Aus der Datenbank

Marken mit dem höchsten durchschnittlichen Proteingehalt

Hier siehst du, bei welchen Marken in der Datenbank im Schnitt mehr Protein auf 100 g steckt.

Author
CalCalc
Reviewed by
CalCalc
Last updated
April 5, 2026

Short answer

Protein density is a practical screening metric when you want to find foods that help with satiety or make it easier to hit a protein target. A brand-level average can point you in the right direction, but it can also hide a messy mix of very different products. Use it to shortlist brands, then inspect the products themselves.

How to use a protein ranking well

What the ranking measures

This page averages grams of protein per 100 g across products assigned to the same brand in the current database. Brands that sell a lot of yogurts, skyr, cottage cheese, protein puddings, meats, or high-protein convenience foods tend to rise. Brands built around confectionery or refined snacks do not.

That does not mean every product under a high-ranking brand is protein-dense. It means the brand is more likely than average to contain protein-forward products worth checking.

Why protein density matters

Higher-protein diets can make energy restriction easier for some people because protein supports satiety and helps preserve lean mass during weight loss. That does not make protein a magic nutrient. It makes it one of the more useful levers when calories are controlled and training is part of the picture.

In practice, protein density matters most when you are choosing between similar foods. A yogurt with substantially more protein at similar calories changes the meal more than a theoretical argument about the 'best' diet.

Where brand averages break down

Brand averages can hide a lot. One brand may sell both plain high-protein yogurt and sugary dessert cups. Another may have protein bars, cookies, and shakes under the same logo. The average gives you a direction. It does not replace product-level reading.

Calories matter too. A protein-dense brand can still produce foods with very different calorie costs per serving. Protein per 100 g is useful, but it is rarely the only number that decides whether a food fits your plan.

How to use the ranking

Use this page when you want a faster route into protein-dense options than typing brand names one by one into search. Open the brand, sort through the product pages, and compare protein, calories, ingredients, and serving size before you decide it belongs in regular rotation.

  • Use the ranking to find candidate brands quickly.
  • Check protein and calories at the product level before logging or buying.
  • Treat the average as a filter, not a finished recommendation.

Nach Marke

Wo im Schnitt mehr Protein steckt

Öffne direkt eine Marke, wenn du vom Überblick schnell zu den konkreten Produktseiten wechseln willst.

Protein ranking FAQ

Does a high-protein brand automatically mean better fat loss results?

Not by itself. Protein helps, especially for satiety and lean-mass retention, but the full meal still depends on calories, total diet, and whether you actually like the food enough to keep buying it.

Why compare protein per 100 g instead of per serving?

Per-100-g values make cross-product comparison cleaner because serving sizes are set by manufacturers and can vary widely. Once you shortlist a product, serving size matters again.

Why can a high-ranking brand still have low-protein products?

Because this is a brand average. Brands often sell multiple sub-lines with very different nutrition profiles.

Research and sources

  1. Leidy HJ, et al. Higher protein intake preserves lean mass and satiety with weight loss in pre-obese and obese women.

    PubMed

    Trial showing that higher protein intake can reduce lean-mass loss during energy restriction.

  2. Westerterp-Plantenga MS, et al. Dietary protein, weight loss, and weight maintenance.

    PubMed

    Review covering protein, satiety, thermogenesis, and body-composition outcomes.

  3. Morton RW, et al. A systematic review, meta-analysis and meta-regression of the effect of protein supplementation on resistance training-induced gains in muscle mass and strength in healthy adults.

    PubMed Central

    Useful context for readers who care about protein targets in combination with training.

  4. Westerterp-Plantenga MS, et al. Dietary Protein and Energy Balance in Relation to Obesity and Co-morbidities.

    PubMed Central

    Broader review of protein intake, satiety, and energy balance.