Protein Intake Calculator
Use this Protein Intake Calculator to estimate how much protein you may need each day based on your body weight, training level, and fitness goal. It gives you a practical daily target, a useful range, and simple per-meal protein guidance.
Select your unit system, enter your body weight, choose your training level and goal, and calculate your daily protein intake. This tool uses practical grams-per-kilogram rules and shows both a main target and a flexible range you can use in real meal planning.
How to Use This Protein Intake Calculator
Choose metric or imperial units first. Then enter your body weight, select your training level, and choose your goal. Click the calculate button to get a daily protein target in grams, a flexible range, and simple per-meal guidance.
Use the result as a practical starting point. You can move toward the lower or upper end of the range depending on hunger, training load, recovery, and how lean or active you are.
What Is a Protein Intake Calculator?
A protein intake calculator estimates how much protein you may need each day based on your body weight, training level, and goal. People use protein targets to support recovery, muscle growth, strength training, fat loss, and general nutrition planning.
Protein needs change with context. Someone who trains hard or diets for fat loss often benefits from a higher protein intake than someone with little training and a maintenance goal.
Why Use Our Protein Intake Calculator?
- Estimate a practical daily protein target quickly
- Use body-weight based protein rules
- Get both a main target and a flexible daily range
- See simple meal-by-meal protein guidance
- Support fat loss, maintenance, and muscle gain goals
How This Protein Intake Calculator Works
This tool converts your body weight into kilograms if needed and then applies a protein rule based on your selected goal and training level. Instead of giving one random number, it gives you a main target plus a range you can actually use.
It also estimates how much protein you would need per meal if you split your intake across three, four, or five meals per day. That makes the result more practical for real meal planning.
Protein Rules Used
This calculator uses practical grams-per-kilogram ranges that fit general fitness and nutrition planning.
Fat Loss: around 2.0 to 2.4 g/kg, with higher targets often more useful during hard training and calorie deficits
Maintenance: around 1.4 to 2.0 g/kg, depending on how much you train
Muscle Gain: around 1.6 to 2.2 g/kg, depending on training volume and recovery demand
These values are practical estimates, not strict medical rules. Many people do well by staying close to the suggested range over time.
Protein Intake Calculation Example
Example: A person who weighs 70 kg, trains regularly, and wants muscle gain may get a target around 1.9 g/kg. That gives a daily protein target of about 133 grams per day.
If that person eats four meals per day, the calculator would suggest roughly 33 grams of protein per meal as a practical starting point.
Why Protein Matters
Protein helps support muscle repair, recovery, strength training adaptation, and fullness. It becomes especially useful during fat loss because it can help support lean mass while calories are lower.
A good protein target makes meal planning easier and gives you a clearer nutrition target than calories alone.