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How Much Protein for Longevity? The RDA Is a Floor

Nutrition5 min read Jul 4, 2026Updated Jul 3, 2026
Ascending bars comparing the 0.8 g/kg RDA floor with higher protein targets for active and older adults.

If there's one thing the nutrition arguments broadly agree on — and they agree on remarkably little — it's that most people, and almost all older people, eat less protein than would serve them well. Protein is the macronutrient we treat as optional and should treat as foundational, because it does something the others don't: it builds and defends the muscle you'll be very glad to still have in forty years.

The macronutrient most people under-eat

Carbohydrate and fat are energy; your body can store both and improvise between them. Protein is different — it's the raw material for muscle, enzymes, and repair, and there's no real storage tank, so a steady daily supply matters. The official reference intake (around 0.8 g per kilogram of body weight) is often mistaken for a target. It isn't. It's the floor set to prevent deficiency in an average sedentary adult — the minimum to avoid a problem, not the amount to build strength, support training, or offset the muscle loss that creeps in with age.

Muscle is the organ you bank for later

Think of muscle less as aesthetics and more as a savings account for later life. From our forties onward we lose muscle and strength gradually unless we actively defend them, and the amount you carry into older age is closely tied to how well you move, stay independent, and handle illness. Protein is one half of defending it; resistance training is the other. Neither works well alone — you need the stimulus of training and the building blocks of protein together. Under-eat protein and even good training under-delivers.

The number that misleads people

The RDA is a floor, not a goal

RDA minimum0.8 g/kg
Active adults~1.2–1.6 g/kg
Older / training~1.6–2.0 g/kg
avoids deficiencysupports activitydefends muscle with age
Illustrative daily protein per kg of body weight. For a 70 kg person, that's roughly 56 g at the floor versus ~85–140 g in the ranges most active and older adults do better on. Aim by the goal, not the minimum.

How much, and when

For most active or older adults, a daily intake in the region of 1.2–2.0 g per kilogram of body weight is a sensible target, toward the higher end if you train hard or are trying to hold muscle with age. Just as useful is distribution: muscle-building is switched on meal by meal, and each meal needs enough protein — very roughly 25–40 g — to trigger it, with the amino acid leucine acting as a key signal. Three or four protein-containing meals across the day beats one big steak at dinner and a protein-poor breakfast. Spread it out, and don't skip the morning.

Quality and sources

"Complete" proteins — meat, fish, eggs, dairy — contain all the essential amino acids in ready proportions, which is why they're efficient. Plant proteins are perfectly capable of covering your needs too; they just often lower in one amino acid or another, so variety does the work — legumes with grains across the day, plus soy, tofu, and the like. Older adults and committed plant-eaters may need to be a little more deliberate about total amount and leucine, since plant sources tend to be less concentrated. There's nothing magic about powders; they're just convenient, well-measured protein for people who struggle to hit the number from food.

The kidney myth (and real cautions)

The most persistent worry — that higher protein harms your kidneys — does not hold up for healthy people; the research simply doesn't support it in those with normal kidney function. The important exception: if you have existing kidney disease, protein intake is genuinely something to manage with a doctor, not a blog. Beyond that, "higher protein" doesn't mean unlimited or all from one source — it means adequate, distributed, and mostly from whole foods, within a balanced diet. As always, if you have a medical condition, personalise this with a professional.

But doesn't protein "accelerate aging"?

You may have met the counter-argument: that high protein drives a growth pathway (mTOR) which some longevity researchers link to faster aging. It's a real hypothesis worth understanding, but the picture is more nuanced than the headlines. Much of the concern comes from animal studies and from midlife metabolic markers, and it appears to be context- and age-dependent — the same growth signalling that might warrant restraint in some settings is exactly what protects a 70-year-old from losing the muscle that keeps them independent. For most people, and especially for older adults, the near-certain benefit of preserving strength and function outweighs a speculative, unresolved longevity trade-off. This is an area where the science is still arguing with itself, so we hold the claim loosely and point back to the strong, boring evidence: enough protein plus training keeps you capable.

The bottom line

Protein is the foundational macronutrient most people under-eat, and the reference intake is a floor, not a goal. Aim higher — roughly 1.2–2.0 g per kilogram for active and older adults — spread it across three or four meals of 25–40 g, favour quality sources with plenty of variety, and don't fear it if your kidneys are healthy. Paired with resistance training, it's how you bank strength for the decades ahead. See how it fits the whole picture in building a longevity protocol. Educational only, not medical advice.