Does Eating Too Much Protein Hurt Your Kidneys? The 50-Year-Old Myth, Explained
It’s not the kidney villain it’s been made out to be
If you’ve ever felt nervous about eating “too much” protein, you’ve absorbed a fear that researchers say has almost no scientific backing — at least for healthy adults.
You’ve probably heard it at the gym, in a wellness blog, or from a well-meaning friend: eat too much protein and you’ll damage your kidneys. It’s one of the most repeated pieces of fitness folklore out there — and it’s also nearly five decades old.
Here’s what’s surprising: researchers at McMaster University reviewed 28 studies spanning four decades and more than 1,300 participants and found no evidence supporting the idea that high protein intake harms healthy kidneys. If anything, the data pointed the other way. This guide breaks down where the myth came from, what the science actually shows, and who genuinely does need to watch their protein intake.
“High protein damages your kidneys”
A claim with roots going back to the 1980s
28-study analysis found no harm
For people with normal kidney function
Bloating, constipation, not kidney damage
Excess calories convert to fat, not muscle
People with existing kidney disease
Protein limits genuinely matter for them
Higher protein increases, not decreases,
kidney function
Where this myth actually came from
The originThe idea that high-protein diets damage kidneys first emerged in the 1980s, based on the theory that processing large amounts of protein would cause a progressive decline in kidney function over time. It’s been repeated in gyms and wellness spaces for roughly 50 years, despite never having strong evidence behind it.
According to Stuart Phillips, who oversaw the McMaster meta-analysis, “it’s a concept that’s been around for at least 50 years and you hear it all the time… the fact is, however, that there’s just no evidence to support this hypothesis.”
The “kidney stress” you’ve heard about is normal
The real mechanismAfter a protein-rich meal, your glomerular filtration rate (GFR) — a measure of how hard your kidneys are filtering — temporarily rises. This is often mislabeled as “stress” on the kidneys, but it’s a normal physiological response, similar to your heart rate increasing during exercise.
Think about how your heart beats faster when you go for a run. Nobody assumes that means your heart is being “damaged” — it’s just working harder to meet demand temporarily.
The same logic applies to kidneys processing a protein-heavy meal: increased activity isn’t the same thing as injury.
The real downsides have nothing to do with kidneys
What actually happensEating excessive protein does come with downsides — they’re just not kidney-related for healthy people. Common side effects include constipation, bloating, and stomach pain, particularly when someone tries to eat a gram of protein per pound of body weight, which is well beyond what most people need.
There’s also a hard biological limit worth knowing: your body cannot meaningfully store excess protein. It uses what it needs and excretes the rest, or converts the surplus calories to fat. Eating more protein than your body requires doesn’t build extra muscle — it just adds to your grocery bill and digestive load.
People with existing kidney disease are the real exception
Who should be carefulThis is the crucial caveat: the myth-busting research applies specifically to people with normal kidney function. For those with chronic kidney disease (CKD), high protein consumption is a genuine factor in disease progression, and protein restriction is often medically necessary.
Patients with CKD who aren’t on dialysis are typically advised to limit protein to around 0.6-0.8 g/kg of body weight daily, while those on dialysis actually need more (roughly 1.2-1.3 g/kg) since protein is lost during the dialysis process itself. This distinction matters enormously — and is exactly why a doctor’s guidance should always override generic advice.
A higher protein diet is safe
and should be viewed as a tool for muscle health
⚠️ Keep This in Mind
If you have diagnosed kidney disease, diabetes, or any condition affecting kidney function, this myth-busting research does not apply to you the same way. Always follow your doctor’s specific protein guidance rather than general fitness advice.