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Allergic rhinitis (AR) is a common inflammatory disorder of the upper airway that is primarily managed with pharmacotherapy, biologics and allergen immunotherapy. However, a substantial proportion of patients experience incomplete or insufficient symptom control, treatment-related adverse effects, or poor adherence. Increasing evidence has linked AR with alterations in microbial composition across multiple mucosal sites, including the gut, highlighting potential roles for host-microbiome interactions in the regulation of allergic inflammation, although causal relationships remain incompletely defined. This narrative mini-review synthesizes current evidence on gut microbiome-based interventions for allergic rhinitis (AR), including probiotics, prebiotics, synbiotics, postbiotics, and emerging approaches such as fecal microbiota transplantation, engineered microbes, and bacteriophage-based therapies. It examines proposed immunological mechanisms involving type 2 inflammation, regulatory immune pathways, and gut–airwa y axis signalling, while distinguishing clinically evaluated strategies from experimental or preclinical and assessing their translational readiness. Collectively, available evidence suggests that microbiome-targeted therapies represent a promising conceptual avenue for understanding and potentially modulating AR. However, their clinical application remains constrained by heterogeneous study designs, reliance on extrapolated data from preclinical studies, limited standardized outcome measures, insufficient long-term safety data, and evolving regulatory frameworks. Addressing these challenges through well-designed clinical trials and improved mechanistic characterization will be essential to clarify the role of microbiome-based interventions as adjunctive strategies in AR management.