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Wondering if you are eating enough protein? A 180 lb man cutting training 5 or more days per week needs about 174 grams of protein per day, split across 4 meals of about 44g each. That number is anchored to lean mass, not total body weight.
TDEE: 3131 kcal (Very Active, hard exercise 6-7 days per week). Lean mass: 148 lbs. BMR: 1815 kcal (Katch-McArdle).
| Schedule | Protein per meal |
|---|---|
| 3 meals per day | 58g |
| 4 meals per day | 44g |
| 5 meals per day | 35g |
180 lb is a classic training weight for active men and a heavier end for most women. Protein targets at 180 lb land between 130 and 185 grams per day depending on goal and training status. The upper end of the bulking-training range approaches the ceiling of what resistance-training research has tested reliably.
Calorie budgets at 180 lb are roomy. A very-active male cutting at 180 lb still has close to 2,700 calories to work with, which means you can hit a high-protein target and still have substantial carbs for training. This is the weight where the macros start to feel like food rather than a math problem.
The pattern Andrew sees at 180 lb is meal skipping during travel and weekends. The trainee hits macros cleanly Monday through Thursday, loses 60 to 80 grams of protein on a weekend road trip, and is 200 grams under weekly target without noticing. Fix: always travel with two ready protein sources (jerky, ready-to-drink shake) and treat them as non-negotiable.
Cutting means eating in a deficit while protecting muscle. That is the whole project. If the scale moves and you keep strength in the gym, the cut is working. If the scale moves and your bench drops or the weights feel heavier every week, the cut is eating muscle and fat together, and that is not what you came for.
The deficit does the fat loss. Protein does the muscle preservation. Training does the muscle signaling. All three have to be in the lineup at the same time or the phase misses.
The most common place Andrew sees a cut fall apart is the protein number. Someone runs a clean deficit, trains hard, and still watches their lifts regress by week three. Nine times out of ten the protein intake is 30 or 40 grams under target, distributed into two meals instead of four, or logged optimistically against unweighed food. The fix is boring: weigh the protein, spread it across the day, hit the number every day. The math is not exotic. The discipline is the variable.
Do not overcomplicate the deficit. A 20% cut under TDEE is enough to move the scale roughly half a pound to one pound per week at most readers' stats. Aggressive deficits feel productive in week one and break by week five. Stay on the knife edge, keep the protein sharp, and let time do the work.
The male version of the protein math starts from a higher average lean mass assumption. We use 18% body fat as the default for moderate training status, which means the lean-mass anchor for the protein calculation includes more muscle tissue than the equivalent female page. Your absolute protein number is higher because your lean mass is higher, not because male physiology asks for a different gram-per-kilogram ratio.
Testosterone's role in the muscle-protein-synthesis ceiling matters here. Higher natural testosterone supports a higher MPS rate per meal, which is why the classic "30g per meal" rule-of-thumb often fits male trainees comfortably at three to four meals a day. Schoenfeld and Aragon's 2018 review on per-meal distribution supports 0.4 g/kg body weight per meal as a functional ceiling, which for a 180 lb male lands near 32 grams per meal (Schoenfeld and Aragon, 2018, JISSN). We show you four-meal and five-meal splits so you can pick the pattern that fits your schedule without over-engineering a single mealtime.
Andrew watches male trainees under-eat protein more often than women do, especially at sedentary or moderate training levels. The assumption is "I'm not lifting heavy, I don't need it." The assumption is wrong. Lean mass preservation is not contingent on whether you had a gym session today.
Very active means 5 to 7 training sessions per week, competitive sport, endurance training, physically demanding work, or any combination that keeps the body under significant load most days. Activity multiplier is 1.725x BMR, and for some endurance athletes even that is conservative.
The protein number on a very-active page is larger in absolute grams, but we still calibrate to 2.6 or 2.3 g/kg lean mass depending on goal. Going substantially higher does not produce more muscle in resistance-trained populations, per Morton's 2018 meta-analysis in BJSM. Endurance athletes in a large energy deficit may need slightly more protein to protect muscle, per Bandegan 2017 in the Journal of Nutrition. The gap is small; the number we show you covers it.
Andrew has seen more very-active trainees under-eat calories than under-eat protein. The training drives hunger, they reach for protein shakes and lean chicken, and their total calorie intake drifts 300 to 500 kcal below what their training demands. Energy availability tanks, recovery collapses, sleep fractures. The protein number looks fine on paper but the body cannot use it because there is not enough total fuel for basic recovery. If you are very active and running a cut, check your calorie number carefully before you chase protein. The calorie floor matters as much as the protein ceiling.
If you train twice a day or compete, talk to a performance dietitian in addition to using this calculator. Our numbers are a defensible starting point, not a prescription.
A calorie deficit eats muscle by default. Your job during a cut is to stop it. Protein is how you stop it.
We use Andrew Menechian's framework, which starts from lean mass rather than total body weight. The reason matters: two people at the same weight can carry wildly different muscle, and a formula that ignores that gives the leaner person too little protein and the heavier one too much. Lean mass is the tissue that can grow, shrink, or hold the line. It's what the math should point at.
The base target is 2.6 grams of protein per kilogram of lean body mass per day. That's the upper end of what the ISSN 2017 position stand calls defensible for trained individuals cutting under a deficit (Jäger et al, 2017, JISSN). Longland's 2016 study in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition tested the logic directly: men in a large deficit who hit ~2.4 g/kg LBM with hard training gained lean mass while losing fat (Longland et al, 2016, AJCN). The RDA number you'll see cited elsewhere (0.8 g/kg body weight) is a deficiency floor, not a performance target. It was not written for people trying to preserve muscle under a deficit and it should not be used that way.
Calories sit at 20% below TDEE. The deficit is aggressive enough to produce weekly change you can see on the scale but shallow enough that training output doesn't collapse and sleep doesn't break. Helms' 2014 evidence-based review for natural bodybuilding contest prep lands in the same range for non-contest conditions (Helms, Aragon, Fitschen, 2014, JISSN). Fat stays at 35% of calories with a safety floor (0.9 g/kg body weight for men, 1.1 g/kg for women) to protect hormonal function; carbs fill the rest with a minimum of 50 grams for basic brain and liver function.
The per-meal split matters more during a cut than any other phase. Leidy's 2015 review found that higher protein distributed across meals, rather than back-loaded at dinner, produced better satiety and lean mass retention during weight loss (Leidy et al, 2015, AJCN). Schoenfeld and Aragon's 2018 review quantified the practical ceiling per meal at roughly 0.4 g/kg body weight, which for most readers lands between 30 and 50 grams per sitting. That's why we show you three, four, and five-meal splits. Pick the one that fits your schedule.
Andrew has watched users hit their daily protein number and still drop muscle on the scale readouts, and the pattern is always the same: they backload protein into dinner and a late shake. The body keeps the input but not the signal. Spread the same grams across three or four meals and the lean-mass retention shows up within the first week.
This is educational, not medical advice. If you have kidney disease, liver disease, are pregnant, or take medications affecting protein metabolism, talk to your doctor before changing your intake.
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On GLP-1 forums, a recurring thread: "my body composition looks worse even though the scale is down a lot." Rapid weight loss without protein guardrails pulls muscle. Keep protein at 2.6 g/kg lean body mass, train hard, and the composition end of the trade-off gets defended. You can't out-protein a six-month medication arc on your own, but 2.6 g/kg is the floor that keeps the muscle loss bounded.
Calculator.net sits at #1 for "protein intake calculator" and has for years. Their calculator does one thing well: it gives a number fast, based on the oldest defensible formula. What it does not do is ask what kind of training you are actually doing, whether you are in a deficit or a surplus, or how you plan to split the protein across the day.
Generic calculators work fine when the answer is an order-of-magnitude estimate. They break when the answer determines whether you lose muscle during a cut or leave growth on the table during a bulk. The difference between "0.8 grams per pound because you lift sometimes" and "2.6 grams per kilogram of lean mass because you are cutting at 20% below TDEE with four training sessions per week" is roughly 40 to 60 grams of protein per day for most readers. That is a meal.
We calibrate by training status, goal, gender, and lean mass rather than by body weight alone. The number you get here assumes you have already decided what phase you are in. If you want a quick weight-based estimate, Calculator.net is fine. If you want a number that ties to Andrew Menechian's macro framework and the 2017 ISSN position stand, this is the right calculator.
Reviewed by Andrew Menechian, Head of Fitness at FitCommit. Last updated 2026-04-24.
Not necessary. Protein powder is a convenience tool, not a requirement. Whole foods like chicken, fish, eggs, Greek yogurt, cottage cheese, lean beef, tofu, and lentils can cover any daily target. Where powder helps: when your schedule does not allow a real meal, when you struggle to hit 30 to 40 grams in the first meal of the day, or when you are traveling. Morton's 2018 meta-analysis found that protein source (whole food vs supplement) had no significant effect on hypertrophy outcomes once total intake matched (Morton et al, 2018, BJSM). Use powder when it solves a logistics problem. Do not treat it as magic.
More, not less. Older adults lose muscle faster per unit of protein, a phenomenon called anabolic resistance. Research consensus now supports intakes of 1.2 to 1.6 g/kg body weight for adults over 50, which maps to roughly 2.3 to 2.8 g/kg lean body mass for a typical body composition. The ISSN 2017 position stand explicitly notes that older adults benefit from the upper end of the recommended range (Jäger et al, 2017, JISSN). Combine that with two to three resistance training sessions per week. Protein without training stalls. Training without protein stalls. This is educational, not medical advice. Check with your doctor if you have kidney concerns before raising intake.
Protein needs rise during pregnancy, particularly in the second and third trimesters, but the upper limit and optimal level are not well defined for high-intake athletic targets. The standard clinical guidance is roughly 1.1 g/kg body weight during pregnancy, up from the non-pregnant RDA of 0.8 g/kg. Whether 2.3 or 2.6 g/kg lean mass is safe during pregnancy has not been adequately studied and should not be assumed from non-pregnant data. This is not medical advice. Pregnancy changes kidney filtration, hormonal metabolism, and nutrient partitioning in ways a general calculator cannot account for. Talk to your OB or a registered dietitian before using any high-protein calculator output during pregnancy or while breastfeeding.
Whole food animal proteins with complete amino acid profiles perform best per gram: chicken breast, lean beef, eggs, Greek yogurt, whey, and fish. They hit the leucine threshold in smaller servings than most plant sources, which matters when stomach capacity is the limiting factor. That said, Morton's 2018 meta-analysis found that once total daily protein is adequate and meals include enough leucine, the specific source matters less than many people think (Morton et al, 2018, BJSM). Soy and pea isolate hold up well among plant options. The "best" source is the one you will actually eat consistently at the quantity your calculator target demands. Consistency beats optimization.
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Full macros for this profile
Protein + carbs + fat breakdown