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Lean Bulk Meal Plan: What to Eat for Clean Muscle Gains

Last updated: May 2026

A lean bulk meal plan isn’t complicated — it’s a small calorie surplus built around enough protein, quality carbohydrates, and healthy fats to fuel muscle growth without stacking on unnecessary body fat. This article covers the food principles, macro targets, and a practical sample day of eating.

Set Your Calorie Target First

A lean bulk meal plan starts with knowing your numbers. You need to eat 10–20% above your maintenance calories — roughly 200–400 extra calories per day for most people.

Without knowing your maintenance (TDEE), meal planning is guesswork. Use the Mifflin-St Jeor formula or a TDEE calculator to get your starting number, then add your surplus on top.

Related Reading

How Many Calories Should I Eat to Gain Muscle? →

Macro Targets for a Lean Bulk

Once you have your calorie target, distribute it across macros:

MacroTargetWhy It Matters
Protein0.7–1.0g per lb of bodyweightBuilds and repairs muscle tissue
Carbohydrates40–50% of total caloriesFuels training, replenishes glycogen
Fat20–30% of total caloriesHormones, vitamin absorption, satiety

Protein comes first. Hit your protein floor before worrying about the carb/fat split.

Related Reading

Macros for Muscle Gain: Exact Protein, Carb, and Fat Targets →

Best Foods for a Lean Bulk

A lean bulk prioritizes whole, nutrient-dense foods that give you precise control over your calorie surplus. Here’s what the shopping list looks like:

Lean Proteins

Complex Carbohydrates

Healthy Fats

Vegetables

Foods to Limit

No food is completely off-limits on a lean bulk, but some make it hard to control your surplus:

These aren’t banned, but if most of your surplus calories come from junk food, you lose the precision that makes a lean bulk work.

Sample Lean Bulk Meal Plan (2,800 Calories / ~175 lb Person)

This example targets a 175 lb lifter with a maintenance around 2,400 cal and a +400 calorie lean bulk surplus:

MealExampleApprox. Protein
BreakfastOatmeal (1 cup dry) + 3 scrambled eggs + banana~30g
Mid-morning snackGreek yogurt (1 cup) + mixed berries + 1 oz almonds~22g
LunchChicken breast (6 oz) + 1 cup cooked rice + broccoli + olive oil~45g
Pre-workout snackApple + 2 tbsp natural peanut butter~8g
DinnerSalmon fillet (6 oz) + sweet potato + mixed greens salad~40g
Pre-bedCottage cheese (1 cup) + handful of walnuts~28g

Total: ~173g protein / ~320g carbs / ~75g fat / ~2,800 calories

Meal Timing Tips

Pre-workout: Eat a carb-rich meal 1–2 hours before training to top off glycogen. A banana, oats, or a rice cake with nut butter all work well.

Post-workout: Consume protein + carbs within a few hours after training to support recovery. This doesn’t need to be a rush — “the anabolic window” is wider than gym lore suggests — but don’t skip it entirely.

Protein distribution: Spreading protein across 4–5 meals (rather than front-loading it) maximizes muscle protein synthesis throughout the day.

Eating Enough Without Overeating

The biggest challenge on a lean bulk isn’t restraint — it’s consistency. For most people, hitting a modest surplus every day without accidentally drifting into a deficit or overshooting into a dirty bulk requires at least rough tracking.

Tips that help:

Related Reading

How to Count Macros: A Step-by-Step Beginner’s Guide →

Build Your Lean Bulk Meal Plan Around Your Numbers

The sample above is a template, not a prescription. Your exact calorie and macro targets depend on your weight, height, age, and activity level. Use the lean bulk calculator to get your personalized numbers, then plug in foods you actually enjoy eating.

Get Your Lean Bulk Calorie & Macro Targets

Calculate your personalized lean bulk numbers to build your meal plan around.

Use the Lean Bulk Calculator →
Dennis Kiplimo
Written by
Dennis Kiplimo

Dennis Kiplimo is a Registered Nurse and founder of Denstar Fitness. He publishes fitness calculators and writes about training, nutrition and health on Medium.

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