Last updated: March 2026 | Reading time: 7 min
Table of Contents
Why Pre-Workout Nutrition Matters 🍽️
Your body runs on fuel. A heavy squat session, a max deadlift attempt, or a competition snatch all demand significant energy. Training fasted or underfuelled means your performance will be compromised — you'll fatigue faster, your technique will break down sooner, and your recovery will be slower.
The goal of pre-workout nutrition: arrive at the bar with full glycogen stores, stable blood sugar, and no GI discomfort.
Timing: When to Eat ⏰
| Time Before Session | Meal Size | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| 3–4 hours before | Full meal | Carbs + protein + moderate fat |
| 1–2 hours before | Moderate meal | Carbs + protein, low fat |
| 30–60 min before | Small snack | Fast carbs, minimal fat/fibre |
| During session | Intra-workout | Fast carbs if session >90 min |
What to Eat: The Macros 🥩
Carbohydrates — Your Primary Fuel
Carbohydrates are the primary fuel for high-intensity strength training. Glycogen (stored carbohydrate) powers your muscles through heavy sets. Aim for 1–2g of carbohydrate per kg of bodyweight in the 3–4 hours before training.
Best sources: rice, oats, potatoes, pasta, bread, fruit.
Protein — For Muscle Preservation
Including protein in your pre-workout meal reduces muscle breakdown during training. Aim for 20–40g of protein in your pre-workout meal.
Best sources: chicken, eggs, Greek yogurt, cottage cheese, protein shake.
Fat — Keep It Low Pre-Workout
Fat slows gastric emptying — meaning food stays in your stomach longer. High-fat meals before training can cause GI discomfort under heavy loads. Keep fat low in the 1–2 hours before training.
Pre-Workout Meal Ideas 🍳
- Chicken + rice + vegetables
- Pasta + lean meat sauce
- Oats + eggs + banana
- Jacket potato + tuna
- Banana + protein shake
- Rice cakes + honey
- White toast + jam
- Sports drink + small snack
Hydration 💧
Dehydration of even 2% of bodyweight significantly impairs strength performance. Aim to arrive at training well-hydrated:
- Drink 500ml of water 2 hours before training
- Sip water throughout your session
- Urine should be pale yellow — not clear (over-hydrated) or dark (dehydrated)
What to Avoid ⚠️
- High-fat meals within 2 hours — causes GI discomfort under heavy loads
- High-fibre foods within 1 hour — same reason
- Training fasted for heavy sessions — fine for light cardio, not for max effort lifting
- Trying new foods on competition day — stick to what you know works
Competition Day Nutrition 🏆
Competition day nutrition is the same principles, amplified:
- Eat your normal pre-competition meal 3–4 hours before your flight
- After weigh-in: prioritise carbohydrates and hydration
- Between flights: small, easily digestible snacks (banana, rice cakes, sports drink)
- Never try new foods on competition day
Read: How to Prepare for Your First Powerlifting Competition
Fuel right. Lift more. Recover faster.
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Keep Reading
- How to Prepare for Your First Competition
- Best Warm-Up Routine for Weightlifters
- Top 10 Benefits of Weightlifting
External: PubMed — Pre-Exercise Nutrition Research | NSCA — Nutrition Guidelines