Strength is built, not born — and a lot of it gets built between sessions, in the small stuff you eat without thinking. You don't need a chef's kitchen or a supplement cupboard to hit your protein as a vegan. You need a handful of snacks that travel well and actually do the job.
Below are the snacks I keep in rotation — each with a sensible serving size, the protein it gives you, and roughly how many calories that costs. Use the filters to find what fits the moment — something to grab on the way out, something light before training, something that rebuilds after. Then scroll down and work out roughly how much protein you're actually aiming for in a day.
InteractiveThe snack explorer
InteractiveHow much protein do you actually need?
For athletes building strength, the usual guide is somewhere between 1.6 and 2.2 grams of protein per kilogram of bodyweight per day — higher when you're training hard. Pop your weight in and see your rough daily range.
A few things that make it stick
- Pair, don't rely. Two 10 g snacks plus your meals beats hunting for one giant protein hit.
- Prep on Sunday. Air-fry a tray of chickpeas or roast some edamame and you've got a week of grabbing instead of deciding.
- Soy and seitan punch hardest. Tempeh, tofu, soy yogurt and seitan carry the most protein per bite of anything on the list.
- Drink some of it. A pea- or soy-protein smoothie after training is the easiest 20 g you'll get all day.
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Join the waitlistServing sizes, protein and calorie figures are approximate and vary by brand and portion. This is general information for healthy, active adults, not personalised dietary advice — check with a professional for guidance specific to you.