If you’ve spent any time searching for protein advice online, you’ve probably encountered wildly conflicting information. One source says 50 grams daily is plenty; another insists you need your body weight in grams. The truth? Both are likely wrong — and the answer depends entirely on your goals, age, and activity level. Let’s cut through the noise and answer the question: how much protein do you actually need?
The RDA Is a Floor, Not a Target
The current Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) of 0.8 grams per kilogram of body weight has been around for over 70 years. As Mike explains in his breakdown at 0:35, this number was established using nitrogen balance studies and was designed to prevent deficiency — not to optimise health, muscle retention, or performance.
Think of it this way: eating 0.8 g/kg is like putting the bare minimum fuel in your car and calling it a full tank. You’ll technically run, but you’re nowhere near operating at your best. The foundation versus house analogy at 1:15 makes this crystal clear — the RDA is your foundation, but the house (optimal intake) requires considerably more building material.
In January 2026, the US Dietary Guidelines finally acknowledged this gap, raising protein recommendations to 1.2–1.6 g/kg — nearly double the old standard. While researchers at Stanford and Harvard have pushed back on the exact magnitude of the increase, the direction is undeniably correct: most people benefit from eating more protein than the outdated RDA suggests.
How Much Protein Do You Actually Need? The Slider Model
Rather than giving everyone the same number, think of your protein needs as a slider that adjusts based on your circumstances. Mike introduces this framework at 2:38, and it’s genuinely practical for figuring out where you fall.
Here’s how the slider works:
- Baseline (active adult): 1.2 g/kg — your starting point if you’re moderately active with no specific physique goals
- Endurance athletes: 1.2–1.4 g/kg — amino acids get burned as fuel during prolonged cardio
- Strength and power athletes: 1.6–2.2 g/kg — more muscle breakdown means more rebuilding required
- Fat loss: 1.8–2.8 g/kg — as explained at 3:47, higher protein intake dramatically improves hunger management and satiety without relying on willpower
- Pregnant or lactating: 1.5–1.9 g/kg — rapid tissue growth creates substantial physiological demand
- Older adults (55–60+): above 1.2 g/kg — anabolic resistance means protein receptors become less sensitive with age, requiring higher intake per meal to trigger the same muscle-building response
For someone pursuing fat loss while preserving muscle, this often means eating 1.8–2.8 g/kg. That’s substantially higher than what most Canadians consume — but the evidence supporting this range for body composition goals is robust.
Distribution Matters More Than Total Intake
Here’s where many people go wrong: they focus on hitting a daily protein number while ignoring how that protein is distributed throughout the day. Muscle protein synthesis doesn’t run continuously — it pulses, peaks, and resets over approximately three hours, as Mike explains at 6:56.
This has massive practical implications. If you eat 90 grams of protein in one sitting, you trigger one pulse of muscle protein synthesis. Split that same 90 grams across three meals, and you trigger three pulses. The excess protein from that single large meal doesn’t get stored for later muscle building — it gets oxidised and burned for energy.
The practical target? Aim for 30–40 grams of protein per meal, spread across 3–4 eating occasions daily. This distribution maximises the muscle-building signal from every gram you consume. At Leverage Nutrition, this is one of the first adjustments we help clients make — often with noticeable improvements in satiety and body composition within weeks.
Debunking the Protein Myths
Two persistent myths continue to make people hesitant about increasing their protein intake. Let’s address both with actual evidence.
Myth 1: Protein damages your kidneys. At 7:42, Mike references meta-analyses of healthy individuals consuming up to 3.3 g/kg that found zero evidence of kidney damage. Healthy kidneys adapt to higher protein loads without issue. The important caveat: people with existing chronic kidney disease should indeed limit protein under medical guidance — but that’s a very different population.
Myth 2: Protein leeches calcium from bones. This misconception arose from older research that measured urinary calcium excretion after high-protein meals and assumed the calcium came from bones. Direct bone density studies at 8:16 tell a completely different story: higher protein intake actually increases bone density. The calcium in urine came from improved gut absorption, not bone degradation.
Resistance Training Is the Cake — Protein Is Just Frosting
Perhaps the most important point comes near the end of the video. At 8:46, Mike references Stanford Medicine’s March 2026 position: protein quantity is only a thin layer of frosting on top of what actually drives muscle preservation and metabolic health — lifting weights.
In a calorie deficit, resistance training is the only exercise modality that consistently produces fat loss without muscle loss. You can eat 160 grams of protein daily and still lose muscle if you’re not giving that protein a reason to be used. The stimulus from resistance training signals your body to preserve and build muscle tissue; protein provides the raw materials to make that happen.
This doesn’t mean protein is unimportant — it absolutely matters. But optimising your protein intake while neglecting strength training is like perfecting your frosting recipe when you haven’t baked the cake.
The Bottom Line
How much protein do you actually need? More than the 0.8 g/kg RDA, but the exact amount depends on your goals. For most active Canadians, 1.2 g/kg is a reasonable baseline. If you’re focused on fat loss or building muscle, slide that number up toward 1.6–2.2 g/kg or even higher during aggressive dieting phases.
Remember the three key takeaways: distribute your protein across 3–4 meals rather than loading it into one; aim for at least 30 grams per meal to cross the muscle protein synthesis threshold; and recalculate your target dynamically as your age, activity level, and life stage change. Most importantly, pair adequate protein with consistent resistance training — because without the stimulus, even optimal protein intake won’t preserve your muscle.
Want personalised guidance on dialling in your protein intake for your specific goals? Learn more about evidence-based nutrition coaching at Leverage Nutrition.
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