Protein Intake Examples
A single population-level protein guideline fits almost nobody well. The right target depends on training volume, body composition goal, age, and how the rest of your diet is structured. These examples apply the scientific evidence to real individuals, showing how the recommended intake shifts across different profiles and objectives.
Worked Examples
See the inputs and outcome together
Each scenario keeps the starting point, the outcome, and the actual lesson in one place so the page reads like a decision notebook, not a data dump.
- 1
Active lifter bulking
An 80 kg active trainee in a muscle-gain phase checks a daily protein target.
The range is 136 to 168 g a day, a midpoint near 152 g, about 38 g across four meals.
Weight Kg
80
Activity Level
Active
Goal
Bulk
Splitting protein across meals matters as much as the total, since each feeding needs roughly 2.5 g of leucine to drive muscle synthesis. A 38 g portion of meat, fish, or whey clears that threshold comfortably.
- 2
Same lifter, cutting
The same 80 kg active person switches to a fat-loss phase.
The target rises to 160 g a day, 1.8 to 2.2 g per kg, around 40 g per meal.
Weight Kg
80
Activity Level
Active
Goal
Cut
Protein needs go up in a deficit, not down. Higher intake while cutting preserves muscle and blunts hunger, so the cut hits fat rather than the lean mass you worked to build.
- 3
Sedentary maintenance
An 80 kg person with a desk job and little training, eating to maintain.
The target drops to 112 g a day, 1.2 to 1.6 g per kg, about 28 g per meal.
Weight Kg
80
Activity Level
Sedentary
Goal
Maintain
Lower training volume means a lower protein requirement, though still well above the bare 0.8 g per kg RDA. Even sedentary adults benefit from holding above that minimum to protect muscle as they age.
- 4
Heavy athlete bulking
A 95 kg athlete training hard and aiming to add muscle.
The target is 209 g a day, 1.9 to 2.5 g per kg, roughly 52 g per meal.
Weight Kg
95
Activity Level
Athlete
Goal
Bulk
Bigger, harder-training athletes sit at the top of the evidence range. Beyond about 2.2 g per kg the returns flatten, so there is little reason to chase the very high intakes some bodybuilding lore suggests.
Patterns
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Sources & References
- International Society of Sports Nutrition Position Stand: protein and exercise — Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition
- Dietary protein and muscle mass: a systematic review and meta-analysis — American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
Related Content
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Protein Intake Formula
protein_g = mass_kg × goal_factor. Goal factors: 0.8 sedentary (RDA), 1.6 trained baseline, 1.8 deficit / hypertrophy, 2.2 advanced cut or older lifter.
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