Quick answer
Red stool is often food/dye or small lower-GI bleeding (like hemorrhoids), but bright red blood or clots need more caution. Black stool can be iron or bismuth, while black, tarry, sticky stool can signal upper‑GI bleeding. This week, log exact color + Bristol type and any likely driver for 7 days.
When to seek care
Seek urgent care for black/tarry stool, large amounts of bright red blood, clots, bleeding that does not stop, faintness, severe pain, high fever, or signs of dehydration. Escalate sooner if you are on blood thinners, pregnant, immunocompromised, or have heart/kidney disease.
What to track this week
- Exact color (red-tinted vs bright red blood vs black/tarry)
- Bristol type + frequency + timing
- Symptoms: pain, fever, vomiting, dizziness/weakness, urgency
- Obvious drivers: beets/dyes, iron, bismuth (Pepto), antibiotics, alcohol
- Whether the color repeats after 24 to 48 hours
A simple 7-day test
- Track color + Bristol type daily for 7 days.
- Note one likely driver if present (food/dye, iron, bismuth).
- If the color repeats without a driver or you feel worse, seek care.
Evidence note
Color changes can be benign, but persistence plus symptoms changes urgency. This guide is for tracking, not diagnosis.
Start here: red-tinted stool vs blood
A practical distinction:
- Red-tinted stool: the stool itself is colored, often due to diet or dye.
- Bright red blood: visible blood in the bowl or on paper.
If you cannot tell, treat it cautiously and seek medical advice.
Red stool: common non-urgent causes
Red stool can happen after eating:
- Beets
- Red food dyes
- Tomato skins or red sauces
If you feel well and the color resolves within 24 to 48 hours, food is a common explanation.
Red stool that needs more caution
Escalate sooner if you have:
- Large amounts of bright red blood
- Clots
- Bleeding that doesn’t stop
- Dizziness, weakness, faintness
- Severe or worsening pain
- Fever
Black stool: supplement effect vs a red flag
Black stool can be caused by:
- Iron supplements
- Bismuth, like Pepto-Bismol
But black, tarry, sticky stool can be a sign of upper-GI bleeding and needs urgent evaluation.
A simple 7-day tracking window (to stop guessing)
For a short window, keep it simple:
- Color (red-tinted, bright red, or black)
- Bristol type (1 to 7)
- Timing and frequency
- 1 to 2 symptoms (pain, fever, dizziness, weakness, vomiting)
- Any obvious driver (iron, bismuth, beets, dyes, antibiotics, alcohol, travel)
This makes it much easier to interpret whether you’re seeing a one-off change or a repeat pattern.
When a stool test may come up
Clinicians may consider stool tests when bleeding-like changes come with:
- Persistent diarrhea
- Fever
- Travel or food poisoning risk
- Ongoing symptoms that suggest inflammation
If you’re curious what each stool test category checks, see: Types of stool tests.