Protein Prices NZ 2026 — Why They're Up & Best Deals
Protein Prices Went Up.
Here's What We're Doing About It.
We warned in December that prices were coming. They did. Raw WPC80 has nearly doubled since late 2024 — from ~$24/kg to $44+/kg locally. We can't change the market, but we're bundling smarter, running multi-buys, and absorbing what we can. Here's where the value is right now.
Bookmark this page. We keep it updated with where things actually stand — real costs, real prices, no spin. When deals change or new stock lands, this is where you'll find it first.
Prices went up April 1st — here's what changed.
We held pre-increase prices as long as we could on the old stock. That stock is now largely gone, and replacement costs are significantly higher. The new prices below reflect what whey actually costs right now. We're using bundles, multi-buy deals, and alternative protein options to keep things as affordable as possible — but this is the new reality of the market.
Best Protein Deals in NZ Right Now
NZ-made WPC80 — 23.7g protein per serve, third-party batch tested. No frills, no filler. Buy 3 and drop the per-kg price to $43.16 — barely above raw ingredient cost. Buy 2 and save 10%.
NZ-made protein blend with 21g protein per serve. At $44.03/kg you're paying roughly what raw WPC80 costs — for a finished, flavoured product with free creatine thrown in. A blend, not pure whey, which is how the per-kg price stays competitive.
NoWhey 1kg (worth $53.95) plus a Protein Water Isolate (worth $59.95) — $113.90 of product for $79.95. The protein water is isolate-based, so you're getting two different protein formats for the price of one and a half.
Phased-release protein blend with 3g creatine per serve. HASTA certified. 6+ hours amino delivery from whey isolate, concentrate, and whole milk powder. Best value in a 5lb tub right now.
Pure 100% whey protein — not a blend. At $55.04/kg it's more than blends, but you're getting a higher protein percentage and nothing else in the mix. This is what pure whey costs in the current market.
Same HASTA-certified blend as the 5lb but in a smaller tub. Best straight whey deal in a 2lb size. Good option if you want to try before committing to a bigger bag.
Can't decide? This pack gives you 27 single-serve sachets across multiple brands and flavours. Find what you like before committing to a full tub — especially smart when every tub is $50+.
Lean protein formula — 30g whey protein per serve plus L-carnitine and C. canephora robusta. Built for cutting, not just recovery. Sachet format makes it easy to keep in your gym bag or at the office.
Bulking? Check the Mass Gainer Deals
If you're in a calorie surplus and need the volume, mass gainers are a different category to whey — built for size, not lean protein. Both bundles below come loaded with free extras.
1,060 calories and 56g protein per serve. 15lb of mass gainer plus over $50 worth of free gifts bundled in. If you're serious about putting on size, this is the one.
Same formula, smaller commitment. Try it before going all-in on the 15lb. Still comes with over $30 worth of free extras included.
Whey too expensive? Plant protein is a real alternative.
With whey at record prices, plant-based protein makes more sense than ever. We've got 40% off Xplosiv Plant Probiotics Protein right now — NZ-made, with added probiotics for gut health. If you're open to it, it's a way to keep your protein intake up without paying whey prices.
Protein Prices in NZ: How We Got Here
We called this in December. When overseas pricing hit $47.74/kg, we said NZ would follow. It did. Local WPC80 has climbed past $44/kg — and that's just the raw powder before it's manufactured, flavoured, tested, and packaged into the bag you buy. Every product below costs more to replace than what we paid for it.
The grey bars show what raw whey powder costs per kg — just the ingredient, nothing else. The coloured bars show what you pay for a finished, flavoured protein at our current prices.
Why Is Protein So Expensive in NZ Right Now?
This isn't a temporary blip. It's a structural shift in global whey supply and demand. Here are the five forces driving prices up — and why they're not going away soon.
New weight-loss medications changed everything.
US whey supply is essentially sold out.
Global buyers are competing for scraps.
You can't just make more.
Whey is decoupled from other dairy.
You've probably noticed fewer protein options on shelves. It's getting worse.
That's not your imagination. It's not just cost pressure — it's a supply problem. You can't stock what you can't source. Multiple major brands have already discontinued protein lines entirely because the costs and availability just don't stack up anymore.
- Major brands have pulled protein products altogether. Not just trimming flavours — discontinuing entire lines. When brands can't secure raw whey at a price that makes sense, the product just stops existing.
- Smaller brands are gone or going. Margins are too thin at these raw costs. Some have quietly stopped restocking and aren't coming back.
- What's left is consolidating fast. Same big international brands, same vanilla-chocolate-strawberry lineup. Far less variety than even six months ago.
- We're keeping variety while we can. NZ-made whey, protein blends, international brands, plant protein — but some products on this page may not be available once current stock clears.
Common Questions About Protein Prices in NZ
Why has whey protein gone up in price in NZ?
Global supply shortage. Raw WPC80 has climbed from ~$24/kg to $44+/kg locally since late 2024. Demand from prescription weight-loss treatments, US suppliers being sold out, and limited manufacturing capacity worldwide are the main drivers.
Will protein prices go down in 2026?
We don't see them stabilising any time soon. If anything, expect prices to keep climbing. Right now many NZ stores — us included — are still selling through stock bought at older, lower costs. As that stock runs out and gets replaced at today's raw prices, retail prices across the board will go up further. New manufacturing capacity is being built globally, but plants take years to come online and demand keeps outpacing supply. A return to pre-2024 levels isn't on the horizon.
What is the cheapest protein powder in NZ right now?
We can only speak to what we stock, but here's where the best value sits in our range right now. For whey: NoWhey WPC80 at $43.16/kg when you buy 3, or Feral Whey at $44.03/kg with free creatine included. For blends: Athletech Pro 6 at $51.52/kg for the 5lb tub. For plant: Xplosiv Plant Protein at 40% off. Always compare price per kilo and check the protein type — a cheap blend and a cheap pure whey are two very different products.
What's the difference between WPC, WPI, and blends?
WPC (concentrate) is the most affordable — around 80% protein. WPI (isolate) is 90%+ protein with less fat and lactose, but costs significantly more — especially right now. Blends mix protein sources to balance cost and quality. Feral Whey and Athletech Pro 6 are blends, Whey Gold is 100% whey, NoWhey is straight WPC80.
Why are there fewer protein options on shelves in NZ?
It's a supply problem — and it's getting worse. When raw ingredients cost $44+/kg, margins disappear. Multiple major brands have discontinued protein lines entirely, not just trimmed flavours. Smaller companies have pulled back or gone quiet. Retailers can't stock what they can't source.
How do I compare value between protein powders?
Always check the price per kilo. A $60 bag and a $125 tub can have very different value once you account for weight. The chart above shows per-kg pricing so you can compare directly. Also consider protein type — a $44/kg blend isn't the same value as a $55/kg pure whey, but both have their place.
Is plant protein worth considering?
More than ever. With whey at record prices, plant protein has become genuinely cost-competitive. It won't have the same amino acid profile as whey, but modern plant blends are much closer than they used to be. If budget is a factor — and it is for most people right now — plant protein at 40% off is worth a serious look.
Sources and disclaimers: Raw ingredient costs sourced from current NZ and international supplier quotes as of April 2026. Prices valid while stock lasts. Per-kg calculations based on net product weight. Multi-buy discounts applied at checkout. All products are dietary supplements — not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.













