Protein Intake for a 190 lb Female
A 190-pound woman (86 kg) should target approximately 199gm of protein per day — that is 1.05g per lb of bodyweight.
This page provides a protein-first baseline plus full macro context: 2433 calories, 257gm carbs, and 68gm 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
190-pound womans who want a straightforward daily protein number alongside full macro context — calories, carbs, and fat — rather than just a grams-per-pound formula.
Macro Rationale
Protein is the most important macro to anchor first. At 199gm/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.
High protein at maintenance holds body composition stable without requiring a strict cut or bulk. For people who train consistently, maintaining a protein target around 0.8–1.1g per lb supports lean mass retention and recovery even without a calorie surplus.
Daily Target Calories
Maintenance at ~2433 cal/day (TDEE). high protein macro split.
Daily Target Macros
Protein
199gm
Carbs
257gm
Fat
68gm
Protein: 199gm (1.0gm per lb body weight)
Sample Meal Plan
Breakfast
- Protein Shake — 1 scoop + water (~30g)130 cal · P25 C3 F2
- Greek Yogurt — 1 cup (~245g)120 cal · P20 C9 F0
- Scrambled Eggs (3) — 3 large (~150g)213 cal · P18 C2 F15
Lunch
- Grilled Chicken Breast — 6 oz (~170g)213 cal · P42 C0 F5
- Strip Steak — 6 oz (~170g)286 cal · P40 C0 F14
- Salmon Fillet — 6 oz (~170g)306 cal · P36 C0 F18
Dinner
- Ribeye Steak — 8 oz (~227g)440 cal · P46 C0 F28
- Grilled Chicken Breast — 6 oz (~170g)213 cal · P42 C0 F5
- Black Beans — 1/2 cup (~86g)114 cal · P8 C20 F1
Snack
- Protein Shake — 1 scoop + water (~30g)130 cal · P25 C3 F2
- Greek Yogurt — 1 cup (~245g)120 cal · P20 C9 F0
Estimates. Not medical advice. Adjust portions to fit your exact targets.
Adjust Your Macros
Pre-filled for this profile. Change any value and recalculate.
Next step
Save these targets and start tracking today.
Log meals in seconds, stay aligned with your goal, and see real progress — not just a number on a page.
Free · Always
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: 2433 cal/day. Adjust by ±100 calories based on trend.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much protein does a 190 lb woman need each day?
A 190 lb woman should target approximately 199gm of protein per day — around 1.05g per lb of bodyweight. This range supports lean mass retention and growth across most training goals. For context, that is roughly the equivalent of 33 eggs or 6 × 100g chicken breasts worth of protein distributed across the day.
How should a 190 lb woman spread 199gm of protein across the day?
Dividing 199gm across 3–4 meals maximizes muscle protein synthesis compared to concentrating it in one or two large servings. A rough structure: ~50gm with breakfast, ~56gm at lunch, ~70gm at dinner, ~24gm from a snack. Each meal should include a primary protein source — chicken, beef, fish, eggs, dairy, or plant-based alternatives for vegetarians.
Does a 190 lb woman 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 199gm 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 190 lb woman need protein supplements to hit 199gm per day?
No. Whole foods can fully cover 199gm 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.
Do women need as much protein per pound as men?
Yes. Women benefit from the same per-pound protein targets as men for muscle retention and body composition. The idea that women should eat less protein is not supported by research — the main difference is that women typically have lower total calorie needs, so they eat fewer total grams in absolute terms. At 190 lb, 199gm (1.05g/lb) is consistent with evidence-based recommendations for active women regardless of whether the goal is fat loss, maintenance, or muscle gain.