If you’ve spent any time in the fitness world, you’ve likely heard the popular advice: eat one gram of protein per pound of body weight. For women over 40 focused on weight loss, muscle tone, and bone health, that rule can sound like a non-negotiable. But according to experts, it’s not that simple.
As we age, protein does become increasingly important. After 40, women naturally begin to lose muscle mass due to hormonal shifts, particularly declining estrogen. This loss of lean muscle can slow metabolism, impact strength, and even affect bone density. Adequate protein intake helps preserve muscle tissue, supports recovery from strength training, and plays a key role in maintaining strong bones — all critical for healthy aging.
But does that mean everyone needs to follow the “1-gram-per-pound” rule?
Online women’s fat loss coach Stefanie Lesperance says not necessarily.

Fitness Coach Breaks Down The '1-Gram-Per-Pound' Rule
“One gram of protein per pound is not for everyone,” she explains. “The rule came from bodybuilding, not busy women, not moms, not people trying to rebuild the relationship with food. Protein is a tool, not a rule.”
The high-protein recommendation originally gained popularity in bodybuilding circles, where maximizing muscle growth and minimizing body fat are top priorities. However, for everyday women juggling careers, families, and long to-do lists, rigid macro targets can sometimes do more harm than good — especially if they make healthy eating feel overwhelming or unsustainable.
Lesperance emphasizes flexibility. “I have some clients that actually eat only 90 to 100 grams of protein per day and they are still seeing results,” she says. “And I have other clients who actually eat more than their body weight in protein because they have higher hunger and it helps them from overeating on the weekends.”
In other words, protein needs are highly individual. Factors like body size, activity level, strength-training frequency, hunger cues, and overall calorie intake all matter. For many women over 40 who lift weights consistently, a moderate protein range — often between 0.6 to 0.8 grams per pound of body weight — may be effective for supporting muscle retention and fat loss, without feeling extreme.
She also reassures women worried about muscle loss if they don’t hit a high number exactly. “If your protein target makes your plan unsustainable, then adjust it. I promise you, if you're lifting weights, you are not going to lose muscle.”
Another important point? Carbohydrates aren’t the enemy. “In fact, eating more carbs will help you with protein sparing, which means your body will use carbs instead of protein as fuel,” she explains. This “protein-sparing” effect allows the body to use dietary protein for muscle repair and maintenance rather than burning it for energy — something especially beneficial during resistance training.
For women over 40 focused on long-term health, the bigger picture matters more than a single number. Prioritizing strength training, spreading protein intake evenly throughout the day, eating fiber-rich whole foods, and ensuring adequate calcium and vitamin D intake are all crucial for bone density and metabolic health.

The Bottom Line
Protein absolutely plays a key role in weight loss, muscle maintenance, and bone health after 40 — but the “1 gram per pound” rule isn’t a universal requirement. Think of protein as a flexible tool that should support your lifestyle, not control it. If a target feels unrealistic or stressful, adjust it to something sustainable. Consistency, strength training, and balanced nutrition will always matter more than chasing a bodybuilding formula.

