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GLP-1 Protein Calculator: How Much Protein You Really Need

The standard dietary recommendation for protein is 0.8g per kilogram of body weight. This recommendation is based on sedentary populations in energy balance. You are neither. You're on a GLP-1 medication, in a caloric deficit, and likely trying to preserve muscle during weight loss. The standard recommendation will fail you.

This guide provides the exact formula to calculate your personal protein needs on GLP-1, explains why standard recommendations are insufficient, and shows you how to distribute that protein to maximize muscle preservation.

Why Standard RDA Doesn't Work for GLP-1 Users

The recommended dietary allowance (RDA) of 0.8g/kg was established for individuals at energy balance with normal appetite. Three factors make this irrelevant for you:

1. Caloric Deficit Amplifies Protein Needs

When you're in a deficit (which GLP-1 naturally creates), your body is under threat of catabolism—breaking down tissue for energy. Protein serves two roles:

At 0.8g/kg in a deficit, you don't have enough amino acids to do both. You'll feel hungrier and lose more muscle mass.

2. GLP-1 Reduces Absolute Food Intake

Normal people in a caloric deficit can still eat normal foods, just in smaller quantities. GLP-1 users eat 30-40% less by volume. This means fewer opportunities to hit protein targets, making each meal more critical.

3. Leucine Threshold Requirements Don't Scale to Low-Protein Intakes

Muscle protein synthesis is triggered by ~2.5-3g of leucine per meal. If you're eating at 0.8g/kg (65g daily for an 82 kg person), and split across 4 meals, you're getting ~1.5g leucine per meal—below the threshold needed to trigger growth. You'd spend most days in muscle breakdown, not preservation.

"The RDA was designed for sedentary populations in energy balance. If that was you, great. But you're in a deficit on appetite suppressant medication. You need 2x the protein of the general population recommendation."

The GLP-1 Protein Formula

Research on muscle preservation during caloric deficit—combined with GLP-1-specific constraints—suggests the following formula:

Calculate Your Daily Protein Target

Formula Breakdown

  1. Use your weight in kilograms. If you only know your weight in pounds, divide by 2.2 to convert.
  2. Select multiplier based on activity + goals:
    • Sedentary: 1.2g/kg (base minimum for GLP-1)
    • Light activity: 1.4-1.6g/kg
    • Moderate activity: 1.6-1.8g/kg
    • High activity: 1.8-2.2g/kg
    • Add 0.2-0.4g/kg if goal is strength building
  3. Multiply: Weight (kg) × Multiplier = Daily Protein Target (g)

Examples:

Why These Multipliers Work for GLP-1 Users

1.2g/kg is the floor. Below this and you cannot preserve muscle in a deficit, period. This aligns with recent research on protein requirements during aggressive weight loss.

1.4-1.6g/kg is the sweet spot for most. Provides enough amino acids to hit the leucine threshold multiple times daily, maintains satiety, and works within typical GLP-1 appetite suppression.

1.8-2.2g/kg is for serious athletes. If you're resistance training 4-5+ times weekly, you need more amino acids for recovery and adaptation.

Practical Application: Protein Distribution

Once you have your daily target, the next step is distribution. Research shows that eating protein in 4 separate meals, each with 2.5-3g leucine, maximizes muscle protein synthesis far better than eating it all at dinner.

How to Distribute Your Protein Across the Day

Step 1: Divide your daily target by 4. This is your target per meal.

Example: 150g daily ÷ 4 meals = 37.5g per meal

Step 2: Choose protein sources that deliver 2.5-3g leucine per meal. Here's how much of each food you need:

Protein Sources and Leucine Content (amounts to hit 2.5-3g leucine)

Step 3: Combine sources to reach your per-meal protein target while hitting the leucine threshold.

Sample Daily Distribution (160g protein target, 4 meals)

This distribution ensures:

Foods With Highest Protein Efficiency (Protein per 100 Calories)

On GLP-1, you have limited calories to work with. These foods give you the most protein bang for your caloric buck:

Most Efficient Protein Sources

Adjusting as You Lose Weight

Your protein needs change as your body weight changes. As you lose weight, recalculate quarterly:

Supplemental Protein: When Whole Foods Aren't Enough

Many GLP-1 users struggle to hit protein targets with whole foods alone due to nausea and appetite suppression. Strategic supplementation helps:

Types of Protein Supplements

Usage strategy: Protein powder should comprise 20-30% of your daily protein, not more. Use it to fill gaps after whole foods, especially post-workout and as convenient snacks on injection days.

Common Calculation Mistakes

Mistake 1: Using Goal Weight Instead of Current Weight

Calculate based on current weight. As you lose weight, your protein needs decrease. If you're 90 kg aiming for 82 kg, don't eat for your goal weight now—you'll overeat protein.

Mistake 2: Eating All Protein at One Meal

Muscle protein synthesis has a leucine threshold and a saturation point. You cannot synthesize muscle from 150g protein eaten at dinner. Distribution matters more than total.

Mistake 3: Ignoring Activity Level

If you're not resistance training, you need 1.2g/kg minimum. If you're training 4x weekly, you need 1.8-2.0g/kg. These aren't suggestions—they're based on how your muscles recover.

Mistake 4: Only Tracking Protein, Not Leucine

Two 30g protein snacks are not equal if one has 2g leucine and the other has 1g leucine. Track both if you want to optimize. (This is why AI coaching helps—it does this calculation automatically.)

Mistake 5: Not Adjusting as Weight Changes

Protein needs are weight-dependent. Every 5 kg lost means a potential 5-10g change in daily protein requirement. Recalculate quarterly to stay accurate.

Example Calculations: Real Scenarios

Scenario 1: New to GLP-1, Sedentary, Focus on Weight Loss

Person: 100 kg, minimal exercise, want to lose weight fast

Calculation: 100 kg × 1.2g/kg = 120g protein daily

Distribution: 30g × 4 meals. Focus on hitting 2.5-3g leucine each meal with easily digestible sources (chicken, fish, yogurt).

Scenario 2: Moderate Activity, Goal is Body Recomposition

Person: 82 kg, resistance training 3x/week, want to preserve muscle while losing fat

Calculation: 82 kg × 1.7g/kg = 139g protein daily

Distribution: 35g × 4 meals. Emphasize post-workout protein (within 2 hours of training).

Scenario 3: Serious Lifter on GLP-1

Person: 86 kg, resistance training 5x/week, want to maximize strength

Calculation: 86 kg × 2.0g/kg = 172g protein daily

Distribution: 43g × 4 meals. Maximize leucine at each meal (2.8-3.2g). Use protein powder as needed to hit targets despite appetite suppression.

How EverStrong Handles Protein Calculation

This entire calculation process—factoring in weight, activity, goals, weight changes, meal timing, leucine distribution, and nausea tolerance—can be automated. EverStrong's AI coach:

Instead of doing these calculations manually every week, let AI handle it.

Key Takeaways

The formula is simple once you know it. The hard part is executing daily—ensuring every meal hits the target, adjusting as weight changes, timing around workouts, and managing nausea. That's where automation and AI coaching transform the equation from theoretical to practical.

Stop Calculating, Start Executing

Your AI nutrition coach is ready to build your personalised plan—exact protein targets, leucine-balanced meals, and automatic adjustments as you progress.

Calculate Your Protein Plan Now