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Protein sources compared

Not All Protein Is Equal: A Complete Comparison of Every Major Protein Source

Chicken breast and lentils can both give you 25 grams of protein. But your body will not use them the same way.

This guide ranks major protein sources across quality, density, cost, and satiety, then translates the numbers into the best choice for muscle gain, fat loss, plant-based eating, convenience, and budget.

Same grams, different usability

Chicken Breast

25g protein target

9.0/10
Quality
0.92
Calories / 100g
165
Leucine threshold
28g protein

Lentils

25g protein target

6.8/10
Quality
0.52
Calories / 100g
116
Leucine threshold
42g protein

Goal-based ranking

What is your primary goal?

Top 5 for Muscle

Quality, leucine, and practical serving size

Live ranking
1

Whole Eggs

13g protein / 100g · $0.25 per 10g protein

9.4/10
2

Whey Protein Powder

80g protein / 100g · $0.30 per 10g protein

9.3/10
3

Salmon

25g protein / 100g · $0.80 per 10g protein

9.2/10
4

Canned Tuna

26g protein / 100g · $0.20 per 10g protein

9.1/10
5

Chicken Breast

31g protein / 100g · $0.35 per 10g protein

9.0/10
Four-dimensional score

Protein quality is not one number

This guide scores protein sources across quality, density, value, and satiety. That is why a food can be excellent for muscle-building but poor for budget, or cheap but incomplete unless paired.

Quality

PDCAAS/DIAAS

Amino acid completeness and digestibility. This is the difference between protein eaten and protein your body can use.

Density

g protein / 100 kcal

How much protein you get before calories climb. This matters most during fat loss.

Value

$ / 10g protein

A practical cost benchmark for making high protein intake sustainable over months.

Satiety

fullness score

A mix of protein, food volume, fiber, and how well a source works as a real meal.

Complete database

Protein sources compared

Cost values are planning estimates. Use them for relative comparison, then update with your local grocery prices.

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Whole Eggs

Animal

9.4
Protein
13g / 100g
Calories
155
Cost
$0.25 / 10g
Density
8.4g / 100 kcal

Whey Protein Powder

Supplement

9.3
Protein
80g / 100g
Calories
400
Cost
$0.30 / 10g
Density
20g / 100 kcal

Salmon

Animal

9.2
Protein
25g / 100g
Calories
208
Cost
$0.80 / 10g
Density
12g / 100 kcal

Canned Tuna

Animal

9.1
Protein
26g / 100g
Calories
116
Cost
$0.20 / 10g
Density
22.4g / 100 kcal

Chicken Breast

Animal

9.0
Protein
31g / 100g
Calories
165
Cost
$0.35 / 10g
Density
18.8g / 100 kcal

Greek Yogurt (0%)

Dairy

8.8
Protein
10g / 100g
Calories
59
Cost
$0.40 / 10g
Density
16.9g / 100 kcal

Turkey Breast

Animal

8.7
Protein
29g / 100g
Calories
135
Cost
$0.40 / 10g
Density
21.5g / 100 kcal

Lean Beef (95%)

Animal

8.7
Protein
26g / 100g
Calories
152
Cost
$0.60 / 10g
Density
17.1g / 100 kcal

Low-Fat Cottage Cheese

Dairy

8.6
Protein
11g / 100g
Calories
72
Cost
$0.30 / 10g
Density
15.3g / 100 kcal

Shrimp

Animal

8.5
Protein
24g / 100g
Calories
99
Cost
$0.55 / 10g
Density
24.2g / 100 kcal

Pea + Rice Protein Blend

Plant blend

8.3
Protein
78g / 100g
Calories
390
Cost
$0.38 / 10g
Density
20g / 100 kcal

Pea Protein Powder

Plant

8.0
Protein
80g / 100g
Calories
380
Cost
$0.35 / 10g
Density
21.1g / 100 kcal

Firm Tofu

Plant

7.8
Protein
17g / 100g
Calories
144
Cost
$0.20 / 10g
Density
11.8g / 100 kcal

Tempeh

Plant

7.7
Protein
19g / 100g
Calories
193
Cost
$0.35 / 10g
Density
9.8g / 100 kcal

Edamame

Plant

7.6
Protein
11g / 100g
Calories
121
Cost
$0.25 / 10g
Density
9.1g / 100 kcal

Quinoa

Plant

7.5
Protein
4g / 100g
Calories
120
Cost
$0.45 / 10g
Density
3.3g / 100 kcal

Chickpeas

Plant

7.1
Protein
9g / 100g
Calories
164
Cost
$0.12 / 10g
Density
5.5g / 100 kcal

Black Beans

Plant

7.0
Protein
9g / 100g
Calories
132
Cost
$0.10 / 10g
Density
6.8g / 100 kcal

Soy Milk

Plant

6.9
Protein
3g / 100g
Calories
54
Cost
$0.30 / 10g
Density
5.6g / 100 kcal

Lentils

Plant

6.8
Protein
9g / 100g
Calories
116
Cost
$0.08 / 10g
Density
7.8g / 100 kcal

Hemp Seeds

Plant

6.5
Protein
31g / 100g
Calories
553
Cost
$0.60 / 10g
Density
5.6g / 100 kcal
Quality deep dive

Why eggs became the practical benchmark

Whole eggs score at the top of common protein-quality systems because they provide all nine essential amino acids in a digestible package. They are not the highest-protein food by weight, but they are one of the cleanest examples of a complete protein that also works in normal meals.

9

essential amino acids

1.00

PDCAAS benchmark

0.54g

leucine per egg approx.

Leucine threshold

The switch for muscle protein synthesis

Many meals need roughly 2-3g leucine to fully stimulate muscle protein synthesis. Lower-leucine sources can still work, but the serving usually needs more total protein.

Whey protein

highest leucine density

~20g protein

Whole eggs

complete whole food

~25g protein

Chicken breast

lean meal anchor

~28g protein

Soy protein

best plant baseline

~30g protein

Pea protein

often better when blended

~35g protein

Wheat protein

low lysine and leucine density

~50g protein

Digestion speed

Fast protein and slow protein solve different jobs

Whey protein

8-10 g/h

Fast post-workout supplement

Casein / cottage cheese

2-4 g/h

Slow evening protein

Egg protein

3-4 g/h

Balanced whole-food option

Chicken breast

3-4 g/h

Structured meal protein

Plant proteins

2-3 g/h

Pair and distribute across meals

Balanced comparison

Animal protein vs plant protein

Animal protein usually gives the highest short-term muscle protein synthesis signal per gram. Plant protein can still work extremely well when total protein is higher and amino acid gaps are covered.

DimensionAnimalPlant
Amino acid completenessUsually completeUsually needs pairing, except soy and quinoa
Leucine densityHigh in whey, eggs, meat, dairyModerate; soy is stronger than most plants
DigestibilityOften 90-98%Often 70-90%, depending on processing
FiberNoneOften high in legumes, grains, seeds
MicronutrientsB12, heme iron, zincMagnesium, potassium, folate
Environmental impactOften higherOften lower

Amino acid coverage

Radar view of whey, tofu, and lentils. The shape shows why soy foods are easier to plan than most legumes.

Essential amino acid coverage radar chartLeuLysMetThrVal
Whey Protein PowderScore 9.3
Firm TofuScore 7.8
LentilsScore 6.8
Plant protein strategy

How to build complete plant protein days

You do not need every plant meal to be complete by itself. The practical goal is to cover the essential amino acids across the day with complementary foods.

Beans + grains

Methionine from grains, lysine from beans

black beans with rice, lentils with whole-grain flatbread

The classic pairing because legumes and grains cover each other's biggest gaps.

Legumes + seeds

Methionine and cysteine from seeds

lentil soup with pumpkin seeds, tofu bowl with sesame

Works well when you want a higher-fiber meal without relying on a large grain portion.

Soy foods alone

Soy is naturally complete enough for practical meal planning

tofu stir-fry, tempeh tacos, edamame bowls

The simplest plant-based base because tofu, tempeh, edamame, and soy milk share a strong amino acid profile.

Pea + rice protein powder

Lysine from pea, methionine from rice

mixed plant protein shake

A convenient option when a vegan athlete wants a more whey-like amino acid profile.

Budget guide

The cheapest protein is not always the best protein

Beans and lentils are extremely cheap, but they need pairing. Eggs, tuna, tofu, and cottage cheese are often the practical middle ground: affordable and easier to complete.

Lentils

$0.08

Black Beans

$0.10

Chickpeas

$0.12

Canned Tuna

$0.20

Firm Tofu

$0.20

Whole Eggs

$0.25

Edamame

$0.25

Whey Protein Powder

$0.30

Low-Fat Cottage Cheese

$0.30

Soy Milk

$0.30

Budget protein day

Target: 150g protein. This template reaches 136g for about $3.55 before local price variation.

FoodProteinCost

Whole eggs

4 large

26g$0.80

Canned tuna

1 drained can

36g$0.90

Black beans

200g cooked

18g$0.20

Greek yogurt

200g

20g$0.80

Rolled oats

80g

10g$0.15

Firm tofu

150g

26g$0.70

Add a small chicken, tofu, or extra yogurt portion to push this over 150g while staying near $4/day in many U.S. grocery contexts.

Final picks

Best protein sources by goal

Quality, leucine, and timing

Maximize muscle growth

Use whey after training when convenient, then anchor meals with eggs, chicken breast, salmon, or Greek yogurt.

See the muscle-building timeline

Density and satiety

Lose fat while keeping muscle

Prioritize chicken breast, Greek yogurt, tuna, shrimp, turkey breast, and cottage cheese.

Build a cutting diet plan

Completeness and total intake

Build muscle on plants

Build around tofu, tempeh, edamame, soy milk, and pea-rice protein, then pair legumes with grains or seeds.

Plan a high-protein week

Cost per gram and easy prep

Maximize budget efficiency

Use lentils, black beans, eggs, canned tuna, tofu, oats, and cottage cheese as the weekly base.

Calculate your TDEE first
FAQ

Protein source questions

What is the highest quality protein source?+

Eggs, whey protein, casein, and soy protein commonly score at or near the top on PDCAAS. Whey is especially useful for muscle-building because it is fast-digesting and rich in leucine.

Is plant protein as good as animal protein for building muscle?+

Plant protein can support comparable long-term muscle growth when total protein is high enough and amino acid gaps are covered. Many plant-based athletes use roughly 20-30% more total protein to offset lower leucine density and digestibility.

What is the cheapest high-protein food?+

Lentils, black beans, eggs, canned tuna, and tofu are among the most cost-effective high-protein staples. Exact prices vary by store, package size, and region.

How much protein can your body absorb in one meal?+

The body can absorb more than one meal's worth of protein, but muscle protein synthesis is usually maximized by spreading protein across several meals. A practical target is about 25-40g protein per meal for many adults.

What are complete protein sources?+

Complete proteins contain all nine essential amino acids in useful amounts. Most animal proteins are complete. Plant-based complete options include soy foods and quinoa, while many legumes and grains become stronger when paired.

Is whey protein better than chicken for building muscle?+

Whey is faster and more leucine-dense, so it is convenient after training. Chicken is better as a filling whole-food meal anchor. Both can fit the same muscle-building plan.

Research note

Use the score as a decision tool, not a diagnosis.

Food data and cost estimates vary by brand, package size, preparation method, and region. The purpose is to compare protein choices, then verify your real recipe or day with the site calculators.

See How Long Muscle Takes
Data and method notes

How to read the protein source rankings

Protein quality is not just a protein-grams column. The FAO report on dietary protein quality evaluation explains why amino acid digestibility and indispensable amino acid balance matter, and why DIAAS was proposed as a more precise method than older scoring systems. This page uses PDCAAS-style values as a practical public-facing benchmark because they are still widely recognized by consumers and educators.

Food protein and calorie values are modeled from USDA-style food composition data. USDA FoodData Central is the public reference source for the type of per-100g food data used across this site. Real cooked weights, draining, brand formulas, and fortification can move the final number, so use the recipe calculator when exact batch values matter.

The muscle-building recommendations are aligned with the International Society of Sports Nutrition protein position stand, which discusses daily protein targets, protein quality, timing, and distribution for active people. For per-meal planning, the review on protein intake per meal and muscle-building is useful background for why spreading protein across meals is usually more practical than trying to eat one very large protein dose.

Cost estimates are deliberately labeled as planning estimates, not live grocery quotes. They are included because budget is a real adherence variable. If you are choosing protein sources for a household plan, update the cost-per-10g column with your actual store prices and keep the quality and density columns as the stable comparison frame.