Protein Calculator to Lose Weight – Daily Protein Intake Tool

💪 Protein Calculator to Lose Weight

Find your personalized daily protein target to burn fat & preserve muscle

Quick Presets
📏 Units
📝 Your Details
Your Personalized Protein Plan
🍗 Top Protein Sources (per 100g / 3.5oz)
31g
Chicken Breast
26g
Tuna (canned)
25g
Turkey Breast
20g
Salmon
18g
Eggs (whole)
17g
Greek Yogurt
9g
Lentils (cooked)
8g
Tofu (firm)
💡 Tip: Animal proteins (chicken, fish, eggs) have a higher biological value and are more efficiently used by your body than plant sources. If you follow a plant-based diet, aim for the higher end of the protein range and combine sources like legumes + grains to get all essential amino acids.
📊 Protein Needs by Goal & Activity
Activity Level g per lb body wt g per kg body wt Primary Goal Diet Suitability
Sedentary0.54–0.64g1.2–1.4gPreserve muscleAll types
Lightly Active0.64–0.73g1.4–1.6gTone & trimAll types
Moderately Active0.73–0.82g1.6–1.8gFat loss + retain muscleStandard, Keto
Very Active0.82–1.0g1.8–2.2gCut fat, build strengthHigh Protein, IF
Athlete1.0–1.2g2.2–2.6gPerformance + recompositionHigh Protein
💡 Note: During a calorie deficit for weight loss, your protein needs are higher than maintenance — not lower. Higher protein intake protects lean muscle mass and keeps you fuller longer.
🍽 High-Protein Meal Examples
Meal Serving Protein Approx. Calories
Grilled Chicken Breast170g / 6oz~53g~280 kcal
Salmon Fillet170g / 6oz~34g~350 kcal
2 Whole Eggs + 3 Egg Whites~200g~27g~200 kcal
Greek Yogurt (plain, 0% fat)200g / 7oz~20g~110 kcal
Canned Tuna in Water140g / 5oz~33g~140 kcal
Whey Protein Shake1 scoop + water~25g~120 kcal
Lentil & Veggie Bowl300g cooked~27g~370 kcal
Tofu Stir-Fry (firm tofu)200g / 7oz~16g~180 kcal
Cottage Cheese (low-fat)200g / 7oz~24g~160 kcal
Shrimp (cooked)170g / 6oz~34g~160 kcal
💡 Per-Meal Tip: Research suggests the body can effectively utilize about 25–40g of protein per meal for muscle protein synthesis. Spread your daily target across 3–5 meals rather than eating it all at once for best results.
Lean Body Weight & Protein Reference
Body Weight Est. Lean Mass (avg) Min Protein/day Optimal Protein/day
120 lbs / 54 kg~84–96 lbs65–77g86–120g
140 lbs / 64 kg~98–112 lbs76–90g100–140g
160 lbs / 73 kg~112–128 lbs87–102g115–160g
180 lbs / 82 kg~126–144 lbs97–115g130–180g
200 lbs / 91 kg~140–160 lbs108–128g145–200g
220 lbs / 100 kg~154–176 lbs119–141g159–220g
💡 Lean Mass Tip: Some experts recommend basing your protein target on your goal body weight or lean body mass — not your total current weight — especially if you have a significant amount of weight to lose. This calculator uses your goal weight as the primary basis when a goal is entered.

Your body is full of protein, it runs through your muscles, bones, skin, hair and pretty much everywhere else. Beyond its structural role, protein does the most important chemical tasks. It powers the enzymes that drive reactions in your body and forms hemoglobin that carries oxygen through your blood.

That is why people call human proteins the basic building blocks of life. Your body breaks it into amino acids that later rebuild and fix the tissues as needed.

What Protein Does and Where to Find It

How does it work so well? Chains of proteins are made up of amino acids tied one to another. Around 20 different amino acids move around in the body, and they combine in endless ways to create various proteins.

If your body requires some new element; muscle fibers, bone density or whatever, it arranges those amino acids in long chains that hold togehter with peptide links.

Where do you get protein? Meat, poultry, fish, beans, peas, lentils, eggs, nuts, seeds and soy all give large amounts. Beyond just protein, you get B-vitamins, vitamin E, iron, zinc and magnesium.

Animal sources usually provide complete proteins rich in minerals, although there is debate about the content of packed fat compared too plant options. Not every protein food is innocent when it comes to levels of fat.

The choice of good sources depends on your eating style. Egg whites, chicken and dairy rank among the purest options. For vegetarians the task becomes a bit harder…

Most plant-based proteins come with many carbs. Tofu works well stir-fried or air-fried or crumbled in burritos. Textured plant protein works well in tacos and sauces.

Beans and lentils shine in stews and broths. Combine grains with vegetables. For instance beans with rice or quinoa, and you will have a firm nutritious base.

Cheese, lentils, vegetables and mushrooms all bring protein to thetable without too much cost.

How much do you truly need? The standard advice for a sitting adult moves around 0.8 grams for every kilo of body weight. Folk weighing 165 pounds, which matches around 75 kilos, aim for about 60 grams a day.

For growing children and pregnant or nursing women the need rises, because their bodies build extra tissue. If you have kidney problems, stay at that 0.8-gram standard per kilo (your kidneys will thank you for it). Athletes and lifters who train hard commonly aim for higher amounts.

Getting enough is not as hard as it sounds. A normal three-ounce piece of chicken gives around 26 grams of protein, more than half of your daily minimum. Most folks reach 15 to 30 grams each meal without big effort.

Protein powders provide about 20 to 30 grams each serving, while bars can reach 40 or more. Whey protein is the favorite for muscle growth. Plain soy protein stays neutral in taste and blends well into smoothies or broths.

Pure powder stores usually 70 to 80 percent of protein per weight.

Protein Calculator to Lose Weight – Daily Protein Intake Tool

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