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Foods to Avoid With Biktarvy: What Actually Matters (2026)

Most foods do not interact with Biktarvy. Unlike some older HIV medications, Biktarvy has a straightforward relationship with diet — it can be taken with or without food, and there is no long list of banned foods. However, certain mineral supplements and antacids can reduce how much bictegravir your body absorbs, and how you space them from your dose depends on which mineral is involved. This page separates genuine interactions from common myths and gives you a clear, practical guide to eating and supplementing safely on Biktarvy. For the complete guide to prescription and OTC drug conflicts, see the Biktarvy drug interactions guide.

At a Glance
Al/magnesium antacid — take Biktarvy
2h before / 6h after
Calcium & iron
OK with food
Banned foods
0
Food effect on absorption
+24% AUC
Aluminum/magnesium antacids reduce bictegravir absorption the most (~79% taken together on an empty stomach). Calcium and iron do not meaningfully interact when taken with food. The food effect (+24% AUC) is not clinically meaningful. Source: Biktarvy FDA prescribing information (2025).

The Core Issue: Polyvalent Cations and Bictegravir Chelation

The only clinically significant food-related interaction with Biktarvy involves supplements and antacids that contain polyvalent cations — specifically calcium, magnesium, iron, and zinc. These minerals bind to bictegravir in the gastrointestinal tract through chelation, forming an insoluble complex that is poorly absorbed. The result is a reduction in the amount of bictegravir that reaches the bloodstream.

This interaction is documented in Biktarvy’s prescribing information and in pharmacokinetic studies, and its size depends on which mineral is involved and whether you take it with food. Taken together on an empty stomach, an aluminum/magnesium antacid reduces bictegravir exposure (AUC) by about 79%, calcium by about 33%, and iron by about 63% — reductions large enough to compromise viral suppression if they happen consistently over time. The good news is that these interactions are easy to avoid: taking calcium or iron with food neutralizes their effect, and aluminum/magnesium antacids simply need to be spaced well apart from your Biktarvy dose.

This is a supplement and antacid interaction — not a food interaction. The calcium in a glass of milk or a portion of yogurt does not cause a clinically meaningful interaction with bictegravir — partly because it comes with food, and partly because a normal serving contains far less calcium than a concentrated supplement tablet. The concern is concentrated mineral doses in supplement tablets or antacids taken on an empty stomach at the same time as Biktarvy.

How to Space Biktarvy From Supplements and Antacids

How you separate these products from Biktarvy depends on the mineral. Aluminum and magnesium need a wide, one-directional gap; calcium and iron are handled simply by taking them with food.

⏱ Spacing Rules by Mineral Type
Aluminum/magnesium antacids Maalox, Mylanta, Milk of Magnesia, some Gaviscon, and magnesium supplements. These cut bictegravir absorption the most (~79% taken together, fasting). Take Biktarvy at least 2 hours before, or at least 6 hours after. Taking Biktarvy 2 hours after is not enough — absorption is still cut by roughly half.
Calcium supplements & antacids Calcium carbonate, calcium citrate, Tums. Take them together with food and there is no meaningful interaction. If you take calcium on an empty stomach, take your Biktarvy dose at least 2 hours first.
Iron supplements Ferrous sulfate, ferrous gluconate, ferric formulations, and iron-containing multivitamins. Like calcium, iron is best taken with food, which prevents the interaction; otherwise take Biktarvy at least 2 hours before the iron.
Zinc supplements Zinc sulfate, gluconate, picolinate, and multivitamins with meaningful zinc content. Zinc is less studied with bictegravir; to be safe, take it with food or separate it from Biktarvy by at least 2 hours.
Multivitamins with minerals Most contain calcium, magnesium, iron, or zinc. Take your multivitamin with food at a different time of day from Biktarvy, or separate by at least 2 hours. If it also contains aluminum or magnesium, use the wider antacid gap (2 hours before or 6 hours after).
Acid reducers (PPIs / H2 blockers) Proton pump inhibitors (omeprazole, lansoprazole) and H2 blockers (famotidine) do not chelate bictegravir and are safe to take with Biktarvy without any timing restriction.

Practical tip: The simplest routine is to take Biktarvy at the same time each day and take aluminum/magnesium antacids well away from it (2 hours before or 6 hours after). Calcium and iron are easiest of all — just take them with a meal.

Foods Reviewed: What Is and Is Not a Problem

🥛Dairy (milk, yogurt, cheese)
Calcium eaten as food, in a normal serving of dairy, does not cause a meaningful interaction with bictegravir. You can drink milk or eat yogurt at the same time as taking Biktarvy.
✓ No restriction
🍊Grapefruit & grapefruit juice
Grapefruit inhibits CYP3A4, which metabolizes bictegravir — so the question is reasonable. However, no clinically significant grapefruit interaction has been identified for Biktarvy in its prescribing information or pharmacokinetic studies.
✓ No restriction
🍔Food / high-fat meals
Taking Biktarvy with a meal raises bictegravir AUC by about 24% (Cmax ~13%) versus fasting. The Biktarvy label calls this modest and not clinically meaningful — you can take Biktarvy with or without food. Consistency matters more than meal content.
✓ Optional — take either way
🍺Alcohol
No direct pharmacokinetic interaction between alcohol and Biktarvy has been established. However, alcohol can impair adherence and suppress immune function. Moderate use is not prohibited; heavy use is inadvisable.
⚠ No direct interaction; moderate use only
🌿St. John’s Wort
St. John’s Wort is a potent CYP3A4 and P-gp inducer. It is contraindicated with Biktarvy and can substantially reduce bictegravir plasma levels, causing viral rebound. Not a food — but commonly encountered in a dietary context.
✗ Contraindicated — do not use
🫙Turmeric / curcumin supplements
Turmeric as a spice in food is not a concern. High-dose curcumin supplements have some evidence of CYP3A4 inhibition, but clinical evidence of a significant Biktarvy interaction is lacking. Mention regular high-dose use to your HIV pharmacist.
⚠ Spice OK; high-dose supplements — ask pharmacist
🐟Omega-3 / fish oil
No meaningful interaction between omega-3 supplements and Biktarvy has been identified. Fish oil can be taken at any time without restriction.
✓ No restriction
🪷Vitamin C supplements
Vitamin C (ascorbic acid) does not chelate bictegravir and has no known pharmacokinetic interaction with Biktarvy. Vitamin C supplements can be taken at any time relative to Biktarvy without restriction.
✓ No restriction

The Full Picture: Biktarvy Food and Supplement Interaction Table

Food / SupplementInteraction TypeVerdictRule
Aluminum/magnesium antacidsChelation — largest reduction (~79% fasting)Strict timingBiktarvy ≥2 h before or ≥6 h after
Calcium supplements / antacidsChelation on empty stomach (~33%); none with foodTake with foodWith food, or Biktarvy ≥2 h before
Iron supplementsChelation on empty stomach (~63%); reduced with foodTake with foodWith food, or Biktarvy ≥2 h before
Magnesium / zinc supplementsChelation — reduces bictegravir absorptionTiming requiredWith food, or separate by ≥2 h
Multivitamins with mineralsChelation via mineral contentTiming requiredWith food at a different time, or ≥2 h apart
St. John’s WortCYP3A4/P-gp induction — reduces bictegravir levelsContraindicatedDo not use with Biktarvy
Dairy foods (milk, yogurt)None clinically significantNo restrictionTake freely
Grapefruit / juiceNo clinically significant interaction identifiedNo restrictionTake freely
Food / high-fat mealSmall AUC increase (~24%); not clinically meaningfulNo restrictionOptional; take with or without food
Proton pump inhibitors / H2 blockersNo chelation interactionNo restrictionSafe to take with Biktarvy
Vitamin C / D / B-complexNoneNo restrictionTake freely
Omega-3 / fish oilNoneNo restrictionTake freely
AlcoholNo direct PK interaction; adherence riskCautionModerate use; heavy use inadvisable

Should You Take Biktarvy With Food or Without?

Biktarvy can be taken with or without food — both are acceptable. Taking it with a meal raises bictegravir exposure modestly: pharmacokinetic studies show about a 24% increase in AUC and a 13% increase in Cmax with a moderate- or high-fat meal compared to fasting. The Biktarvy label describes this change as modest and not clinically meaningful, which is why the drug is approved for use with or without food.

In practice, most patients take Biktarvy at the same time each day, and pairing it with a regular meal is a simple way to stay consistent. If you consistently take Biktarvy on an empty stomach and remain virologically suppressed, there is no clinical reason to change. Consistent daily timing matters far more than whether you eat with your dose.

Best practice: Take Biktarvy at the same time each day. Keep aluminum/magnesium antacids well away from your dose (2 hours before or 6 hours after), and take calcium or iron with a meal.

What About Protein Shakes and Fortified Foods?

Protein shakes, meal replacement drinks, and fortified foods vary widely in their mineral content. Some high-mineral fortified drinks contain concentrated calcium and magnesium in amounts comparable to supplement tablets. If you regularly take a fortified nutritional drink alongside Biktarvy, check the mineral content:

  • If the drink contains a large calcium or iron dose, taking it as part of a meal generally prevents a meaningful interaction; if it contains aluminum or magnesium, keep it 2 hours before or 6 hours after your Biktarvy dose
  • Standard whey protein shakes with no added minerals are fine to take at the same time as Biktarvy
  • Standard fortified breakfast cereals do not contain enough elemental mineral per serving to cause a clinically meaningful chelation interaction

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I take Biktarvy with milk or dairy products?

Yes. Dairy products — milk, yogurt, cheese — do not cause a clinically significant interaction with Biktarvy. This is partly because dairy is eaten as food, which prevents the chelation effect, and partly because a normal serving contains far less calcium than a concentrated supplement tablet. The interaction that reduces bictegravir absorption comes from concentrated mineral supplements and antacids taken on an empty stomach, not from food-form calcium. You can take Biktarvy with a glass of milk or eat dairy at any time relative to your dose.

Can I take my multivitamin at the same time as Biktarvy?

Most multivitamins contain calcium, magnesium, iron, or zinc, which reduce bictegravir absorption when taken together on an empty stomach. The simplest fix is to take your multivitamin with food at a different time of day from Biktarvy, or to separate the two by at least 2 hours. If your product also contains aluminum or magnesium (as many antacid-vitamin combinations do), allow a wider gap — take Biktarvy at least 2 hours before or 6 hours after it.

How should I take antacids like Tums, Maalox, or Milk of Magnesia with Biktarvy?

It depends on the antacid. Aluminum- or magnesium-containing antacids (Maalox, Mylanta, Milk of Magnesia, some Gaviscon) reduce bictegravir absorption the most — taken together on an empty stomach they cut it by about 79%. Take Biktarvy at least 2 hours before, or at least 6 hours after, these products; taking Biktarvy 2 hours after is not enough. Calcium-based antacids like Tums can instead be taken together with food, which prevents a meaningful interaction. Proton pump inhibitors such as omeprazole do not interact and need no separation.

Can I take calcium or iron with Biktarvy if I take it with food?

Yes. Taken on an empty stomach at the same time as Biktarvy, calcium lowers bictegravir absorption by about 33% and iron by about 63%. But taking calcium or iron together with food removes the meaningful effect — so calcium and iron supplements, and calcium-based antacids, can be taken with food alongside Biktarvy. If you prefer to take them on an empty stomach, take your Biktarvy dose at least 2 hours first.

Is grapefruit safe to eat while on Biktarvy?

Yes. Grapefruit inhibits CYP3A4, the enzyme that metabolizes bictegravir — so the question is reasonable. However, no clinically significant grapefruit interaction has been identified for Biktarvy in its prescribing information or in available pharmacokinetic data. Grapefruit and grapefruit juice are not restricted on Biktarvy.

What happens if I accidentally take my calcium supplement at the same time as Biktarvy?

A single accidental co-administration is unlikely to cause viral rebound — Biktarvy has a high barrier to resistance and the interaction reduces rather than eliminates absorption. However, consistently co-administering Biktarvy with mineral supplements on an empty stomach could over time reduce drug exposure enough to compromise viral suppression. If this has been happening regularly for weeks or months, mention it to your HIV clinician at your next appointment so they can check your viral load.

Can I drink alcohol while taking Biktarvy?

There is no direct pharmacokinetic interaction between alcohol and Biktarvy. However, alcohol can affect HIV care in indirect ways: heavy alcohol use is associated with poorer adherence, impaired immune function, and worsened metabolic outcomes. Occasional moderate alcohol consumption is not clinically contraindicated with Biktarvy, but regular heavy drinking is inadvisable for anyone on long-term antiretroviral therapy.

Does it matter whether I take Biktarvy with or without food?

Biktarvy can be taken with or without food — both are acceptable. Taking it with a meal raises bictegravir exposure (AUC) by about 24%, but the Biktarvy label calls this change modest and not clinically meaningful. For most patients, taking Biktarvy at the same time each day is what matters most; pairing it with a regular meal is a practical way to stay consistent. Meal content is not important.

For a full review of drug interactions beyond food and supplements — including prescription medications — see the Biktarvy drug interactions guide.

This article was reviewed by Dr. Neha Mishra, MBBS, MD, and written by Ana Goios in accordance with SunnyPharma’s Editorial Policy. Content is reviewed for clinical accuracy, updated when guidelines change, and written to inform — not replace — the advice of a qualified healthcare provider.

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