The post-workout protein shake is fitness culture's most durable ritual. The idea: a 30-minute "anabolic window" after training where protein is magically more effective. Miss it, lose your gains.
The research says otherwise — and has for a decade.
Where the Window Came From
Early studies on untrained subjects in a fasted state showed better outcomes with immediate post-workout protein. Both conditions matter: untrained and fasted. If you ate a meal with protein 2–3 hours before training, amino acids are still circulating when you finish. The "window" is already full.
What Actually Matters
Ranked by measured effect on body composition:
| Priority | Target | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Daily total | 1.6–2.2 g/kg bodyweight | The single largest dietary driver of hypertrophy |
| Distribution | 3–5 feedings of 0.4 g/kg | Each feeding maximally stimulates synthesis |
| Quality | Complete proteins, ~3g leucine | Triggers the synthesis response |
| Timing | Within a few hours of training | Marginal — matters only when everything above is handled |
Key point: timing is the last 5%. Most people chasing it haven't handled the first 95% — total daily protein, distributed across the day.
Practical Targets
For an 80kg lifter, that's roughly 130–175g of protein daily — say four feedings of 35–45g. A shake is a convenient feeding, not a magic one. If it helps you hit the number, use it. If you'd rather eat food, eat food.
The Bottom Line
Stop stressing the stopwatch. Start counting the day. Your muscles keep a running total, not a timer.



