A nutritionist explains how to apply the 2025 U.S. Dietary Guidelines.
For 15 years, I’ve watched patients struggle with government nutrition advice that didn’t make them feel good—until now.
The new guidelines maintain many familiar recommendations—they still advise keeping saturated fat under 10 percent of daily calories and limiting added sugars and sodium. However, the emphasis has shifted in ways that reflect what many clinicians have found actually works in practice: building meals around “real” foods with ample, individualized protein amounts (about 1.2 to 1.6 grams per kilogram of body weight per day) and sharply curbing highly processed products and refined carbohydrates.
As a clinician who has used food-first strategies to improve patients’ health, these guidelines better reflect what delivers results in real-world settings.
Build a Real‑Food Plate
Most people I see don’t want another list of “good” and “bad” foods; they want a clear picture of what dinner can look like. Tonight’s dinner is the perfect place to start.
Think in simple terms: a piece of salmon, a burger made from ground beef, a couple of eggs, a bowl of full‑fat yogurt, a handful of nuts, and vegetables you or your kids can name. Rather than chasing perfect portions, follow a clear pattern: put protein at the center, surround it with plenty of plants, and choose fats that come from real foods, like olives and avocados, instead of factory blends. Then, layer in what the guidelines still emphasize—lots of fruits and vegetables and a modest amount of fiber‑rich whole grains, like oats or brown rice—to round out the plate.
Protein Without the Math
Take protein. For a 130‑pound, moderately active 49‑year‑old woman, a reasonable target is roughly 60 to 75 grams per day—more than the bare minimum, but not bodybuilder territory. Instead of fixating on grams, use your hands. A 3- to 4‑ounce portion of cooked ground beef (about the size of your palm) delivers roughly 25 grams of protein, so a palm‑sized portion at one meal, plus similar amounts from other foods—a breakfast of three eggs, some yogurt and nuts, or a piece of fish at dinner—can comfortably cover most of the day’s needs, adjusted up or down based on hunger, activity, and how steady energy feels.
The guidelines’ advice to “eat the right amount for you, based on age, sex, size, and activity level” is a useful reminder that there is no single ideal plate; your needs shift with your life and how much you move. For some people, that might mean more animal protein; for others, it means leaning more on lentils, tofu, and seeds so that plant‑based options still deliver that palm‑sized protein anchor at each meal.
Making Sense of Fats
For years, guidelines trained people to fear anything that wasn’t low‑fat or fat‑free. The new approach is less about waging war on saturated fat and more about asking where your fats come from and what else comes with them.
Two tablespoons of peanut butter, for example, typically contain about 16 to 18 grams of total fat, with roughly 2.5 to 3 grams as saturated fat and the rest mostly unsaturated. Almond butter has similar total fat (around 18 to 20 grams) but only about 1.3 to 1.5 grams of saturated fat and a higher proportion of heart‑friendly monounsaturated fat. A typical 50‑gram serving of avocado (about a third of a medium fruit) offers around 7 to 8 grams of total fat, with just 1 to 1.5 grams saturated and most as monounsaturated fat. In everyday language, avocado usually delivers less total fat and similar or lower saturated fat than nut butter, while all three can fit into a real‑food pattern when they come without added sugars and industrial oils.
Rather than obsessing over every gram, you can make simple swaps that reflect the spirit of the guidelines—sugary cereal becomes eggs with vegetables; a flavored yogurt cup becomes full‑fat yogurt with chia seeds and berries; a processed snack bar becomes half a cup of hummus with cucumber or carrots and a piece of fruit.







