Those include feeling full and satisfied after meals, building muscle mass (which is especially important as you age), supporting weight loss, and your hair, skin, and nail health.
Other potentially irritating ingredients include fermentable fibers like inulin and carrageenan, gums and thickeners like xanthan gum, and sugar alcohols that can produce gas as a byproduct and trigger stomach discomfort, Sharp says. You could try looking for protein powders without those ingredients and with sweeteners like monk fruit extract instead of sugar alcohols, which Sharp says is easier on the stomach.
Without enough fiber in your diet—from plants like whole grains, legumes, fruits, and vegetables—you’re going to have stomach issues, regardless of the protein powder, Sharp says.
“A serving of protein powder a day is absolutely safe for folks to consume, especially when you’re combining that with…other sources of lean protein,” Sharp says. “It’s not that the protein itself is causing the issue, especially when eating plant-based sources of protein. The challenge comes when replacing other gut-supporting nutrients like fiber.”
Both Sharp and Balk agree that there’s one pretty substantial reason why protein powders could be causing stomach issues: too much protein, too fast.
“It can slow gastric emptying,” Balk says, which means the protein will hang out in the stomach a bit longer and cause that unwelcomed discomfort. Additionally, having 25 to 30 grams of protein in just a few minutes in the form of a shake or smoothie can overwhelm the gut and lead to more bloating and gas, Sharp explains.
“It’s really easy to down a protein shake in a couple gulps versus how long it takes to eat a steak,” Balk adds. “It’s not so much about avoiding ingredients, it’s about slowing down consumption.”
Balk advises slowing down when you sip on a protein shake to help lessen the impact it has on your stomach.
“It’s not designed for stomach comfort. It’s designed to get a lot of protein in. That sets us up for probable or possible stomach distress,” he says.
It also might help to break up your protein intake—if you normally have two scoops of favorite protein powder in the morning, Balk recommends having one scoop in the morning and another later in the day so you don’t overwhelm your stomach all at once.
“It doesn’t matter when you’re ingesting the protein, it’s all going to do its job. It doesn’t need to be in one shot to work,” he says.
For more on protein: