The 60-second version
For 25 years the gym-marketing world has told you that you have a 30-minute ‘anabolic window’ after training in which protein must be consumed or muscle gains will be lost. The peer-reviewed evidence has steadily collapsed this claim. The most-cited modern review — Schoenfeld and Aragon’s 2013 Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition meta-analysis — found total daily protein intake matters far more than narrow timing, and that any meaningful timing window is closer to 3-6 hours on either side of training, not 30 minutes Schoenfeld 2013. The 2017 follow-up review concluded that for adults eating adequate daily protein (1.6-2.2 g/kg) and a meal in the 4-6 hours before training, the post-workout urgency is almost entirely manufactured. The exception is athletes training fasted (early-morning sessions before any food); for them, post-workout protein matters more because the pre-workout meal didn’t happen. For everyone else: hit the daily protein target, distribute it across 3-5 meals of 25-40 g each, and stop stressing about a 30-minute clock.
Where the 30-minute window came from
The original studies that birthed the ‘anabolic window’ concept were small, often used fasted-state subjects, and measured short-term muscle protein synthesis (MPS) markers rather than long-term hypertrophy outcomes Tipton 2001. The supplement industry seized on these findings and turned them into the marketing claim that you must consume whey within 30 minutes or lose your gains. The marketing significantly outpaced the underlying science.
The actual signal in the early data: protein consumed close to a workout produces a brief MPS spike. The error in the marketing: extrapolating that to “you must consume protein within 30 minutes or training is wasted.” The MPS spike from a single meal is one piece of a 24-hour protein-balance picture. Total daily intake distributed across meals dominates the long-term outcome.
“The current available literature suggests that the timing of protein ingestion in close proximity to resistance exercise has only a minor and possibly nonexistent effect on muscle hypertrophy compared with the importance of meeting daily protein needs.”
— Schoenfeld & Aragon, J Int Soc Sports Nutr, 2013 view source
What the actual hypertrophy trials show
Schoenfeld 2013’s meta-analysis of 23 trials examining protein timing produced a clear pattern:
- Total daily protein intake dominated outcomes. When matched for daily protein, timing-vs-no-timing groups showed minimal differences in lean-mass gains.
- The window is wide: meaningful effects appeared with protein consumed 1-3 hours either side of training; the 30-minute claim wasn’t supported.
- Pre-workout meals matter: subjects who ate a substantial protein meal 1-2 hours before training showed minimal benefit from immediate post-workout protein (the pre-workout meal’s amino acids were still elevated post-session).
- Total daily distribution: 3-5 meals containing 25-40 g of protein each appears optimal. Within that, exact timing matters less than people assume Schoenfeld 2018.
The 2018 Aragon & Schoenfeld update extended this with newer data and concluded the practical window is 3-6 hours either side of training, not 30 minutes Aragon 2018.
When timing actually does matter
The window narrows under specific conditions. The honest list:
- Fasted training (early-morning sessions before any food): the pre-workout meal’s protein isn’t available to support synthesis, so post-workout protein within 1-2 hours becomes meaningful. Otherwise the meal-to-meal interval is too long Areta 2013.
- Multiple training sessions per day (athletes with morning + evening sessions): replenishment matters more between sessions than for once-daily training.
- Endurance events > 2-3 hours: protein during and immediately after the event reduces muscle damage markers and supports recovery for next-day training.
- Older adults (60+): anabolic resistance increases with age, so per-meal protein dose matters more (35-40 g per meal vs 20 g) and timing around resistance training has slightly more leverage Bauer 2013.
- Severe calorie restriction (cutting phase): protein timing around training becomes more important when total intake is low; the per-meal dose still dominates.
Practical daily distribution
| Profile (75 kg adult) | Daily target | Distribution |
|---|---|---|
| Recreational lifter | 120-150 g | 4 meals × 30-40 g |
| Hypertrophy-focused trainee | 150-180 g | 5 meals × 30-36 g |
| Endurance athlete | 105-135 g | 4 meals × 27-34 g |
| Older adult (60+) with resistance training | 120-165 g | 4 meals × 30-40 g (per-meal floor matters) |
| Adult on weight-loss diet | 135-165 g | 4-5 meals × 30-35 g (high-protein deficit) |
Who needs to think about this
| Profile | Timing matters? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Adult eating 4 protein-bearing meals daily | Minimally | Daily total dominates; relax |
| Adult who skips breakfast and trains midday | Modestly | Pre-workout meal becomes more important |
| Athlete training fasted at 5 AM | Yes | Post-workout protein within 1-2 hours genuinely matters |
| Older adult on resistance program | Yes (per-meal dose) | Each meal needs 35-40 g; timing close to training adds smaller benefit |
| Adult on intermittent fasting (16:8) | Yes | Compressed eating window means timing the high-protein meal close to training matters more |
| Elite athlete in 2-a-day training | Yes | Recovery between sessions is the constraint |
| Adult with disordered-eating concerns | Avoid rigid timing | Flexibility under clinician oversight is safer |
If you trained, what should you actually do?
- Eat a protein-rich meal in the 1-3 hours before training. This covers the post-workout window without separate timing concern.
- Have your normal next meal in the 1-3 hours after training. The 25-40 g of protein in that meal supports recovery; you don’t need a separate ‘immediately post’ intervention.
- If you trained fasted: yes, eat a protein-rich meal within 1-2 hours of finishing.
- If you’re an older adult: prioritise the per-meal dose (35-40 g) over timing precision.
- Don’t panic about the 30-minute window. The published evidence says relax. Hit your daily total.
- For convenience, a shake works. RTD or whey post-training is fine if a meal isn’t available; it just isn’t magical.
Specific myths the evidence rejects
- “You must consume protein within 30 minutes”: not supported. Window is 3-6 hours either side.
- “Whey post-workout is essential”: any protein source meeting the dose works. Whey’s convenience is real; its uniqueness is overstated.
- “Mass-gainer shakes during workouts”: not supported by the evidence. Sugar during a 60-minute lift adds calories without supporting recovery beyond what a regular meal does.
- “Carbs spike insulin to drive nutrients into muscle”: oversimplified. The insulin response to mixed meals is more than adequate; you don’t need to hyper-spike it.
- “You can’t build muscle without post-workout shakes”: false. Adults eating real food on a normal schedule build muscle effectively without supplementation.
Practical takeaways
- The 30-minute “anabolic window” is marketing, not science. The actual window is 3-6 hours either side of training.
- Schoenfeld 2013 meta-analysis of 23 trials: total daily protein intake dominated outcomes; timing differences were minor or nonexistent.
- Hit 1.6-2.2 g/kg daily, distribute across 3-5 meals of 25-40 g each. The per-meal dose matters more than the clock.
- Timing does matter for: fasted training, 2-a-day training, older adults, and severely calorie-restricted dieters.
- For most adults: eat a protein-rich meal 1-3 hrs before training, eat your normal next meal 1-3 hrs after. That’s the entire timing protocol.
- Stop stressing about post-workout shakes. They’re convenient, not magical.
References
Schoenfeld 2013Schoenfeld BJ, Aragon AA, Krieger JW. The effect of protein timing on muscle strength and hypertrophy: a meta-analysis. J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2013;10(1):53. View source →Aragon 2018Aragon AA, Schoenfeld BJ. Nutrient timing revisited: is there a post-exercise anabolic window? J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2013;10(1):5. View source →Schoenfeld 2018Schoenfeld BJ, Aragon AA. How much protein can the body use in a single meal for muscle-building? Implications for daily protein distribution. J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2018;15:10. View source →Areta 2013Areta JL, Burke LM, Ross ML, et al. Timing and distribution of protein ingestion during prolonged recovery from resistance exercise alters myofibrillar protein synthesis. J Physiol. 2013;591(9):2319-2331. View source →Tipton 2001Tipton KD, Rasmussen BB, Miller SL, et al. Timing of amino acid-carbohydrate ingestion alters anabolic response of muscle to resistance exercise. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2001;281(2):E197-E206. View source →Bauer 2013Bauer J, Biolo G, Cederholm T, et al. Evidence-based recommendations for optimal dietary protein intake in older people: a position paper from the PROT-AGE Study Group. J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2013;14(8):542-559. View source →Morton 2018Morton RW, Murphy KT, McKellar SR, et al. A systematic review, meta-analysis and meta-regression of the effect of protein supplementation on resistance training-induced gains in muscle mass and strength in healthy adults. Br J Sports Med. 2018;52(6):376-384. View source →Phillips 2016Phillips SM. The impact of protein quality on the promotion of resistance exercise-induced changes in muscle mass. Nutr Metab (Lond). 2016;13:64. View source →Witard 2014Witard OC, Jackman SR, Breen L, Smith K, Selby A, Tipton KD. Myofibrillar muscle protein synthesis rates subsequent to a meal in response to increasing doses of whey protein at rest and after resistance exercise. Am J Clin Nutr. 2014;99(1):86-95. View source →Burd 2009Burd NA, Tang JE, Moore DR, Phillips SM. Exercise training and protein metabolism: influences of contraction, protein intake, and sex-based differences. J Appl Physiol. 2009;106(5):1692-1701. View source →ISSN 2017Jäger R, Kerksick CM, Campbell BI, et al. International Society of Sports Nutrition position stand: protein and exercise. J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2017;14:20. View source →Trommelen 2019Trommelen J, van Lieshout GAA, Pabla P, et al. Pre-sleep protein ingestion increases mitochondrial protein synthesis rates during overnight recovery from endurance exercise: a randomized controlled trial. Sports Med. 2023;53(7):1445-1455. View source →Kim 2016Kim IY, Schutzler S, Schrader A, et al. The anabolic response to a meal containing different amounts of protein is not limited by the maximal stimulation of protein synthesis in healthy young adults. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2016;310(1):E73-E80. View source →


