: trapped gas

This is the classic “I ate beans / a big salad / a lot of fiber” story. Fermentation makes gas. Some of that gas ends up in the stool, so it floats.

Clues it is just gas:

  • Your stool still looks like your usual stool (just buoyant)
  • It comes and goes
  • No weight loss, fever, or ongoing diarrhea

The “pay attention” pattern: fatty stool (steatorrhea)

When stool contains extra fat, it can look and behave differently:

  • Looks greasy or shiny
  • Leaves an oily ring or droplets
  • Smells unusually foul
  • Tends to be bulky and hard to flush

This pattern is less “I ate something weird” and more “this keeps happening.”

A simple 7-day check (better than guessing)

If you are seeing floating stool repeatedly, run a quick, low-effort log for a week:

  • Meals (especially high fat, dairy, gluten)
  • Stool look (floating? greasy? pale?)
  • Symptoms (bloating, cramps, urgency)
  • Anything new (antibiotics, supplements)

If the “greasy + persistent” pattern shows up, bring the log to a clinician. It shortens the conversation.

When to seek care sooner

  • Stool looks greasy/oily and this is new or persistent
  • Unexplained weight loss, ongoing diarrhea, or significant abdominal pain
  • Pale/clay or white stool, especially with jaundice (urgent)

FAQs

Is floating poop healthy? +
It can be normal. Stool can float from trapped gas, which is common after fiber-heavy meals. If you feel fine and your stool is otherwise typical for you, you can usually just watch it.
What is steatorrhea? +
Steatorrhea is excess fat in the stool. It can happen when your body is not breaking down or absorbing fat well. A clinician may ask about symptoms (weight loss, diarrhea), diet changes, and sometimes order stool tests.
Does floating stool mean I have Celiac disease? +
Not by itself. Celiac disease can cause fat malabsorption, but floating alone is common and nonspecific. If you also have ongoing diarrhea, weight loss, or symptoms that reliably worsen after gluten, bring it up with your clinician.
Can stress cause floating stool? +
Sometimes. Stress can change gut motility and trigger looser stool for some people, which can change buoyancy. The key is whether the change is brief and self-limited.

References

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