⚡ Quick Answer
UK women over 45 in perimenopause and early postmenopause typically need 1.0 to 1.2 grams of protein per kg body weight per day for maintenance, rising to 1.2 to 1.6 g per kg for active women or those in a calorie deficit. That is well above the UK RNI of 0.75 g per kg. For a 70 kg woman aiming for 1.2 g per kg, that is 84 g protein a day spread across three meals of 25 to 30 g plus a snack. Distribution and quality matter as much as total.
Protein Intake for Women Over 45 UK 2026: Grams per kg in Perimenopause Explained
A 49 year old runs three strength sessions a week plus daily walking, eats what she thought was a balanced diet, and notices strength plateaus and slower recovery. You have read that women in perimenopause need more protein. The real question: how much, in what form, when?
The UK Reference Nutrient Intake for adult women is 0.75 g of protein per kg body weight per day. This figure, set in 1991, is a minimum to avoid deficiency in a sedentary population. It is not the optimal target for muscle and bone health in midlife.
The newer evidence for women in perimenopause and postmenopause is consistent. For maintenance, aim for 1.0 to 1.2 g per kg per day. For active women, those doing resistance training, or those in a calorie deficit, the target rises to 1.2 to 1.6 g per kg. The reason is anabolic resistance, where oestrogen decline reduces the muscle-building response to a given protein dose.
This guide walks through the grams per kg targets, practical UK food examples, meal distribution, plant-based plans, supplements, and considerations for bone health.
Why protein matters more in perimenopause and after 45
Oestrogen does several useful things for muscle. It supports muscle protein synthesis, reduces muscle protein breakdown, and helps muscle stem cell function. When oestrogen levels fall during perimenopause, muscle becomes less responsive to a given dose of protein. This is known as anabolic resistance. The same 30 g protein meal that triggered a solid muscle-building response in a 25-year-old triggers a smaller response in a 55-year-old. The body needs more protein per meal to hit the same effect.
Layered on this is the age-related loss of muscle, termed sarcopenia. Lean body mass falls by about 0.5 percent per year through the menopause transition. Cross-sectional research finds reductions of around 2.5 percent in perimenopausal women and 5.7 percent in postmenopausal women compared with premenopausal controls. After age 40, muscle mass can drop by up to 8 percent per decade. By age 60, a postmenopausal woman may have lost up to 16 percent of her muscle.
The clinical implications go beyond appearance. Muscle is a metabolic organ. It helps regulate blood glucose, supports posture and balance to reduce fall risk, and underpins bone density. Adequate protein plus resistance training is the most evidence-based intervention to slow this loss.
UK midlife women who only meet the RNI of 0.75 g per kg and do not partake in resistance exercise face the steepest decline. Women who achieve 1.2 to 1.6 g per kg with regular resistance work can hold or even build muscle through perimenopause and beyond.
The grams per kg target for women over 45
The UK Reference Nutrient Intake for adult women is 0.75 g of protein per kg body weight per day. For a 60 kg woman, that is 45 g a day. For a 70 kg woman, it is about 53 g a day. The RNI was set to avoid deficiency in a sedentary population. It is not the optimum for midlife women.
Peri- and postmenopausal evidence from muscle protein synthesis studies supports higher targets. For maintenance of muscle and bone, aim for 1.0 to 1.2 g per kg per day. For active women, those doing resistance training, women in a calorie deficit, and women on GLP-1 medication at risk of under-eating, aim for 1.2 to 1.6 g per kg per day.
For a 70 kg woman, 1.2 g per kg is 84 g of protein a day. At 1.6 g per kg, it is 112 g a day. For a 60 kg woman, 1.2 g per kg is 72 g a day, and 1.6 g per kg is 96 g a day.
Use your current body weight if you are around a healthy weight, or your goal weight if you are well above it, to avoid an inflated target. Intakes up to about 2 g per kg are well tolerated in adults with healthy kidneys, but most women do not need to go that high. Older concerns that higher protein damages bone are no longer supported by current evidence. Higher protein intake, when combined with adequate calcium and vitamin D, is bone protective.
| Body weight | UK RNI (0.75 g/kg) | Maintenance (1.0-1.2 g/kg) | Active or deficit (1.4-1.6 g/kg) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 55 kg | 41 g | 55-66 g | 77-88 g |
| 65 kg | 49 g | 65-78 g | 91-104 g |
| 75 kg | 56 g | 75-90 g | 105-120 g |
| 85 kg | 64 g | 85-102 g | 119-136 g |
How to distribute protein across the day
Total daily protein is the starting point, but distribution matters almost as much. Aim for 25 to 35 g of high-quality protein at each main meal: breakfast, lunch, and dinner. The body uses about 2.5 to 3 g of the amino acid leucine per meal to trigger muscle protein synthesis. Smaller protein doses below 20 g per meal produce less synthesis. You cannot stockpile from one large dinner to make up for skipped protein earlier in the day.
Breakfast is the meal where most UK adults under-eat protein. A typical breakfast of toast and jam, or porridge with fruit, may deliver only 5 to 10 g of protein. Easy upgrades include three medium eggs plus a yoghurt, or 200 g of Greek yoghurt with mixed seeds and oats, providing around 20 to 25 g. Cottage cheese on toast with a hard-boiled egg, or adding a whey or pea protein shake to porridge, are other practical options.
Lunch built around a chicken or salmon salad, a wholemeal wrap with eggs and ham, or a bowl of lentil soup with cheese can easily reach 25 to 30 g. Dinner is usually the simplest, with a 100 to 150 g portion of fish, chicken, lean meat, tofu, or tempeh hitting 25 to 35 g without trouble.
Good snack choices include tinned tuna and crackers, a small pot of cottage cheese, a boiled egg, Greek yoghurt, edamame, or a small protein shake. Spreading protein evenly through the day is more effective than backloading your dinner plate.
UK food sources that deliver 25 to 35 g of protein
Animal protein sources easily reach 25 to 35 g per serving. Examples include 100 g cooked chicken breast, which provides about 31 g; 150 g cooked salmon, providing 33 g; or 150 g cooked lean beef mince, providing about 27 g. A combination of three medium eggs and 200 g Greek yoghurt delivers around 30 g.
Dairy sources like skyr yoghurts, supermarket high-protein yoghurts, and cottage cheese are convenient. Eggs remain one of the most cost-effective UK protein sources.
For plant-based eaters, larger portions are usually needed. 200 g firm tofu provides about 30 g protein; 250 g cooked lentils provide about 22 g; and 100 g cooked edamame provides about 12 g. A 30 g serving of pea protein isolate shake typically provides about 22 g. Pulse-based dishes like lentil dal, chickpea curry, and bean chilli are UK staples that can be scaled up.
Bread and oats contribute lower amounts but add up across the day. The UK supermarket protein product range has expanded, with items like protein yoghurts, puddings, bread, and pasta all useful for hitting targets without a major diet overhaul. Cost typically ranges from 25 to 60 pence per 10 g of protein.
Plant-based protein for perimenopause UK women
Plant-based and largely plant-based eating is a reasonable choice in midlife. Hitting 1.2 to 1.6 g per kg per day from plants alone is achievable with some planning. Build meals around soya foods like tofu, tempeh, and edamame, along with pulses such as lentils, chickpeas, and beans. Seitan, quinoa, nuts, seeds, and oats are also valuable.
Soya proteins are particularly useful as they are complete, containing all essential amino acids in good ratios, and have high leucine. Most plant proteins are slightly lower in leucine per gram than animal proteins, meaning larger portions are usually needed to hit the 2.5 to 3 g leucine threshold per meal. A daily pea or soya protein shake providing 25 to 30 g protein is a simple way for many UK plant-based women to bridge the gap.
Combine pulse sources across the day, such as chickpea hummus with seeded crackers at lunch, a tofu-lentil curry at dinner, and oats with hemp seeds at breakfast. Iron and vitamin B12 deserve attention on plant-based diets, especially around perimenopause when iron loss may still be significant. NHS-friendly options include fortified breakfast cereals, iron-rich beans, leafy greens with vitamin C sources, and a daily B12 supplement.
Hitting 1.2 to 1.6 g per kg of protein on a plant-based diet is a planning exercise, not a barrier.
Protein on GLP-1 medication and in a calorie deficit
Women on Mounjaro, Wegovy, or other GLP-1 medications often lose appetite and naturally eat less. This is part of how the medication works, but it raises a real risk of under-eating protein and accelerating muscle loss. Recent UK clinical guidance from weight management services is consistent: prioritise protein at every meal, lean toward the higher end of the 1.2 to 1.6 g per kg range, and consider a daily whey or plant protein shake to ensure the target is reached.
The same principle applies in any calorie deficit, whether or not GLP-1 medication is involved. When body weight is dropping, the body preferentially keeps muscle if protein intake is high and resistance training continues. If protein is low and there is no resistance training, weight loss includes a higher proportion of muscle, which is undesirable in midlife.
A practical UK approach in a deficit is to calculate your protein target on your goal weight, using 1.4 to 1.6 g per kg. Spread this across three meals plus one snack. Adopt protein-first plating by covering a third of your plate with protein before adding carbohydrates and fats. Accept that a daily protein shake is a reasonable strategy.
Resistance training two to three times a week is essential to retain muscle. This combination of high protein and loaded training also protects bone density, which is at additional risk as oestrogen falls.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much protein do women over 45 need per day in the UK
The UK Reference Nutrient Intake for adult women is 0.75 grams per kg body weight per day, a sedentary minimum. Recent evidence for perimenopause and postmenopausal women is consistently higher. For maintenance, aim for 1.0 to 1.2 g per kg per day. For active women, those doing resistance training, or those in a calorie deficit, aim for 1.2 to 1.6 g per kg per day. For a 70 kg woman, that is 84 to 112 g a day. This should be spread across three meals plus a snack.
How much protein should be in each meal in perimenopause
Aim for 25 to 35 g of high-quality protein at each main meal: breakfast, lunch, and dinner. The body uses about 2.5 to 3 g of leucine per meal to trigger muscle protein synthesis, and smaller protein doses under 20 g per meal produce a less effective muscle-building response. Breakfast is the meal most UK adults under-eat protein. Easy upgrades include eggs, Greek yoghurt, cottage cheese, or adding a protein shake to porridge.
Why do midlife women need more protein than the UK RNI
Oestrogen decline in perimenopause causes anabolic resistance, meaning muscle is less responsive to a given protein dose. The same 30 g meal that built muscle effectively at 25 builds less muscle at 55 unless protein intake is higher or better distributed. Lean body mass falls by about 0.5 percent per year through the menopause transition. Higher protein intake and resistance training are the most evidence-based interventions to slow muscle loss in midlife.
Can I hit the protein target on a plant-based UK diet
Yes, with planning. Build meals around soya foods like tofu, tempeh, and edamame, along with pulses such as lentils, chickpeas, and beans. Include seitan, quinoa, nuts, and seeds. Plant proteins are slightly lower in leucine per gram, so larger portions are usually needed at each meal. Many UK plant-based women add a daily pea or soya protein shake providing 25 to 30 g to hit higher targets. Pair this with B12 supplementation and iron-rich foods to cover other potential gaps.
Does high protein harm bones or kidneys
No, not in adults with healthy kidneys. Intakes up to about 2 g per kg per day are well tolerated. Older claims that high protein damages bone, based on a flawed acid-base hypothesis, have been overturned by modern research. Higher protein with adequate calcium and vitamin D is bone-protective, which is especially relevant in midlife. People with established kidney disease should follow their renal team advice on protein restriction. For everyone else, hitting 1.2 to 1.6 g per kg in perimenopause is safe and beneficial.
Do I need protein supplements like whey to hit my target
Not always, but they are a helpful tool. Most UK women can hit 1.2 g per kg per day from food alone with attention to protein at breakfast and lunch. Above 1.4 g per kg, especially for active women or those on GLP-1 medication, a daily whey or plant protein shake of 25 to 30 g is a simple and cost-effective way to bridge the gap. UK pricing is typically £1.50 to £3 per serving. Choose products with simple ingredients and minimal artificial sweeteners.
Should women on Mounjaro or Wegovy eat more protein
Yes. GLP-1 medications reduce appetite, and many women using Mounjaro or Wegovy under-eat protein and lose muscle alongside fat. UK weight management services now recommend prioritising protein at every meal, aiming for 1.4 to 1.6 g per kg per day of goal body weight, and considering a daily protein shake. Combine this with resistance training two to three times a week to protect muscle and bone during weight loss. This advice applies to anyone on a calorie deficit, not just those on prescribed GLP-1 medication.
✅ The verdict
UK women over 45 in perimenopause and early postmenopause need more protein than the longstanding UK Reference Nutrient Intake suggests. For maintenance, aim for 1.0 to 1.2 g of protein per kg body weight per day. For active women, those doing resistance training, or those in a calorie deficit, the target rises to 1.2 to 1.6 g per kg. Anabolic resistance and accelerated muscle loss make protein a higher priority in midlife.
Take practical steps. Upgrade the protein content of your breakfast. Build your lunch and dinner plates around a 25 to 35 g protein portion. Use a daily protein shake if it helps you reach your target. Pair your higher protein intake with regular resistance training and ensure adequate calcium and vitamin D for bone health. For a broader view on supporting your body through this transition, you may wish to read the Walton Surgery guides on the best evidence-based supplements for perimenopause and on creatine for menopause women UK.
This article is informational only and does not replace personalised advice from your GP, pharmacist, or another qualified healthcare professional.
