Protein Timing Made Simple: When to Eat for Strength, Endurance & Recovery

Protein Timing Made Simple: When to Eat for Strength, Endurance & Recovery

Your daily total matters most | But timing gives you an edge.

Protein timing isn’t magic, but it’s meaningful. If you hit your daily protein target and distribute it evenly, you’ll likely build/maintain more lean mass and recover faster. Add strategic timing around training and sleep, and you turn a good diet into a great one.

 

First principles of protein timing

Daily target: 1.2–2.2 g/kg, scaled to match training volume & activity levels.

Even distribution: 3–5 feedings of 20–40g each.

Anchor windows: Pre‑training, post‑training, and pre‑sleep.


Read more in‑depth: High‑Protein Eating in the UK →

Pre‑training (30–120 mins)

  • You want digestible protein + modest carbs, low fibre/fat.
    • Examples: Roam bar + rice cakes; yoghurt + banana; oats + clean whey.
    • Why: Amino acids are available during the session; carbs support output.

Post‑training (0–60 mins)

  • Aim for 20–30g protein + 30–50g carbs.
    • Examples: Roam bar + dates; eggs on toast; cottage cheese + cereal/fruit.
    • Why: You’ll support muscle protein synthesis and refuel glycogen efficiently.

Pre‑sleep (about 60 mins)

  • A slow, protein‑rich snack improves overnight recovery and sleep quality.
    • Examples: Roam bites; Greek yoghurt + seeds; small turkey roll‑ups.
    • Why: You extend the recovery window and reduce night‑time awakenings from blood sugar dips.

Read more in‑depth: Real Recovery Starts with Food →

Timing for different goals

Strength focus: 
Emphasise post‑training 30–50g carbs with your protein to drive adaptations.

Endurance focus: 
Add a small mid‑session carb for >60 min sessions; maintain protein across the day.

Fat‑loss focus: 
Keep snacks protein‑forward; time carbs around training for performance.


Mistakes to dodge

  • Skipping pre‑sleep protein—a missed recovery opportunity.
  • Only drinking sugary shakes; favour real‑food protein (Roam) for better satiety and fewer additives.
  • Front‑loading all protein at dinner; spread it for best results.


Build a time‑smart routine with Roam - pre, post, and pre‑bed.

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Got questions - we have answers

FAQ

Do I need protein during training?

Only for very long session (90–120+ min); but most people don’t. Focus on pre/post and total daily intake.

Can I train in a fasted state and still build muscle?

Yes, but performance may dip. Prioritise post‑training protein + carbs.