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Nutrient Timing: What Actually Matters and What's a Myth

Nutrient timing matters less than you've been told. The anabolic window is wider than 30 minutes, and your daily protein and carb totals do most of the work.

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Nutrient Timing: Myth vs Reality, What Really Matters
Last updated on June 4, 2026, and last reviewed by an expert on June 4, 2026.

For years the gym lore went like this: slam a protein shake within 30 minutes of your last rep or your workout was basically wasted. That “anabolic window” panic sold a lot of supplements. It also got the science backwards. Nutrient timing does matter for certain things, but the part everyone obsesses over — racing the clock after training — is the least important piece. What you eat across the whole day matters far more than the exact minute you eat it.

Nutrient Timing: Myth vs Reality, What Really Matters

This guide sorts the real effects of nutrient timing from the marketing. We’ll cover the anabolic window myth, where timing genuinely helps, and the daily targets that do most of the heavy lifting.

Quick answer

The anabolic window myth

The classic claim was that muscle protein synthesis spikes hard right after training and then slams shut within 30–60 minutes, so you had to get protein in immediately. The reality is more forgiving.

A 2017 position stand from the International Society of Sports Nutrition (ISSN), co-authored by Brad Schoenfeld and Alan Aragon, concluded that the post-exercise period for muscle protein synthesis is wide — and that the size and timing of your pre-workout meal heavily influences how urgent post-workout feeding actually is.1 If you ate a solid protein-containing meal two to three hours before lifting, those amino acids are still circulating during and after your session. There’s no slamming window to beat.

This doesn’t mean post-workout nutrition is pointless. It means the panic was overblown. Eating protein in the hours around training is what counts, and “around” is generous. For the practical side of after-training eating, see our post-workout nutrition guide, and for the lead-in, the pre-workout nutrition guide.

When is the Best Time to Take Protein? | Protein Timing Guide
Suggested read: When is the Best Time to Take Protein? | Protein Timing Guide

Why daily totals dominate

Your muscles don’t tally up the clock — they respond to the steady supply of amino acids and the total training stimulus over days and weeks. If your daily protein is too low, perfect timing won’t save you. If your daily protein is dialed in, imperfect timing barely registers.

The same logic applies to glycogen. Your muscles refill their carbohydrate stores based on how much carbohydrate you eat across the day, not on a single magic post-workout shake. Only when recovery time is very short (you’re training twice in one day) does rapid refueling become genuinely time-sensitive.

So the hierarchy looks like this:

PriorityFactorHow much it matters
1Total daily proteinMost
2Total daily calories and carbsMost
3Protein spread across mealsModerate
4Exact timing around trainingLeast (for most people)

How much protein, and how to spread it

The dose that reliably supports muscle is well established.

A practical example for an 80 kg person: aim for about 130–175 g of protein a day, split across four meals of 30–40 g. That’s it. No stopwatch required.

If you mostly train and just want a simple rule on the shake question, our take on whether to drink a protein shake before or after a workout lands in the same place: either works, consistency beats timing.

Suggested read: Electrolytes for Sweating: When Water Isn't Enough

Carbohydrate timing: when the clock actually ticks

Carbohydrate timing follows the same pattern — usually relaxed, occasionally urgent.

For endurance athletes specifically, taking carbs during the session is its own topic — see intra-workout nutrition for when mid-session carbs and electrolytes earn their place.

Where supplements fit into timing

Some performance supplements are genuinely timing-sensitive, and others aren’t:

In short: supplements that build up in tissue care about your daily habit, while acute-effect supplements care about timing.

Suggested read: Hydration During Exercise: How Much to Drink

The pre-workout meal sets the rules

Here’s the underrated lever. The reason the post-workout window is so forgiving is that your pre-workout meal is still working for you. A meal with protein and carbs two to three hours before training keeps amino acids and fuel available right through your session and into recovery.

If you train fasted — early morning, nothing in the tank — then post-workout feeding becomes more time-sensitive, because there’s no pre-workout meal still feeding you. In that case, getting protein and carbs in reasonably soon after training is the smarter play. If you eat normally beforehand, relax.

A simple daily template

For someone lifting four to five days a week:

  1. Set daily protein at 1.6–2.2 g/kg and hit it, no matter how you slice the meals.
  2. Spread it into three to five feedings of 0.3–0.4 g/kg each.
  3. Eat a balanced meal (protein + carbs) two to three hours before training when you can.
  4. Eat again within a couple of hours after training — no sprint needed unless you trained fasted.
  5. Match carbs to your training load across the day; only get strict about timing when you’re doing two-a-days or long endurance sessions.
  6. Use supplements correctly: daily for creatine and beta-alanine, pre-session for citrulline and stimulants.

Bottom line

Nutrient timing is real, but it’s been wildly oversold. The anabolic window isn’t 30 minutes — it’s measured in hours, and a decent pre-workout meal stretches it further. What actually moves the needle is your total daily protein (1.6–2.2 g/kg, spread roughly every 3–4 hours) and your total daily carbohydrate, with precise timing only mattering for fasted training, two-a-day sessions, and long endurance efforts. Stop racing the clock and start hitting your daily numbers. For the surrounding pieces of this topic, see pre-workout nutrition, post-workout nutrition, intra-workout nutrition, and carb loading.


  1. Kerksick CM, Arent S, Schoenfeld BJ, et al. International Society of Sports Nutrition position stand: nutrient timing. J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2017;14:33. PubMed | DOI ↩︎ ↩︎ ↩︎

  2. Cermak NM, van Loon LJC. The use of carbohydrates during exercise as an ergogenic aid. Sports Med. 2013;43(11):1139-55. PubMed | DOI ↩︎

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