NutraTested
Protein

Protein Powder

Also called: whey, casein, plant protein, whey protein, whey isolate, pea protein, rice protein
A
Best for: Strength
The bottom line

The evidence that protein supplementation supports muscle gain with resistance training is among the most robust in nutrition science: a 2018 meta-analysis of 49 trials (PMID 28698222) confirmed the benefit with a ceiling at roughly 1.6 g/kg/day. Heavy-metal contamination in protein powders is a legitimate concern documented across multiple independent investigations, with plant-based proteins consistently showing higher levels than whey; the widely cited 'nearly half exceed safety thresholds' headline is based on California Prop 65 limits (a threshold approximately 25x stricter than the FDA adult reference level) and the Clean Label Project methodology has been formally disputed by CRN and NPA as non-peer-reviewed and without full transparency. Consumers who prioritize both efficacy and safety are best served by NSF Certified for Sport or Informed Protein-certified products.

Documented risks

Generally well tolerated in healthy adults. In people with normal kidney function, high protein intakes up to at least 2.2 g/kg/day are not associated with kidney damage; individuals with pre-existing kidney disease (particularly CKD with eGFR below 30) should consult a clinician before significantly increasing protein intake. Plant-based protein powders absorb more naturally occurring heavy metals (lead, cadmium, arsenic) from soil than whey derived from milk; consumers using plant-based protein daily at multiple servings should prioritize third-party-tested brands. Not a treatment for any disease.

Full safety details below

Reviewed by owner on 2026-06-02. Not medical advice; consult a licensed clinician before supplementing.

We aggregate third-party testing, certification, and clinical evidence. We do not run the tests ourselves.
What the evidence shows

Evidence by use

Each use graded independently. A strong grade for one use does not carry over to others.

A
Strength & muscle

Strong, consistent human trials.

B
Satiety & weight

Moderate evidence; some gaps remain.

B
Older adults

Moderate evidence; some gaps remain.

Documented risks and safety
Documented risks and safety notes

Generally well tolerated in healthy adults. In people with normal kidney function, high protein intakes up to at least 2.2 g/kg/day are not associated with kidney damage; individuals with pre-existing kidney disease (particularly CKD with eGFR below 30) should consult a clinician before significantly increasing protein intake. Plant-based protein powders absorb more naturally occurring heavy metals (lead, cadmium, arsenic) from soil than whey derived from milk; consumers using plant-based protein daily at multiple servings should prioritize third-party-tested brands. Not a treatment for any disease.

Reviewed by owner on 2026-06-02. Not medical advice; consult a licensed clinician before supplementing.

Expert stacks

Who takes it and why

Each expert's dose and stated reason, linked to their own words. Attribution only; no endorsement implied.

Peter Attia, MDPhoto: Jop van Velthuis, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons ↗
~2 g/kg/day (~1 g/lb/day)

Building and maintaining muscle is critical for longevity and metabolic health; skeletal muscle is the primary site of glucose disposal and muscle loss accelerates frailty, cardiovascular risk, and cognitive decline; the RDA (0.8 g/kg) was derived from nitrogen balance studies in young sedentary men and fails older adults and exercisers

peterattiamd.com ↗

Attribution only; no endorsement implied.

RP
1.2-1.6 g/kg/day minimum; up to 2.2 g/kg for serious resistance trainers

RDA (0.8 g/kg) prevents deficiency but does not optimize muscle health; cites stable isotope studies supporting 1.2-1.6 g/kg as practical optimum; for active adults in resistance training, 1.6 g/kg has been shown to maximize lean mass gains; older adults may need the higher end to prevent frailty

www.foundmyfitness.com ↗

Attribution only; no endorsement implied.

Bryan Johnson (Blueprint)Photo: M Robertson, CC BY 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons ↗
~1.6 g/kg/day personal intake; blueprint specifies 130 g/day for his own body (~25% total calories); recommends 1.5 g/kg for premenopausal women (follicular phase) and 2.0 g/kg (luteal phase)

Protein is a foundational longevity nutrient for muscle repair and preservation; Blueprint frames muscle retention as anti-aging infrastructure; luteal-phase elevation compensates for progesterone-driven muscle catabolism

blueprint.bryanjohnson.com ↗

Attribution only; no endorsement implied.

Buying guide

Which Protein Powder should you buy?

The short version: plain protein powder is the most-studied and least-expensive form, and any product that is third-party certified is a safe bet. Certification (NSF Certified for Sport or USP Verified) screens for banned substances and confirms the label matches what is in the bottle. Here are recognizable brands that carry it. We do not certify products and take no payment to list them.

Momentous
Essential Grass Fed-Whey Protein Unflavored
What's good 20g of grass-fed whey isolate per scoop from pasture-raised European dairy, NSF Certified for Sport and Informed Sport certified, with an added ProHydrolase digestive enzyme. Momentous ↗
Top complaint BarBend rates price per serving 1 out of 5, noting it runs about $2.60 per serving (roughly a dollar above the average isolate) and comes in only three flavors. BarBend ↗
NSF Certified for Sport Find Momentous ↗
Thorne
Whey Protein
What's good An easy-to-digest whey isolate with 21g protein and only 2g sugar per serving, NSF Certified for Sport for drug-tested athletes. NSF Certified for Sport ↗
Top complaint ProteinPowder.com notes it is surprisingly expensive, landing on the higher end of the pricing spectrum versus isolates with similar or higher protein. ProteinPowder.com ↗
NSF Certified for Sport Find Thorne ↗
Klean Athlete
Klean Casein
What's good Klean Casein supplies 24g of slow-digesting micellar casein per serving for overnight recovery, and is NSF Certified for Sport against banned substances. NSF Certified for Sport ↗
Top complaint ProteinPowder.com finds the price hard to justify, since with no added enzymes, BCAAs, or functional extras it offers less than similarly certified products that cost less. ProteinPowder.com ↗
NSF Certified for Sport Find Klean Athlete ↗
Transparent Labs
100% Grass-Fed Whey Protein Isolate
What's good 28g of grass-fed whey isolate (over 90 percent protein) per serving with no artificial sweeteners, dyes, or fillers, and Informed Choice and Informed Protein certified. Transparent Labs ↗
Top complaint BarBend notes it is expensive (around $1.82 per serving) and uses stevia, which can leave a bitter aftertaste for some palates. BarBend ↗
NSF Certified for Sport Find Transparent Labs ↗
Optimum Nutrition
Gold Standard 100% Whey
What's good Gold Standard delivers 24g protein per scoop from whey isolate, concentrate, and hydrolyzed isolate, and is Informed Choice certified against more than 250 banned substances. BarBend ↗
Top complaint BarBend criticizes the lack of blend transparency (you cannot tell how much concentrate versus isolate) and flags that the artificial sweeteners may upset some stomachs. BarBend ↗
NSF Certified for Sport Find Optimum Nutrition ↗
Garden of Life
Certified Grass-Fed Whey
What's good SPORT Grass-Fed Whey gives 24g of whey isolate from Truly Grass Fed Irish cows, plus probiotics, glutamine, and BCAAs, and is NSF Certified for Sport and Informed Choice certified. Garden of Life ↗
Top complaint Garage Gym Reviews lists mixability as a con, noting it may not fully mix without a blender. Garage Gym Reviews ↗
NSF Certified for Sport Find Garden of Life ↗

58 Protein Powder products are third-party certified in total. See the full list →

Independent research

Published lab tests on Protein Powder

These studies test the ingredient category, not a single branded product. All attributed to their original source. We do not run the tests.

47% of tested protein products exceeded California Prop 65 or other federal safety thresholds for at least one contaminant; 21% exceeded Prop 65 lead limits by 2x or more; plant-based protein powders showed 77% exceedance. Note: Prop 65 lead MADL is 0.5 mcg/day, roughly 25x stricter than the FDA adult reference level of 12.5 mcg/day; methodology disputed by CRN and NPA as non-peer-reviewed.

✗ Failed label claim Source: Consumer Reports (2010-07) ↗

All 15 products contained detectable levels of at least one heavy metal; three products (EAS Myoplex Original Rich Dark Chocolate, Muscle Milk Chocolate, Muscle Milk Vanilla Creme) exceeded proposed daily safety limits at 3 servings/day.