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This article is for educational purposes only. Consult a dietitian or GP for personalised nutrition advice.
If you're trying to lose weight and you're not paying close attention to your protein intake, you're almost certainly making the process harder than it needs to be. Of all the dietary levers available — caloric restriction, meal timing, macronutrient ratio — protein intake for weight loss has the strongest and most consistent evidence base behind it. It's not a trend. It's biochemistry.
This guide breaks down exactly how much protein you need to lose fat, what the science actually says about high-protein diets, and how to hit your targets practically as an Australian — including what to buy at Coles or Woolworths without spending a fortune.
When people talk about losing weight, they tend to fixate on carbohydrates or total calories. Both matter — but protein operates through three distinct mechanisms that no other macronutrient can replicate. Understanding these mechanisms makes it clear why protein and weight loss are so tightly linked.
Protein is the most satiating macronutrient, and this isn't simply because it's filling in a mechanical sense. It actively changes the hormonal environment of your gut and brain.
After a protein-rich meal, your gut releases three key satiety hormones:
Simultaneously, protein suppresses ghrelin, the primary hunger-stimulating hormone. Lower ghrelin means you feel less hungry between meals — a critical advantage when you're eating in a caloric deficit.
Every macronutrient requires energy to digest, absorb, and metabolise. This is called the thermic effect of food (TEF), and the difference between macronutrients is striking:
| Macronutrient | TEF (% of calories consumed) | |---------------|-------------------------------| | Protein | 25–30% | | Carbohydrate | 6–8% | | Fat | 2–3% |
This means that for every 100 calories of protein you eat, approximately 25–30 calories are used up in digestion and processing. No other macronutrient comes close. On a high-protein diet of 150–180g per day, the TEF advantage can amount to 80–120 extra calories burned daily compared to a lower-protein diet with identical total calories — the equivalent of a 20–30 minute walk, every single day, just from eating.
This is perhaps the most clinically important mechanism of all. When you eat less than you burn, your body is forced to draw on stored energy. The problem is that in a deficit — especially a large one — it doesn't just burn fat. It also breaks down muscle protein for fuel, a process called muscle catabolism.
Losing muscle during weight loss is one of the worst outcomes possible. Muscle is metabolically expensive tissue: the more of it you carry, the higher your resting metabolic rate. Lose muscle on a diet, and you'll find it progressively harder to maintain your weight loss long-term. You also get weaker, lose functional capacity, and often end up at a lower weight but a higher body fat percentage — sometimes called "skinny fat."
Adequate protein intake for weight loss is the primary dietary tool for preventing this. Higher protein intake signals the body to preserve lean muscle tissue and preferentially burn fat. Combined with resistance training, a well-structured high-protein diet can allow you to lose fat while holding — or even gaining — muscle simultaneously.
This is the question most people search for, and the answer depends on who you ask. Let's be direct: the official government recommended dietary allowance of 0.8g of protein per kilogram of body weight is not adequate for weight loss. It is a minimum for preventing deficiency in sedentary adults, not an optimal target for people trying to change their body composition.
The current evidence-based consensus among sports nutrition researchers and obesity medicine specialists for people actively trying to lose weight:
1.6–2.2g of protein per kilogram of body weight per day
This range is supported by:
For highly active individuals or those doing regular resistance training, some researchers recommend the upper end of this range (2.0–2.4g/kg), particularly during aggressive caloric restriction.
Here is what this looks like in real numbers for common Australian body weights:
| Body Weight | Minimum (1.6g/kg) | Target (1.8g/kg) | Upper (2.2g/kg) | |-------------|-------------------|------------------|-----------------| | 70 kg | 112g/day | 126g/day | 154g/day | | 90 kg | 144g/day | 162g/day | 198g/day | | 110 kg | 176g/day | 198g/day | 242g/day |
A practical starting point: aim for 1.8g/kg and adjust based on hunger, performance, and progress. This hits the middle of the evidence-supported range and is achievable with whole foods for most Australians.
For reference, the average Australian adult consumes approximately 80–100g of protein per day (CSIRO data) — well below the optimal range for active weight loss.
The hunger-suppressing effects of protein are among the most replicated findings in nutrition science. Here is what the randomised controlled trial evidence actually shows.
Research published in Cell Metabolism found that increasing protein from 15% to 30% of total calorie intake — while keeping calories constant — led to spontaneous reductions in daily food intake and significant decreases in ghrelin levels throughout the day. Participants were not asked to eat less; they simply wanted to, because protein kept ghrelin low.
One of the most practically useful findings in protein research: a high-protein breakfast (approximately 30–35g of protein) can reduce total daily caloric intake by up to 400kcal in some study populations.
A randomised trial by Leidy et al. published in Obesity followed overweight adults eating either a high-protein breakfast, a normal-protein breakfast, or skipping breakfast. The high-protein group spontaneously consumed around 400kcal less across the remainder of the day, driven by reduced appetite and lower evening snacking. The mechanism was confirmed hormonal: higher morning PYY and lower ghrelin persisted for the rest of the day.
This has significant real-world implications. Choosing eggs, Greek yoghurt, or a protein-rich smoothie over toast or cereal in the morning does not just add protein — it reshapes your hormonal environment for the following 12 hours.
A 2024 review in Advances in Nutrition examining 22 randomised crossover trials found that protein's satiety advantage over carbohydrate or fat persisted across meals — not just at the meal where protein was consumed. The authors concluded that protein's effect on PYY and GLP-1 appears cumulative: higher protein intake throughout the day progressively shifts the body toward lower hunger signalling.
For people dealing with insulin resistance — a condition that commonly accompanies excess weight and disrupts hunger signalling — the satiety benefits of protein may be even more pronounced, as the hormonal disruption caused by insulin dysregulation is partially offset by protein's direct gut hormone effects.
Decades of diet wars have generated enormous confusion. The honest summary from the current meta-analytic evidence:
All structured diets with adequate protein produce meaningful weight loss. The variable that best predicts body composition outcomes is protein content — not carbohydrate or fat restriction.
A landmark meta-analysis by Leidy et al. in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, later confirmed by a Cochrane review, found that when protein content was controlled across different diet types, the apparent advantage of low-carb or low-fat diets largely disappeared. The short-term superiority often attributed to low-carbohydrate diets was primarily explained by their higher protein content, not the carbohydrate reduction itself.
A 2024 network meta-analysis in JAMA Network Open analysed 220+ randomised controlled trials involving over 30,000 participants. Key findings:
For weight loss specifically, the evidence suggests quantity trumps source. Animal and plant proteins produce similar satiety and body composition outcomes when total protein is matched. However, individual amino acid profiles matter for muscle protein synthesis — animal proteins and soy are considered "complete" proteins (containing all essential amino acids), while most plant proteins require combining sources.
For Australians following vegetarian or vegan diets, combining legumes with grains (rice and lentils, hummus on bread) across the day achieves complete amino acid profiles without requiring rigid meal combinations.
Choosing the right protein sources makes hitting your daily targets sustainable rather than a chore. Here are the most practical options for Australian adults, focused on what is widely available and affordable.
Approximately 6–7g protein per egg, with a complete amino acid profile and high bioavailability. A 12-pack from Coles or Woolworths costs around $6–8. Two eggs at breakfast contributes 12–14g protein for under $1.50 — one of the most affordable and nutritious protein sources available. Current evidence does not support limiting egg intake for healthy adults concerned about cholesterol.
The short answer: timing matters less than total daily intake, but it is not irrelevant. Optimising protein timing can make hitting your daily target easier and may modestly improve body composition outcomes.
As covered in the satiety section, a high-protein breakfast appears to have disproportionate effects on appetite and total daily caloric intake. Practically, shifting your first meal from a carbohydrate-dominant one (cereal, toast, pastry) to a protein-dominant one (eggs, Greek yoghurt, cottage cheese, protein smoothie) is one of the highest-leverage changes you can make.
Target: 30–40g protein at breakfast. Two eggs with 170g Greek yoghurt and a serve of cottage cheese achieves this without any supplements.
For people doing resistance training — strongly recommended during any weight loss phase — protein timing around exercise is relevant. The idea that you must eat protein within 30 minutes of training is largely a myth, but consuming adequate protein within a few hours of resistance training does support muscle protein synthesis.
A practical approach: eat a protein-containing meal 2–3 hours before training, or have a protein-rich meal within 1–2 hours after. Exact timing is far less important than total daily intake.
Research consistently finds that distributing protein across 3–4 meals produces better muscle protein synthesis than consuming the same total protein in one or two large meals. This is because muscle protein synthesis is stimulated by a threshold dose of the amino acid leucine — typically achieved with approximately 25–40g of protein — after which additional protein at that same meal provides diminishing returns.
Practically: aim for 30–50g of protein per meal across 3–4 meals, rather than attempting to eat 180g of protein in a single sitting.
A common concern with time-restricted eating protocols is whether compressing your eating window compromises protein targets. Research published in 2025 suggests that consuming adequate protein (1.6–2.0g/kg) within a 6–8 hour eating window does not impair muscle protein synthesis compared to the same protein distributed across a standard day — provided total intake is met. The key is prioritising protein-dense foods in each meal during the feeding window rather than filling up on lower-protein foods first.
This section deserves its own emphasis because the failure to preserve muscle during weight loss is one of the most common — and most consequential — mistakes people make.
When you lose weight without adequate protein and resistance training, a significant proportion of what you lose is muscle, not just fat. Research suggests that on a typical low-calorie diet without protein optimisation, 20–30% of weight lost may come from lean mass. This matters because:
A meta-analysis in the British Journal of Sports Medicine analysed 58 randomised trials involving individuals in a caloric deficit. The combination of high protein intake (at or above 1.6g/kg) and resistance training produced:
The practical recommendation: if you are doing any structured weight loss programme, include 2–3 sessions of resistance training per week (bodyweight exercises count) and hit your protein targets. The combination dramatically changes body composition outcomes compared to caloric restriction alone.
For those following developments in metabolic and body composition research more broadly, there is growing scientific interest in compounds that interact with muscle metabolism and energy pathways. Researchers studying metabolic research peptides — including those examining muscle protein synthesis pathways, mitochondrial function, and metabolic regulation — are investigating a range of mechanisms relevant to body composition science. This remains an active area of preclinical and clinical research.
The pharmaceutical parallel is instructive: Ozempic in Australia (semaglutide) works partly through GLP-1 receptor activation to reduce appetite, but preserving muscle while losing fat with GLP-1 agonists still requires adequate protein intake and resistance training. The drug changes the energy equation; protein and exercise determine what the body loses.
Knowing you need 140–200g of protein per day is one thing. Actually hitting that target without spending a fortune or eating the same thing every day is another. Here is a practical framework built around what is available in Australia right now.
| Food | Protein per 100g | Approx. cost (Coles/Woolworths) | |------|------------------|---------------------------------| | Chicken breast (raw) | 31g | $0.40–0.55 per 100g | | Canned tuna (springwater) | 25g | $0.15–0.25 per 100g | | Eggs | ~13g per 100g (~7g/egg) | $0.55–0.70 per 2 eggs | | Greek yoghurt | 9–11g | $1.20–1.60 per 100g | | Cottage cheese | 11–13g | $1.00–1.40 per 100g | | Firm tofu | 8g | $0.60–0.80 per 100g | | Lentils (cooked) | 9g | $0.10–0.15 per 100g | | Tempeh | 19g | $1.20–1.50 per 100g | | Lean beef mince (90/10) | 27g | $1.00–1.30 per 100g | | Canned salmon | 24g | $0.40–0.60 per 100g |
Breakfast: 3 scrambled eggs + 170g Greek yoghurt + 100g cottage cheese → ~52g protein
Lunch: 150g canned tuna + mixed salad + 1 slice sourdough → ~42g protein
Snack: 200g Greek yoghurt → ~20g protein
Dinner: 200g chicken breast + roasted vegetables + lentil side → ~70g protein
Total: ~184g protein — comfortably above the 1.8g/kg target
This day costs approximately $12–16 in ingredients and requires no protein supplements. Every item is available at any Coles or Woolworths.
Hitting protein targets on a tight budget is very achievable in Australia:
Whole food protein sources are always preferred, but protein powder can be a useful tool when:
Whey protein concentrate (WPC) is the most cost-effective option for non-vegans. Pea protein isolate or rice-and-pea blends are solid plant-based alternatives. Australian brands such as Bulk Nutrients (Tasmania) and True Protein manufacture locally and offer competitive pricing. Look for products providing at least 20–25g of protein per serve with minimal added sugar.
Using the evidence-based recommendation of 1.6–2.2g of protein per kilogram of body weight, an 80kg person should aim for 128–176g of protein per day for optimal fat loss while preserving muscle. A practical starting point is 1.8g/kg = 144g/day. Spread this across 3–4 meals of approximately 35–45g each. This is achievable with whole foods and does not require protein supplements.
In healthy adults with no pre-existing kidney disease, high-protein diets — even at 2.0–2.4g/kg — have not been shown to cause kidney damage. This concern originates from research on patients who already had chronic kidney disease, where protein restriction is sometimes clinically appropriate. For healthy adults, the kidneys handle elevated protein loads without issue. If you have any pre-existing kidney condition, discuss your protein targets with your GP before significantly increasing intake.
The best option depends on your dietary preferences and budget:
Yes — but it is harder and typically slower. People who do not track protein tend to undereat it significantly (Australian average is 80–100g/day, well below the optimal range for weight loss). If you prefer not to track macros, use a simpler rule: make protein the centrepiece of every meal. Ensure your plate has a palm-sized serving of a high-protein food at breakfast, lunch, and dinner. This rough method typically delivers 100–130g/day — better than the national average, though still below the research-supported optimal range for active weight loss.
Yes. Protein's satiety effects, thermic effect of food, and hormonal impacts on hunger operate independently of exercise. Even in sedentary individuals, higher-protein diets produce better weight loss outcomes than lower-protein diets at matched calories. That said, the muscle-preservation benefits of high protein are significantly amplified when combined with resistance training — making even light exercise a strong complementary strategy.
A high-protein diet and time-restricted eating are highly compatible. The two strategies work through partially complementary mechanisms — protein targeting satiety hormones and the thermic effect of food, intermittent fasting targeting insulin sensitivity and metabolic flexibility. The main practical consideration is ensuring you hit your full protein target (1.6–2.0g/kg) within a compressed eating window, which requires prioritising protein density at each meal rather than filling up on lower-protein foods first. For more detail on combining these approaches, see our guide to intermittent fasting for weight loss.
Protein and weight loss are inseparably linked through three powerful mechanisms: appetite-suppressing gut hormones (CCK, GLP-1, PYY), a thermic effect of food three to ten times higher than other macronutrients, and the preservation of metabolically valuable muscle tissue during a caloric deficit.
The government's recommended 0.8g/kg is a floor, not a target. For active fat loss, the evidence supports 1.6–2.2g of protein per kilogram of body weight per day — a target that is entirely achievable through whole foods available at any Coles or Woolworths, with or without protein supplements.
Start with your body weight in kilograms, multiply by 1.8, and build your meals around hitting that number. Everything else — carb cycling, meal timing, specific food choices — is secondary to this single variable.
References: Johnston CS et al., Cell Metabolism. Leidy HJ et al., Obesity. Stokes T et al., Nutrients. Morton RW et al., British Journal of Sports Medicine. Phillips SM et al., American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. Aragon AA et al., ISSN Position Stand on Protein and Exercise. Bray GA et al., JAMA. Australian Bureau of Statistics National Nutrition and Physical Activity Survey. CSIRO Total Wellbeing Diet research data. Witbrock I et al. (2023), Obesity Reviews. JAMA Network Open network meta-analysis (2024). Advances in Nutrition systematic review (2024).
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