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Wondering if you are eating enough protein? A 210 lb woman holding at maintenance with a mostly sedentary routine needs about 164 grams of protein per day, split across 4 meals of about 41g each. That number is anchored to lean mass, not total body weight.
TDEE: 2295 kcal (Sedentary, desk job, little or no exercise). Lean mass: 158 lbs. BMR: 1912 kcal (Katch-McArdle).
| Schedule | Protein per meal |
|---|---|
| 3 meals per day | 55g |
| 4 meals per day | 41g |
| 5 meals per day | 33g |
210 lb is where mature training populations land. The absolute protein numbers look large: 155 to 210 grams per day depending on goal and training. At that volume, meal timing becomes the planning bottleneck, not ingredient availability.
Per-meal protein at this weight comfortably clears the 30-gram threshold at four meals and the 40-gram threshold at three. The MPS signaling research consistently rewards this level of per-meal distribution, and the practical eating pattern is more flexible than most people assume when they see the total.
The pattern Andrew sees at 210 lb is training volume creep. Trainees at this weight often run more total weekly volume than their calorie target supports. If you are 210 lb, very active, in a 20% cut, and running five heavy lifting sessions plus three cardio sessions per week, the deficit is probably too aggressive for that training load. Reduce one or the other. The macro math assumes you are making realistic training decisions.
Maintenance is the phase most people think is the boring one. It is actually the one that determines whether any of your other phases stick.
Maintenance means calories match TDEE and body comp drifts quietly toward whatever your protein, training, and sleep habits are pointing at. If your habits are solid, you get leaner over months without trying. If they are shaky, you get softer the same way. The phase reveals what your underlying routine actually does when it is not being forced one direction by a deficit or a surplus.
We use the same protein target as bulking (2.3 g/kg lean mass) because the muscle-preservation case does not disappear when calories stop moving. Fat stays at 30% of calories, carbs fill the rest. You have the most flexibility here. You can afford a weekend restaurant meal, a high-carb training day, a low-carb travel day, and the phase absorbs the variance.
The mistake Andrew sees most often during maintenance is people stop weighing their food because "I know what I eat." Two weeks later the protein is 40 grams under target because chicken breasts are bigger than they used to be, or the yogurt portion doubled. Recalibrate one week per quarter. Weigh everything for seven days. Adjust. That is the whole maintenance discipline.
The female version of the protein math uses 25% body fat as the default for moderate training status, which produces a lower lean-mass anchor than the male version at the same weight. Your absolute protein number is lower in grams because the lean-mass pool the calculation points at is smaller, not because female physiology needs less protein per unit of lean tissue.
The menstrual cycle creates a protein demand shift across the month that most calculators ignore. During the luteal phase (roughly days 15 to 28), basal metabolic rate rises modestly and amino-acid oxidation climbs. For trainees who pay attention, that is the half of the cycle where hitting the upper end of your daily protein target has a noticeable effect on recovery and soreness. We do not subdivide the calculator by cycle phase because the rest of the variables swamp the signal for most readers, but if you track carefully you may see the pattern.
Andrew watches female trainees run protein too low far more often than men do, and the reason is almost always social: women are taught across a lifetime of food culture that lean protein is "enough" when it is actually half the number they need. A 150 lb moderately active female cutting needs 135 to 155 grams of protein per day. That is a chicken-breast-sized portion at three meals, not a sprinkle of grilled chicken on top of a salad. Scale the portions to the math.
### Perimenopause subblock: female, 40s
**DRAFT — Andrew methodology review required before merge**
Perimenopause typically begins in the early to mid forties and lasts roughly four to eight years before menopause itself. Estrogen levels become volatile, sleep quality fragments, and muscle-protein-synthesis response to any given protein dose weakens. The practical consequence: perimenopausal women often need to hit the upper end of the protein band we show rather than the middle to preserve the same amount of lean mass they could hold on less protein five years earlier.
Bauer et al's 2013 PROT-AGE recommendations, originally written for older adults, increasingly apply to women in this transition window: 1.0 to 1.2 g/kg body weight per day minimum, with higher targets for active women (Bauer et al, 2013, J Am Med Dir Assoc). Our 2.3 to 2.6 g/kg lean-mass target fits inside that range and usually lands on the safer side of it.
If your cycle is still active, pay attention to the luteal phase. If it has become irregular, use the calculator output as a floor, not a ceiling. Talk to your doctor if you have specific metabolic concerns.
### Perimenopause subblock: female, 50s
**DRAFT — Andrew methodology review required before merge**
By the fifties, most women are in the late perimenopause or early post-menopause window. Estrogen has settled at lower baseline levels, and the anabolic resistance that began in the forties is now a bigger factor. The protein requirement to preserve the same lean mass is measurably higher than it was in the thirties.
The research case: Bauer et al 2013 recommend a minimum of 1.0 to 1.2 g/kg body weight for adults over 65, and more recent work on women in their 50s suggests the curve starts earlier than the original PROT-AGE threshold implied. Our calculator sits on the safer side of this, but if you are in your 50s and your goal is active preservation of muscle you have already built, treat our number as a floor and hit the higher end consistently.
Strength training makes the protein investment actually pay off. Without it, extra protein is just food. With it, the muscle stays even as the hormonal context shifts away from you.
### Perimenopause subblock: post-menopause baseline
**DRAFT — Andrew methodology review required before merge**
Post-menopause means estrogen has been consistently low for at least 12 consecutive months. Bone density loss accelerates, sarcopenia risk rises, and the protein-preservation case becomes harder to argue against. The women who lift and eat protein through this transition keep the muscle they have. The women who do not lose it steadily.
Our calculated number applies. We are not adjusting the formula for post-menopausal status because the 2.3 g/kg lean-mass target already sits above what most research supports for this population as a preservation floor. Hit the number consistently, get resistance training into your weekly schedule, and the decade-over-decade trajectory changes.
### Perimenopause subblock: resistance-training note
**DRAFT — Andrew methodology review required before merge**
The single variable that changes perimenopausal body composition outcomes more than protein intake is whether you lift. Protein is the raw material. Lifting is the signal that tells the body to use it. Without the signal, extra protein ends up as fuel, not tissue.
If you are in perimenopause and not currently resistance training, the highest-leverage thing you can do is start, even at minimum viable dose (two sessions per week of compound lifts). The protein math in this calculator assumes you are training. If you are not, the math still runs but the outcome looks different.
Sedentary means a desk job, less than one structured training session per week, and otherwise light daily movement. We use an activity multiplier of 1.2x BMR, which is the lowest band in our TDEE calculation and is probably still generous for most truly sedentary days.
The protein number on a sedentary page is lower in absolute grams than the same person would need if they trained, but the per-kilogram ratio relative to lean mass stays the same. The reason: even without resistance training, the body still uses dietary protein for tissue turnover, hormone production, and immune function. Skipping it because "I didn't work out today" is how people end up losing muscle while holding a steady deficit.
Andrew sees this play out with office workers in cuts. They run the deficit clean for three weeks, their step count is around 5,000 per day, they are not in the gym, and they believe the "lower activity" narrative to the point of cutting their protein. By week four the scale is moving and the arms look narrower than they want. The lower calorie target was correct. The lower protein target was not. Protein is sized to lean mass, not to how many steps you walked.
If you are sedentary and plan to start training, rerun the calculator once your weekly schedule includes 3+ sessions. The activity multiplier will shift your calorie target but the protein per-kilogram-of-lean-mass anchor will stay steady.
Maintenance is the phase most people skip and most programs ignore. It is also the phase where body composition quietly changes for the better or worse over the long run. Your job at maintenance is not to force progress, it is to defend it.
We use Andrew Menechian's framework. Calories match TDEE. Protein lands at 2.3 grams per kilogram of lean body mass, the same number we use for bulking. Phillips and Van Loon's 2011 review in the Journal of Sports Sciences laid out the case that active adults benefit from protein intakes of 1.3 to 1.8 g/kg body weight across training years, which lines up with our LBM-anchored 2.3 g/kg target for a typical lean trainee (Phillips and Van Loon, 2011, J Sports Sci). The ISSN 2017 position stand puts the range at 1.4 to 2.0 g/kg body weight for exercising individuals (Jäger et al, 2017, JISSN); we sit at the upper end because the cost of slightly too much protein is nothing and the cost of slightly too little is measurable in recovery quality.
Fat sits at 30% of calories, carbs fill the rest. This is the most forgiving macro distribution we give you. Maintenance is where the body can absorb day-to-day variance without breaking the plan. Miss a protein meal on a Saturday at a restaurant, catch it back the next day, and the phase continues. That flexibility is what makes maintenance sustainable for years.
The common mistake Andrew sees with users in maintenance is underestimating how much protein they actually eat. They log "one chicken breast" without weighing it and the entry is low by 50%, or they skip tracking on weekends and drift for two days. Two weeks of that and the scale moves down or stays flat while muscle quietly softens. The fix is simple: weigh protein sources for one week every quarter. Recalibrate. Continue.
Schoenfeld and Aragon's 2018 review on per-meal protein distribution is worth reading during maintenance specifically because meal timing becomes your lever when you are not driving change through calorie manipulation (Schoenfeld and Aragon, 2018, JISSN). Three solid meals spaced four to six hours apart with 30 to 50 grams of protein each is the low-friction version. Four meals is the version that shows up in better body comp over the long run.
Antonio's 2015 one-year crossover in trained males confirms that sustained high-protein intakes produce no adverse markers in healthy populations (Antonio et al, 2015, J Nutr Metab). The worry that maintenance-level protein at 2.3 g/kg lean mass is "too much" is a holdover from the 1989 RDA era and has not survived the research of the last two decades.
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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A year-one lifter asked the cleanest version of the question: "how do I know my protein number is working." You'll see it two places. First, your strength will hold or climb during a cut instead of regressing in week three or four. Second, your body composition will shift faster than the scale at any given calorie level. If neither of those is happening on 2.6 g/kg LBM, the problem isn't protein. Look elsewhere.
MFP's protein calculator sits on their blog and exists partly to drive installs of the MyFitnessPal app. That is not a criticism; it is how every free calculator on a commercial site works. The relevant question is whether the calculator itself is useful regardless of whether you install their app.
MFP's calculator is fine for a quick estimate and reasonable for a sedentary-to-moderately-active adult. Where it falls short is specificity: it does not split recommendations by training status, does not account for lean-mass-based calculations, and does not walk you through per-meal distribution. The output is one number with minimal context.
Our calculator takes the opposite approach: specific inputs, explicit framework, named sources, full macro context. If you want a calculator that works without requiring an app install or a food log, this one is here. If you want to track your meals in an app, FitCommit is built specifically for photo-based logging with visible confidence scores, which is a different value proposition than MFP's database-lookup approach.
Reviewed by Andrew Menechian, Head of Fitness at FitCommit. Last updated 2026-04-24.
Women need the same protein per kilogram of lean body mass as men. Biology does not care about gender at the muscle-synthesis level. A woman cutting targets 2.6 g/kg LBM, a woman bulking or maintaining targets 2.3 g/kg LBM. Because women on average carry more body fat at the same weight, the gram total is usually lower than a man of matched body weight, not because the rule is different but because the lean mass is different. The ISSN 2017 position stand does not differentiate protein targets by sex for exercising adults (Jäger et al, 2017, JISSN). If you are pregnant or breastfeeding, protein needs rise further and you should work with a clinician, not a calculator.
Total daily protein matters more than timing. Distribution matters more than the post-workout window. Schoenfeld and Aragon's 2018 review concluded that three to four protein feedings of 30 to 50 grams each, spaced three to five hours apart, produced better muscle protein synthesis outcomes than the same total protein packed into one or two meals (Schoenfeld and Aragon, 2018, JISSN). The old "anabolic window" of 30 to 60 minutes post-workout has been softened by the research. You do not need to sprint to the shaker bottle. You do need to avoid going six hours between meals on training days. Hit the daily total, spread it across the day, and the timing optimizations are rounding errors.
Estimate it. Navy circumference method, a bioimpedance scale, or a DEXA scan all give workable numbers. For most adults, default categories get you close enough to start: men average around 18% body fat, women around 25%. If you are visibly lean (abs showing), subtract five points. If you carry obvious excess fat, add five to ten. From there, lean body mass = total weight × (1 minus body fat decimal). Multiply LBM in kilograms by 2.6 for cutting or 2.3 for bulking and maintenance. The number will be within 10 to 15 grams of the precisely measured version, which is well inside the daily variance most people already have in their eating.
Indefinitely, for most people. Antonio's 2015 one-year crossover study in trained males found no adverse health markers at sustained intakes near 3.4 g/kg body weight (Antonio et al, 2015, J Nutr Metab). The ISSN 2017 position stand's review of longer-term data reached the same conclusion for healthy adults (Jäger et al, 2017, JISSN). A "high-protein" diet at 2.3 to 2.6 g/kg lean mass is not a cycle or a phase. It is the sustainable input level for anyone training with weights. This assumes you are healthy. If you have kidney disease, liver disease, or are pregnant, check with your doctor before sustaining intakes above 1.2 g/kg body weight.
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Protein + carbs + fat breakdown