Never before in the history of sports nutrition have we known so much about the vital role of nutrition in sports performance—from optimum protein intake for athletes to sports nutrition supplements for strength, energy and recovery. As the research in sports nutrition science expands, brands have an unparalleled opportunity to offer consumers products with evidence-based benefits that can help them achieve their workout and performance goals.
At the same time, sports nutrition consumers are beginning to view their health and performance in more holistic ways, considering factors like mental wellness, gut health and plant protein options to support a more sustainable lifestyle. Interest is growing in natural, non-stimulant energy, as well as adaptogens that can improve resilience to physical and mental stress. Active lifestyle consumers and gamers are also looking at sports nutrition products, though their needs differ from those of core users.
Trends in athletic and sports performance
There is high growth ahead for sports nutrition products, with protein powders making up the largest segment but protein bars and non-protein products (like amino acids and pre-workout products) growing the fastest. Weight management has emerged as a top driver for the use of sports nutrition products among US consumers.
Brands focused on core users, which include athletes and gym goers, are discovering new opportunities in products for active lifestyle consumers, who are increasingly reaching for sports nutrition products to support their strength and energy needs. Preferences among this group include no/low sugar hydration, natural energy boosters and on-the-go protein.
Interest in plant-based sports nutrition continues to rise due to its association with health and sustainability. Brands are innovating in vegan protein powders and bars, shifting from soy to pea protein and new plant protein blends. Many of these brands have doubled down on their sustainability stance to include the use of plastic-free or recyclable packaging.
Some emerging topics in sports nutrition science are oxidative stress in athletes, the gut microbiome’s influence on performance and recovery and mental health in sports nutrition. Opportunities ahead for brands in the space include sports nutrition products fortified with nootropics, adaptogens, or beauty-from-within ingredients and those targeting the new, youth-focused sports at the Summer Olympics.
Strength and muscle
Protein is one of the most essential nutrients in sports performance, particularly for supporting muscular health and strength, with a key role in pre-workout nutrition. Consumers are using protein to fuel their workouts, as well as for recovery, managing satiety and as a healthy snack. The trend in plant-based nutrition for athletes has expanded into newer plant protein sources such as flax, chia, pumpkin, sunflower and hemp seed, often in innovative blends to improve amino acid balance.
Though plant-based nutrition is gaining momentum, dairy protein remains the premium choice for athletes, with recent research indicating potential benefits in weight management, immunity, and healthy aging. Whey protein is the most in demand in sports nutrition, but choosing the right type is important. For example, compared to whey protein concentrate (WPC), whey protein isolate (WPI) is higher in leucine, which has a unique role in stimulating muscle protein synthesis and is virtually lactose-free.
More active lifestyle consumers are purchasing protein products from the sports nutrition category. However, key drivers tend to be muscle support for their active lifestyles and for healthy aging, unlike core users, who are motivated by muscle building and strength. Additional performance-enhancers sought by core users include hydrolyzed whey protein, creatine, nitric oxide boosters, glycerol and IGF-1.
Sports nutrition for women is becoming more differentiated. Products are still protein-based but with added nutrients such as iron, calcium and vitamin D, plus bioactives for women’s health. Go-to formats for muscle support products are ready-to-mix powders, ready-to-drink beverages, gels and supplements, though the convenience of protein snacks makes this a space to watch closely (with cheese and protein snacks some of the best snacks for pre-workout use).
Energy and endurance
Nutrition and sports performance go hand-in-hand, with nutritional products that can help optimise energy high on the list for athletes. Energy drinks remain popular in pre-workout nutrition for sports performance, but interest in healthier versions is growing. Some exciting trends in energy drinks include amino acid fortification, no sugar formulations, and plant-based ingredients, including natural, non-stimulant sources of energy.
Energy products also highlight the important role of vitamins in sports performance—particularly the B vitamins, which are essential to the process of energy metabolism. This process provides athletes with a more sustained energy through the conversion of carbohydrates, fats, and proteins into ATP to fuel the body.
Popular dietary supplements for athletes interested in improving performance include creatine due to its unique role in supplying energy to the cells. When the body’s ATP supply is used up, the body breaks down creatine to produce more. While creatine users are often bodybuilders and weight lifters, they’re also more likely to participate in team sports and combat sports in which endurance is critical to performance.
For endurance athletes such as long distance runners, cyclists and swimmers, healthy sports nutrition requires electrolytes like potassium as part of their hydration strategy due to the high losses that occur during sweating. If potassium levels drop too low during exercise, fatigue and muscle weakness can set in. Nitric oxide boosters are another sports performance ingredient that can minimise fatigue to improve endurance.
Rest and recovery
Proper rest and recovery allow athletes to maintain their overall health and quickly return to prior performance levels. However, this process relies on the availability of key nutrients in the body. Recovery nutrition after exercise includes fluids, electrolytes and protein. Proteins and the amino acids they provide are critical to the protein synthesis (for both muscle repair and muscle building) that occurs during recovery.
Protein snacks are an ideal format for recovery nutrition since they answer both a need (protein to rebuild muscle tissue) and a want (an indulgent treat or reward). Protein snacks are expanding beyond the protein bar into sweet protein balls and bites, as well as savoury protein snacks like high protein chips and extruded curls and puffs made with protein from whey or cheese.
Athletes may also supplement with amino acids, especially BCAAs such as leucine, to influence muscle recovery more directly. In addition, recovery nutrition products often include key vitamins for athletes, such as vitamin D, vitamin B6 and vitamin C.
Some brands are emphasising the importance of stress relief and mood in the rest and recovery process, particularly as they impact sleep quality. Adequate sleep allows the body to enter into deeper stages of sleep, when the release of growth hormone and the tissue repair process are most active. Magnesium, vitamins B6 and B12, omega-3s, tryptophan, and adaptogenic herbs like ashwagandha are being incorporated into recovery products to address the emerging interest in mental health in sports nutrition.
Mental focus and alertness
Another trend in nutrition for athletes is support for mental focus, a need relevant across all types of sports. Some of the latest dietary supplements for athletes contain nootropics, with claims to optimise cognitive performance (such as attention, learning, and memory), plus adaptogens to support mental balance.
Products with focus and alertness positioning are also catching the attention of gamers, a newer category of athletes seeking sports nutrition information that can give them an edge. ESports participation has grown phenomenally in recent years, with widely viewed, high-stakes competitions backed by major corporate sponsors.
Despite the excitement around this growing sport, the performance nutrition needs of gamers are not being fully addressed in the market. Gamer-focused products with mental focus, visual health and sustained energy benefits are a clear opportunity. This includes functional beverages like no/low sugar energy drinks fortified with L-theanine, Panax ginseng, and B vitamins, along with other formats convenient to gamers like gels and snacks.
Adaptogens such as ginseng, as well as ashwagandha, Rhodiola, and kava, which have a long history of use in traditional medicine, are thought to have a wide range of holistic benefits for mental and physical resilience that could benefit athletes. This gives sports nutrition brands diverse positioning opportunities, including pre-workout mental focus, post-workout stress relief and daily mood support.
We are science-led, quality-obsessed and a provider of innovative nutrition solutions to many of the world’s greatest brands. Learn more about how Glanbia Nutritionals partners with companies to create better performance products supporting the needs of today’s athletic and sports performance consumers.