Should You Drink Raw Eggs? Protein Absorption and Safety Explained

Bodybuilding has always had its rituals. Some are useful. Some are harmless. Some survive purely because they look hardcore.

Drinking raw eggs sits firmly in that last category.

This article cuts through the mythology and explains where the idea came from, why it stuck around, and why it no longer makes sense for anyone training with intent.


Where the raw egg myth came from

Raw eggs entered bodybuilding culture long before we had:

  • Reliable nutrition science
  • Protein powders
  • Modern food safety standards

Early bodybuilders used what was cheap and available. Eggs were dense, affordable, and easy to consume in large quantities. Over time, this became identity while being reinforced by pop culture without todays performance data.

What mattered then was access. What matters now is absorption and recovery.


Protein usage; the part that actually matters

Muscle growth depends on digestible, bioavailable amino acids, not what you consume on paper.

Human studies show:

  • Raw egg protein digestibility ≈ 51%
  • Cooked egg protein digestibility ≈ 91%

Cooking denatures egg proteins, making them easier to digest and absorb.

This is not marginal. It is a near-doubling of usable protein.

Sources:


Amino acid availability after exercise

Beyond digestion, cooked eggs deliver greater post exercise amino acid availability, which is what actually drives muscle protein synthesis.

Raw eggs underperform in this context.

Source:


The biotin problem (quiet but real)

Raw egg whites contain avidin, a protein that binds biotin, also known as vitamin B7, and prevents absorption.

Chronic, high consumption of raw egg whites can cause biotin deficiency, affecting:

  • Energy metabolism
  • Skin and hair health
  • Neuromuscular function

Cooking alters the qualities of avidin and eliminates this problem entirely.

Sources:


Hormones and the old school testosterone myth

Eggs can support hormonal health as part of a sufficient diet, but there is no evidence that consuming eggs raw improves testosterone or anabolic hormones compared to cooked eggs.

Hormonal outcomes are driven by:

  • Total energy intake
  • Dietary fat adequacy
  • Sleep
  • Training stress
  • Recovery

Not food theatrics.

Supporting context:


Food safety risk but without the reward

Raw and undercooked eggs can carry Salmonella enteritidis.

UK Spec

British Lion marked eggs come from vaccinated flocks.

UK guidance allows Lion eggs to be eaten raw or runny.

Risk is reduced, not eliminated.

But we don’t want the risk of an illness that can derail training and recovery.

Sources:


Why some lifters still do it

Not because it works better but because:

  • It feels hardcore
  • that haven’t read this article
  • They saw Arny or Rocky do it
  • Passed down culture and belief

The Constancy Code doesn’t reward appearances. It rewards repeatable behaviour that compounds.


The Constancy Code position

If you care about:

  • Muscle gain
  • Recovery
  • Long-term consistency

Then cooked eggs win every time.

Not because they work.


Practical takeaway

Cook your eggs.

Eat them consistently.

Focus on what compounds over months, not what looks tough for five seconds.

Discipline isn’t doing the dramatic thing. It’s doing the effective thing.

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