Physiq Macro Calculator

Protein Intake for a 150 lb Male

A 150-pound man (68 kg) should target approximately 128gm of protein per day — that is 0.85g per lb of bodyweight.

This page provides a protein-first baseline plus full macro context: 2475 calories, 367gm carbs, and 55gm fat. Use it as a starting point, then adjust with the calculator for your specific training goal and activity level.

Use the interactive calculator below to dial in your exact targets.

Who This Is For

Lighter mans (under 160 lb) who want a concrete daily protein target without overthinking it. Also useful for people new to macro tracking who want to start with protein first before worrying about carbs and fat.

Macro Rationale

Protein is the most important macro to anchor first. At 128gm/day, intake is high enough to protect lean mass and control appetite regardless of whether total calories are in a deficit, surplus, or at maintenance. Carbs and fat can shift considerably — protein should stay consistent.

Standard macros provide a structured split aligned with your goal and activity demands.

Daily Target Calories

2475cal/day
Target2475

Your macros are based on your body stats, goal, and activity level. Eating style shapes meal suggestions; keto, carnivore, and PSMF also change how carbs and fat are set.

Moderate Protein / High Carb / Moderate Fat

Daily Target Macros

128gm

Protein

128gm

367gm

Carbs

367gm

55gm

Fat

55gm

Protein: 128gm (0.9gm per lb body weight)

How we calculated this

Calories are based on BMR (1648) × activity for a TDEE of 2472, then adjusted by 0% for your goal.

Protein uses total body weight because body fat % was missing or outside the supported range.

Fat starts at 0.30g per lb body weight and generally stays above 20% of calories.

Carbs fill the calories remaining after protein and fat are set.

Standard uses the algorithm output as-is.

Sample Meal Plan

Breakfast

  • Oatmeal1.3× (1 cup cooked (~240g))228.1 cal · P8.6 C39 F4.3
  • Avocado Toast1.3× (1 slice)288.7 cal · P7.2 C28.8 F17.3
  • Banana1.3× (1 medium (~118g))151.6 cal · P1.4 C39 F0
Total: 668 cal · 17.3g P · 106.8g C · 21.6g F

Lunch

  • Chickpea Salad2.5× (1 cup (~240g))593.9 cal · P32.4 C81 F16.2
  • Mixed Green Salad2.5× (2 cups (~60g))108 cal · P5.4 C21.6 F0
  • Asparagus2.5× (6 spears (~90g))64.8 cal · P8.1 C10.8 F0
Total: 767 cal · 45.9g P · 113.4g C · 16.2g F

Dinner

  • Quinoa2.5× (1 cup cooked (~185g))599.3 cal · P21.6 C105.3 F10.8
  • Steamed Broccoli2.5× (1 cup (~91g))108 cal · P10.8 C16.2 F0
  • Asparagus2.5× (6 spears (~90g))64.8 cal · P8.1 C10.8 F0
Total: 772 cal · 40.5g P · 132.3g C · 10.8g F

Snack

  • Rice Cakes (2)1.1× (2 cakes (~20g))79.8 cal · P2.3 C16 F0
  • Beef Jerky1.1× (1 oz (~28g))79.8 cal · P10.3 C3.5 F1.2
  • Apple1.1× (1 medium (~182g))108.3 cal · P0 C28.5 F0
Total: 268 cal · 12.5g P · 47.9g C · 1.2g F

Daily plan total: 2475 cal · 116.2g P · 400.4g C · 49.8g F

Live target: 2475 cal · 128g P · 367g C · 55g F

Sample plan built to hit your targets. Not medical advice.

Adjust Your Macros

Pre-filled for this profile. Change any value and recalculate from the same macro engine.

Body Stats

If you know your body fat %, we can calculate more accurate macros.

Goal

Your goal affects calories and macro targets.

Activity Level

Your activity level affects calories, protein needs, and carb needs.

Eating Style

Your eating style affects meal suggestions and food choices. Keto, carnivore, and PSMF also change how carbs and fat are set (PSMF adds a large deficit versus TDEE).

Dietary Restrictions & Preferences

These help us avoid foods that do not fit your needs.

Adjustment Notes

  • Hold your targets for at least 2 full weeks before making changes — short-term weight fluctuations are water and digestion, not fat or muscle.
  • Adjust calories in 100–150 calorie increments, not large jumps. Small changes compound without disrupting adherence.
  • Recalculate every 10–15 lb of bodyweight change or every 6–8 weeks.
  • If scale weight trends consistently up or down over 3+ weeks, recalculate — your true maintenance has shifted.
  • Current maintenance estimate: 2475 cal/day. Adjust by ±100 calories based on trend.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much protein does a 150 lb man need each day?

A 150 lb man should target approximately 128gm of protein per day — around 0.85g per lb of bodyweight. This range supports lean mass retention and growth across most training goals. For context, that is roughly the equivalent of 21 eggs or 4 × 100g chicken breasts worth of protein distributed across the day.

What are the easiest ways for a lighter man to hit 128gm of protein daily?

At 150 lb, 128gm is achievable with 3–4 protein-rich meals. Practical anchors: 2 eggs at breakfast (~12gm), a 150g chicken breast at lunch (~47gm), Greek yogurt as a snack (~10gm per 100g), and a protein-rich dinner. Lower-calorie protein sources matter more at lighter bodyweights because you have less calorie budget to fill — lean sources like chicken breast, white fish, and egg whites give the most protein per calorie.

Does a 150 lb man need more or less protein when cutting versus bulking?

Protein requirements actually rise slightly during a calorie deficit compared to maintenance or a surplus. When calories are restricted, the body is more likely to use protein for energy — so keeping intake at or above 128gm protects muscle specifically during the cut phase. On a bulk, the minimum protein threshold is slightly lower because excess calories reduce catabolism risk, but keeping protein high (as this calculator targets) is still beneficial for body composition outcomes.

Does a 150 lb man need protein supplements to hit 128gm per day?

No. Whole foods can fully cover 128gm per day. A day with 3 meals built around lean meat, fish, eggs, and some dairy will typically reach this target without supplements. Protein powder is useful for convenience — it is fast, portable, and reduces meal-prep complexity — but it is not nutritionally superior to whole food protein sources. If you already eat adequate protein from food, adding shakes provides diminishing returns.

What is the minimum protein a 150 lb man should eat to avoid losing muscle?

Research suggests a minimum of roughly 0.7g per lb of bodyweight to prevent significant muscle loss under normal conditions, but 0.8–1.1g per lb is the practical recommendation for people actively training. At 150 lb, the minimum floor would be around 105gm/day — this target of 128gm is meaningfully above that floor, giving you a proper buffer for body composition improvement rather than just muscle preservation.

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