The "anabolic window" — the supposed 30-minute window after a workout where you must consume protein or forfeit your gains — has been one of fitness culture's most persistent myths. Modern research has significantly refined our understanding of protein timing, revealing a more nuanced and, frankly, more manageable picture. Here is what the evidence actually says.
Does Protein Timing Actually Matter?
The short answer: yes, but not as critically as once believed. The anabolic window is real but far wider than the original 30-minute claim suggested. Current research indicates that muscle protein synthesis is elevated for up to 24–48 hours after resistance training — meaning the entire day's protein intake matters more than the precise post-workout timing. However, within this broader window, strategic protein distribution does produce measurably better outcomes.
The Most Important Protein Timing Principle: Distribution
The most evidence-backed protein timing principle is not when relative to exercise you eat protein — it is even distribution across meals throughout the day. Research shows that consuming 0.4g protein per kg bodyweight at each meal (typically 3–4 meals) maximises muscle protein synthesis (MPS) far more effectively than the same total protein consumed in 1–2 large meals. Each meal should contain a minimum of 2.5–3g of leucine — the amino acid that acts as the primary trigger for MPS signalling. Sources rich in leucine: whey, eggs, chicken, beef, fish, Greek yogurt.
Pre-Workout Protein
Consuming protein 1–3 hours before training provides amino acids to fuel the workout, reduces muscle protein breakdown during exercise, and contributes to post-workout MPS. A meal containing 20–40g protein 1–2 hours before training is effective. If training fasted (e.g., early morning), a small protein source (whey shake, 2–3 eggs) consumed 30–60 minutes before training is beneficial.
Post-Workout Protein: The Real Window
While the 30-minute window is overstated, consuming protein within 2 hours after training is still advantageous — particularly if training in a fasted state or more than 5–6 hours since the previous protein-containing meal. Whey protein is the ideal post-workout choice: it is rapidly absorbed and exceptionally high in leucine (approximately 11% leucine by weight). Aim for 20–40g protein post-workout. The classic chicken breast, Greek yogurt, cottage cheese, or a quality protein shake all work well.
Morning Protein — The Highest-Leverage Timing
Of all protein timing strategies, consuming adequate protein at breakfast shows the highest leverage effect on daily satiety, muscle protein synthesis, and weight management outcomes. As discussed in our 30-30-30 rule guide, 30g protein at breakfast is one of the most impactful daily nutrition habits you can establish. It sets up blood sugar stability, reduces cortisol, primes GLP-1 release (see our GLP-1 foods guide), and reduces total daily caloric intake through improved satiety.
Before Bed Protein: The Casein Advantage
Muscle protein synthesis continues during sleep — meaning the amino acid availability during your overnight fast matters. Research shows consuming casein protein (40g) before bed significantly increases overnight MPS and muscle recovery. Casein digests slowly, providing a steady amino acid supply throughout the 7–9 hour sleep window. Best sources: cottage cheese, casein protein powder, Greek yogurt. This is particularly valuable on training days and for older adults where anabolic resistance (reduced MPS efficiency per gram of protein) makes every protein-stimulating opportunity more important.
Daily Protein Recommendations
| Goal | Daily Protein Target | Example (70kg person) |
|---|---|---|
| General health | 0.8g/kg bodyweight | 56g/day |
| Weight loss (preserve muscle) | 1.6–2.0g/kg | 112–140g/day |
| Muscle building | 1.6–2.2g/kg | 112–154g/day |
| Older adults (60+) | 1.2–1.6g/kg | 84–112g/day |
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the 30-minute anabolic window real?
The "30-minute window" is largely a myth — the window for effective post-workout protein is closer to 2 hours. Total daily protein and even distribution matters far more than precise timing.
Can you absorb more than 30–40g protein per meal?
Yes. The body can absorb protein from any meal size. However, about 25–40g per meal is optimal for maximising muscle protein synthesis stimulation — beyond this, surplus amino acids are used for energy or other metabolic processes rather than additional MPS. Eating more protein than 40g in one sitting is not harmful, but spreads protein across 4 meals for best muscle results.
Should vegetarians and vegans time protein differently?
Plant proteins generally have lower leucine content and bioavailability. Vegetarians and vegans should aim for the higher end of protein recommendations (2.0g/kg) and should combine complementary plant proteins at each meal to ensure adequate leucine intake.
Conclusion
Protein timing is real but its practical importance is secondary to total daily protein intake and even distribution. Focus first on hitting your daily target split across 3–4 meals, each containing at least 20–30g high-quality protein. Then optimise: morning protein for satiety and GLP-1, post-workout within 2 hours, and casein before bed on training days. These strategies, combined with consistent resistance training, create the optimal environment for muscle growth and fat loss.



