How Much Protein Should I Eat a Day in the UK? - Fittux

How Much Protein Should I Eat a Day in the UK?

Smarter Nutrition Starts with the Fittux Protein Calculator

When it comes to protein, you’ll often see big, bold claims: “Eat 200 g a day!”, “Double your muscle!” — but the truth in the UK context is far more nuanced and far easier to manage. Whether you’re trying to build muscle, lose weight, or simply maintain your strength as you get older, understanding your daily protein intake is the smart first step.

 

And yes, we’ve got a free protein calculator below to tailor your target based on bodyweight, activity, and goal. We’ll walk you through how it works, why the numbers matter, and where supplements like Fittux Whey Protein Chocolate and Fittux Whey Protein Vanilla fit in — without the hype.


Let’s dive in.

 

Why Protein Matters — Not Just for the Gym

Protein is more than muscle-building fuel. It plays a role in:

  • Repairing tissues — after workouts, everyday wear and tear, even during sleep.

  • Maintaining muscle mass as you age (yes, strength matters even if you’re not “training hard”).

  • Supporting immune function, hormone production, and general metabolism.

 

In the UK, while most adults get enough to avoid deficiency, your optimum amount depends on your weight, activity level, and goal.

For example:

  • For a “general healthy adult” not training hard, guidance suggests roughly 0.75 g per kg bodyweight per day. 

  • For active people who train regularly, higher numbers like 1.2-2.0 g per kg appear in sport-nutrition guidance. 

    So yes — context matters. Let’s break down how you find your own number.

 

How to Work Out Your Daily Protein Target (UK Focus)

Here’s how to find your ideal number:


1. Know your bodyweight

Enter your weight in kilograms or select stones and pounds in the calculator below.


2. Choose your activity level

Pick the option that best describes your routine — from sedentary to heavy training or a fat-loss phase.


3. See your daily range

Our calculator estimates how many grams of protein per day you need based on your weight and goal.


4. Spread it through the day

Eating protein every 3–4 hours supports better recovery, strength, and muscle maintenance.

 

Use the Fittux Protein Intake Calculator

Protein Intake Calculator (UK)

Estimate your daily protein needs based on your weight and activity level. This is a general guide — not medical advice.

Enter your weight, set the unit (kg or stones + lbs), pick your activity/goal, and click Calculate.

You’ll see your estimated daily range and meal-by-meal breakdown.

It’s built on commonly used sports-nutrition guidance (1.2-2.2 g protein per kg of bodyweight per day for active adults) and is intended for education — not to replace personalised advice.

 

How to Interpret Your Results

Once you input your details:

 

  • The range gives you a minimum and maximum daily protein intake.

  • Use the lower end if you’re more casual with training or your goal is maintenance.

  • Use the higher end if your goal is muscle growth, you’re in a calorie-deficit (fat-loss), or you drag through intense workouts.

  • The per-meal suggestion helps you plan: if your goal is 90 g/day and you eat three meals, aim ~30 g per meal.

 

Specific Targets: What UK Guidance Says

Here are some easier-to-grasp benchmarks in the UK setting:

 

  • For a 60 kg woman: ~45 g/day (0.75 g/kg) is the baseline. 

  • For a 75 kg man: ~56 g/day (0.75 g/kg) is the equivalent baseline. 

  • But for muscle-building or heavy training: 1.2-2.0 g/kg is cited. For a 75 kg man that’s ~90-150 g/day. 

  • For older adults (> 65 yrs), research shows some benefit in higher intakes, e.g., 1.0-1.2 g/kg to support muscle-maintenance.
     

So your personal range depends quite directly on what you’re doing and why you’re doing it.

 

Common Questions & Myths

Q: “Should I aim for 200 g of protein?”

A: Unlikely unless you weigh ~100 kg and have intense training. Most UK adults overshoot basic needs. 


Q: “Will more protein burn fat?”

A: Protein helps preserve muscle during fat-loss, increases satiety, and supports recovery — but alone it won’t trim fat if calories aren’t managed.


Q: “Do I need protein supplements?”

A: Not always. Whole-food protein sources are sufficient for many. Supplements are convenient but not mandatory. 


Q: “Can too much protein be harmful?”

A: In healthy individuals, moderate higher intakes (≤2 g/kg) are generally safe. But extremely high intakes over time may put strain on kidneys or displace other vital nutrients. 

 

How to Hit Your Target: Food, Timing & Strategy

1. Focus on protein-rich food choices

Beans, lentils, tofu, lean meat, poultry, fish, dairy — a mix of plant and animal sources is fine. 


2. Spread it across meals

If your target is 100 g/day, aim for ~25-30 g at breakfast, lunch, dinner — plus snacks if needed.


3. Post-workout matters

After resistance training, ~20-25 g is often suggested to support muscle repair. 


4. When in a calorie deficit (fat-loss)

Higher end of your protein range helps maintain muscle despite lower overall calories.


5. Add convenience with supplements when needed

For example:

  • Fittux Whey Protein Chocolate 600 g – a mix of whey concentrate & isolate, from hormone-free UK/EU milk, flavoured with cocoa, sweetened with stevia, no added sugar.

  • Fittux Whey Protein Vanilla 600 g – similar profile but vanilla flavour, clean, versatile.

  • Fittux Pre-Workout Energy – Orange 440 g – formulated with nitric-oxide precursors, amino acids, creatine, caffeine, and key vitamins and minerals to support focus and performance before training. A refreshing orange flavour that mixes easily for gym, run, or high-intensity sessions.
  • Fittux Post-Workout Recovery – Chocolate 1.8 kg – a complete recovery blend of protein, carbohydrates, creatine, BCAAs, electrolytes, and essential nutrients designed to refuel, repair, and restore after training. Smooth chocolate flavour for convenient recovery nutrition.

  • These products make it easier to hit your daily protein and energy targets around training — supporting performance before, during, and after workouts — without resorting to unnecessary additives or hype.

 

How Much Protein Per Day When Building Muscle?

When you’re intentionally training for muscle growth, your target shifts:

 

  • Use ~1.4-2.0 g per kg bodyweight (maybe up to 2.2 in some fat-loss/phase scenarios).

  • Make sure you’re doing the right training (resistance/weight training) and getting enough total calories — protein doesn’t act alone.

  • Use the calculator above to choose your range and follow the per-meal suggestion.

  • Example: 80 kg person aiming to build muscle → ~100-160 g protein/day.

 

How Much Protein Per Day to Lose Weight?

When fat-loss is the goal:

  • Higher protein supports muscle retention and hunger management.

  • Aim for the higher end of your personal range (e.g., 1.6-2.2 g/kg) if you’re in a calorie deficit.

  • Pair this with strength training and overall calorie control.

 

Daily Protein Intake for Women & Men (UK Reference)

  • Women (baseline healthy weight ~60 kg): ~45 g/day minimum. 

  • Men (baseline ~75 kg): ~56 g/day minimum. 

  • But again — if you’re active or training, these are lower boundaries.

 

Why Many UK Adults Already Hit Their Protein Targets

Surprisingly, surveys show many UK adults already exceed baseline recommendations. 

The key isn’t just hitting “enough” but aligning your intake with your goal (maintenance, growth, or fat-loss) and ensuring your protein comes from quality sources.

 

How Much Protein Supplement Per Day?

Supplements should fill gaps or support convenience — not replace whole foods.

 

  • If your diet is already rich in protein foods, you may need little or none.

  • If you struggle to hit your target (busy schedule, appetite issues, etc.), a clean whey like Fittux is practical.

  • Follow serving guidance (e.g., 1 scoop ≈22-23 g protein in our products) and adjust based on your target — e.g., if your target is 120 g/day, 1-2 scoops might cover ~40-45 g plus food.

  • Always keep hydration, fibre and micronutrients in check.

 

Tips for Getting It Right

  • Weigh yourself (or know your best estimate) so kg conversion works.

  • Use the calculator above to get your tailored target.

  • Track your meals for a week — are you hitting your number? If not, adjust (more protein food or supplement).

  • Pair with training and rest — protein works best when your body uses it (workout + recovery).

  • Update periodically — as your weight, training, goal or age changes, so may your target.

 

Explore More High-Protein Guides from Fittux

Want to explore high-protein food options? Check out our blog: What Food Is Highest in Protein?

And if you’re ready to use our top-quality powders: both Fittux Whey Protein Chocolate and Vanilla are designed for everyday use — before or after training, or simply as a protein boost during the day.

 

Final Takeaway

Your best daily protein intake isn’t a one-size-fits-all mega number. It’s about doing the simple things well:

 

  • Using your bodyweight and activity to calculate a realistic range.

  • Eating consistent protein across meals.

  • Tailoring for your goal (maintenance, build, or lean down).

  • If you choose supplements, using them smartly — not massively.

 

Using the calculator above, you’ll get a clear, personalised target — then it’s up to you to hit it with smart food choices, training, and consistency.


Here’s to hitting your number, training strong, recovering well, and making every gram of protein count.

Discover more at Fittux.com — your home for premium gym clothing, nutrition, and lifestyle essentials.


Disclaimer

This article and calculator are for general educational use only. They’re designed to help you estimate your personal protein needs based on current UK and sports-nutrition guidelines. Everyone’s body is different, so if you have a medical condition or specific dietary requirements, it’s best to speak with your GP or a registered dietitian.

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