Pluronic F127 (PF127), a surfactant polymer is used as a drug delivery system and has been introduced recently in the food research to delay lipid digestion process. In this context study the interaction of this polymer with human intestinal bile salts assumes important. The studies involving interaction of PF127 with human intestinal bile salts sodium taurocholic acid (NaTC) and sodium cholate acid (NaC) by using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and 1-naphthol as a fluorescent molecular probe show that the bile salts induce decrease of sol–gel phase transition temperature of the PF127 to lower temperature, from ~21°C to ~18°C. Variation of neutral form fluorescence intensity of 1-naphthol with bile salts in water confirmed efficient micellar aggregation with critical micellar concentration (CMC) values of 12.6mM for NaTC and 12.7mM for NaC. Fluorescence parameters like fluorescence intensity and fluorescence lifetime of the two excited state prototropic forms {neutral form emission (λem=370nm), anion form emission (λem=470nm)} of 1-naphthol suggested that the NaTC (below critical micellar concentration 12mM) and NaC (above critical micellar concentration 12mM) induce appreciable dehydration of the hydrophilic corona as well as core region PF127 hydrogel. The micropolarity of the hydrogel microenvironment decreases with increase in concentration of both the bile salts.