Best High-Protein Breakfast Options
The "30 g of protein within an hour of waking" guideline is well-supported in muscle protein synthesis research and in satiety / appetite trials. It's also harder to hit than people expect — most cereals deliver 5–6 g, most pastries under 5 g. Below: 12 packaged breakfast options that clear the FDA "high in protein" bar (≥10 g per serving) and score in the top of our database.
The ranked list
1. Vega — One All-in-One Nutritional Shake, Vanilla Chai
A 94 / 100 · 20 g protein per serving · 170 cal · 0.999 g sugar
Vega One Vanilla Chai: 20g plant protein, ~6g fiber per 44g packet at 170 cal. A vegan all-in-one meal shake, not an isolate. Labelgrade A (94/100).
2. Ratio — :Fiber And Protein Vanilla Dairy Snack
A- 87 / 100 · 20 g protein per serving · 180 cal · 3 g sugar
:Ratio Vanilla Dairy Snack packs 20g protein, 10g fiber, and just 3g sugar per cup at 180 cal. A stevia-sweetened, cream-based keto-leaning yogurt alternative. Labelgrade A- (87/100).
3. Catalina Crunch — Chocolate Banana Cereal
A- 85 / 100 · 11 g protein per serving · 110 cal · 0 g sugar
11g protein, Labelgrade A- (85/100): Catalina Crunch Chocolate Banana packs 9g fiber and 0g sugar per 1/2 cup (36g), 110 cal, on a pea-protein base.
4. Dannon — Oikos Triple Zero Blended Nonfat Greek Yogurt, Cherry
A- 85 / 100 · 15 g protein per serving · 120 cal · 6 g sugar
Oikos Triple Zero Cherry: 15g protein, 6g fiber, 0g added sugar for 120 cal per 5.3 oz cup, stevia-sweetened. Labelgrade A- (85/100), with the full 6-dimension breakdown.
5. Dannon — Oikos Nonfat Greek Yogurt, Plain
B+ 84 / 100 · 15 g protein per serving · 79.5 cal · 6 g sugar
Oikos Plain Nonfat Greek Yogurt: 15g protein, 80 cal, one ingredient per 5.3 oz cup. Labelgrade B+ (84/100) — the unsweetened workhorse of the Oikos line.
6. Fage — Total 0% Nonfat Greek Strained Yogurt
B+ 83 / 100 · 18 g protein per serving · 90 cal · 5 g sugar
Fage Total 0%: 18g protein, 90 calories per 180g, just skim milk and live cultures. Labelgrade B+ (83/100). The gold-standard plain nonfat Greek yogurt, by the numbers.
7. Friendship Dairies — 1% Milkfat Small Curd No Salt Added Cottage Cheese
B+ 83 / 100 · 15 g protein per serving · 90.4 cal · 4 g sugar
Friendship Dairies 1% No Salt Added cottage cheese: 15g protein for 90 calories per 1/2 cup, at just 55mg sodium. Labelgrade B+ (83/100), with the full 6-dimension breakdown.
8. Oikos — Pro Vanilla Greek Yogurt
B+ 83 / 100 · 20 g protein per serving · 140 cal · 3 g sugar
Oikos Pro Vanilla packs 20g protein into a 150g cup for 140 calories — the highest per-cup protein among Greek yogurts, helped by added whey. Labelgrade B+ (83/100).
9. OWYN — Pro Elite Chocolate Shake
B+ 83 / 100 · 32 g protein per serving · 200 cal · 0 g sugar
OWYN Pro Elite Chocolate: 32g plant protein for 200 calories, the highest-protein vegan RTD shake. 0g sugar, dairy/soy/gluten/nut-free. Labelgrade B+ (83/100).
10. Stonyfield — Organic Greek Nonfat Yogurt Plain - 32 oz
B+ 83 / 100 · 16 g protein per serving · 90 cal · 5 g sugar
16g protein, 90 cal per 180g — Stonyfield Organic Plain Greek earns Labelgrade B+ (83/100). One-ingredient organic strained milk, 0g fat, sugar is lactose-only.
11. Wallaby — Plain Organic Aussie Greek Lowfat Yogurt, Plain
B+ 83 / 100 · 14 g protein per serving · 100 cal · 5 g sugar
Nutrition facts for Wallaby Plain Organic Aussie Greek Lowfat Yogurt, Plain: 14g protein per 5.3 oz cup (2.6g per oz). Labelgrade B+. Clean ingredient list, very low saturated fat, effectively zero sugar, and very low sodium.
12. Chobani — Plain Non- Fat Greek Yogurt
B+ 82 / 100 · 16 g protein per serving · 90 cal · 6 g sugar
Chobani Plain Non-Fat Greek Yogurt: 16g protein for 90 calories per 180g, zero fat, zero added sugar, just cultured nonfat milk. Labelgrade B+ (82/100), and how it stacks up against Fage.
Build your own from these picks
- ~25 g protein, 250 cal: 1 cup plain non-fat Greek yogurt + ¼ cup berries + 1 tbsp chia seeds
- ~30 g protein, 320 cal: 2 eggs scrambled + 1 cup low-sodium cottage cheese + slice of whole-grain toast
- ~40 g protein, 450 cal: 1 scoop whey + 1 cup milk + ½ cup oats + 1 banana, blended
- ~50 g protein, 600 cal (athlete): 2 eggs + 1 cup cottage cheese + 1 protein bar + 8 oz milk
How we picked these
Filters: (1) traditional breakfast category — yogurt, cereal, eggs, milk, oats, bread, or a product whose name suggests breakfast use; (2) ≥10 g of protein per labeled serving (FDA "high in protein" threshold). Sorted by overall Labelgrade score, which weighs protein density + ingredient quality + sat fat + sodium + sugar + fiber together. Drawn from our graded products catalog — verified against USDA FoodData Central, last refreshed 2026-05-27.
Related guides
- How much protein do I actually need per day?
- What "high in protein" actually means under FDA rules
- Best high-protein Greek yogurts
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does breakfast protein matter more than other meals?
Two reasons. (1) Anabolic resistance — overnight fasting depletes amino acid pools, and a high-protein breakfast triggers the largest muscle protein synthesis response of the day in most adults. The "30 g of protein within 1 hour of waking" guideline traces to research by Donald Layman and others at the University of Illinois. (2) Satiety — protein at breakfast suppresses ghrelin (hunger hormone) more than carbs or fat, reducing total daily calorie intake by 10–15% on average in controlled trials.
How much protein should breakfast have?
For most active adults, 25–40 g of protein at breakfast hits both the muscle protein synthesis threshold AND the satiety benefit. For older adults (65+), 30+ g is meaningful — anabolic resistance means smaller doses produce less synthesis. For sedentary adults, 20 g is enough. Going past 50 g in one sitting produces no additional muscle benefit — the excess is used for energy.
What's the highest-protein US breakfast cereal?
Cheerios Protein and Kashi GO (the original "high protein" variant) both deliver 11–14 g of protein per cup with milk added. Among "protein cereals" without added milk, Magic Spoon and Catalina Crunch lead — 13–14 g per cup using whey protein concentrate in the formula. Without the added whey, traditional cereals max out around 5–6 g per cup of protein from the grain itself.
Is oatmeal a good high-protein breakfast?
Plain oats deliver ~5 g of protein per ½ cup dry — modest. The trick is to make oats a vehicle for additional protein: ½ cup oats + 1 cup milk (8 g) + 1 scoop whey (24 g) + 1 tbsp peanut butter (4 g) = 41 g of protein in a single bowl. Oats themselves provide soluble fiber (beta-glucan) which is heart-healthy but not protein-rich.
What about eggs?
Two large eggs = ~13 g of protein, ~155 calories — one of the most efficient whole-food protein-per-calorie ratios. Add 1 cup of milk + 1 piece of whole-grain toast and you're at ~25 g of protein for ~340 calories. Eggs also deliver choline (cognitive function), lutein/zeaxanthin (eye health), and B12. The cholesterol concern from 1980s nutrition advice has been substantially walked back by major guidelines — current evidence supports eggs as a normal protein source for most adults.
Is a protein shake a "real" breakfast?
It can be. A shake with 30 g of protein, 30 g of carbs (banana + oats), 10 g of fat (peanut butter), and 400–500 calories is nutritionally comparable to a balanced solid breakfast. The downside is satiety — liquid calories suppress hunger less than solid food, so some people end up hungrier 2 hours later. The upside is convenience and consistency. Pair a shake with a piece of fruit or a slice of whole-grain toast for better staying power.
What's the best breakfast for cutting?
Highest protein-per-calorie ratio: plain non-fat Greek yogurt + berries + chia seeds. About 25 g of protein, 200 calories, and 6+ g of fiber. The high protein triggers satiety; the fiber slows digestion; the calories leave room for the rest of the day. Add 1 hard-boiled egg if you want a slight increase to ~30 g protein.
Best breakfast for athletes / muscle gain?
Heavier calorie target with the same protein priority. Sample: 1 cup oatmeal (5 g protein) + 1 cup milk (8 g) + 1 scoop whey (24 g) + 2 eggs (13 g) + ½ cup berries = ~50 g of protein, 700 calories. Pre-training, this hits maintenance + leaves room for an additional 600–800 calories of training fuel during the day.
What about fast-food / chain breakfasts?
Some hit the protein bar; most don't. McDonald's Egg McMuffin: 17 g of protein. Starbucks turkey bacon egg-white sandwich: 18 g. Chick-fil-A egg white grill: 26 g (highest among major chains). Most pastry-style options (croissants, muffins, donuts) deliver under 10 g and clear the threshold only with a side. If you eat fast-food breakfast regularly, build your order around egg-containing items rather than pastries.