High Protein Overnight Oats

High Protein Overnight Oats (40g Protein, No Powder Needed)

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Category: Breakfast Prep time: 5 minutes | Chill time: 8 hours (overnight) | Total time: 5 minutes active Servings: 1 | Calories: ~420 kcal | Protein: ~40g


I resisted overnight oats for two years.

Every recipe I saw looked the same — rolled oats, almond milk, a banana, maybe some chia seeds. Pretty in a jar. About 8 grams of protein. Fine if you want to be hungry by 10am, which I don’t.

Then I started playing with the ratio. What if Greek yogurt wasn’t a topping but the base? What if cottage cheese — which I’d been avoiding for years because of texture — actually disappeared into the oats overnight? Seven months of Sunday meal prep later, I landed on this: a jar of overnight oats that hits 40 grams of protein without a single scoop of protein powder, tastes like dessert for breakfast, and takes five minutes the night before.

My husband now makes his own jar every Sunday. My kids steal bites before school. That’s the version I’m giving you.

High Protein Overnight Oats

Why Most Overnight Oats Fail the Protein Test

Standard overnight oats recipes are essentially slow-carb porridge. Oats are wonderful — but they contribute almost no protein on their own (about 5g per half cup). The usual additions — almond milk, fruit, honey — add flavor and carbs, not protein.

To hit real protein numbers without powder, you need two high-protein bases working together:

  • Greek yogurt — about 17g protein per ¾ cup (full-fat, plain)
  • Cottage cheese — about 14g protein per ½ cup

Combined with the oats and milk, you’re at 38–42g protein per jar. That’s a complete meal, not a snack.

Here’s why this combination works texturally: cottage cheese breaks down completely overnight in the fridge. By morning, you can’t detect it. It blends into the oats and yogurt and creates an incredibly creamy, thick texture that most people assume comes from heavy cream or protein powder. It doesn’t.

High Protein Overnight Oats vs. Standard Overnight Oats

This RecipeStandard Recipe
Protein per serving~40g~8–12g
Calories~420 kcal~300–350 kcal
Base liquidGreek yogurt + cottage cheeseAlmond or oat milk
Protein powder neededNoOften yes
TextureThick, creamy, dessert-likeThinner, more porridge-like
Prep time5 minutes5 minutes
Keeps4 days in fridge2–3 days

Ingredients

For the base (the night before):

  • ½ cup rolled oats (not instant — they turn mushy)
  • ¾ cup plain full-fat Greek yogurt (Fage Total 5% or Chobani Plain)
  • ½ cup full-fat cottage cheese (small curd blends better)
  • ¼ cup whole milk (or oat milk for dairy-free)
  • 1 tbsp chia seeds
  • 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
  • 1–2 tsp maple syrup or honey (optional — adjust to taste)
  • Pinch of sea salt

For topping (the morning of):

  • ½ cup fresh berries (blueberries, sliced strawberries, or raspberries)
  • 1 tbsp natural almond butter or peanut butter
  • Optional: 1 tsp hemp seeds for extra protein

Equipment

  • Mason jar or airtight container (16 oz works perfectly): I use these Ball Wide Mouth Mason Jars every single week. Wide mouth makes stirring and eating directly from the jar so much easier.
  • Blender or immersion blender : You only need this to blend the cottage cheese smooth. I’ve been using the Nutribullet Pro for 3 years and it’s still going strong. The Ninja Personal Blender is a slightly cheaper option that works just as well for this.
  • Spoon or small spatula

Method — The Night Before (5 minutes)

If cottage cheese texture bothers you even slightly, blend ½ cup with 2 tbsp of the milk until completely smooth — 20 seconds in a blender or with an immersion blender. You won’t taste or feel it in the final jar. If you don’t mind the texture, skip this and add it directly.

Step 2: Combine the base

In your mason jar, add in this order:

  • Oats
  • Greek yogurt
  • Cottage cheese (blended or whole)
  • Remaining milk
  • Chia seeds
  • Vanilla extract
  • Maple syrup or honey
  • Pinch of salt

Stir well until everything is evenly combined. The mixture should look thick — thicker than you expect. It loosens overnight as the oats absorb the liquid.

Step 3: Seal and refrigerate

Put the lid on and refrigerate for at least 6 hours. Overnight (8 hours) is ideal. The chia seeds need time to swell and the oats need time to soften fully.

💡 The texture tip nobody mentions: If your oats are too thick in the morning, stir in 1–2 tablespoons of milk and wait 2 minutes. If too thin, you used too much milk or too little chia seeds — adjust next time.

Step 4: The morning of — add toppings

Open the jar. Give it a stir. Add berries, a spoonful of nut butter, and any other toppings. Eat immediately or take it to go.


Nutrition Information (Per Serving)

Estimates based on USDA FoodData Central values. Actual values vary by brand.

NutrientPer Serving
Calories~420 kcal
Protein~40g
Carbohydrates~42g
Total Fat~12g
Saturated Fat~4g
Fiber~7g
Sugar~14g (mostly natural)
Sodium~320mg

Why this breakfast keeps you full until lunch: The combination of slow-digesting oats, protein from two dairy sources, and fat from nut butter creates sustained energy. A 2006 study published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition (Blom et al., doi: 10.1093/ajcn/83.2.211) found that high-protein breakfasts suppressed ghrelin — the hunger-stimulating hormone — more effectively than high-carbohydrate breakfasts. The authors concluded that protein is the most satiating macronutrient.


6 High Protein Overnight Oats Variations

Once you have the base down, variations take 30 extra seconds.

VariationWhat to addExtra protein?
Chocolate Peanut Butter1 tbsp cocoa powder + 1 tbsp PB in the base+4g from PB
Banana Walnut½ mashed banana in base + walnuts on top
Strawberry Cheesecake2 tbsp cream cheese in base + sliced strawberries on top+2g
Apple Cinnamon1 tsp cinnamon + ½ diced apple on top
Mango CoconutSwap milk for coconut milk + mango chunks
Espresso Boost1 shot cooled espresso in the base

Make-Ahead and Storage

Meal prep for the week: This recipe scales perfectly. Make 4–5 jars on Sunday night and breakfast is done until Friday. The base keeps well for 4 days in the fridge. Add toppings fresh each morning — berries release moisture overnight and make the texture watery if added too early.

Can you freeze overnight oats? Yes — freeze the base without toppings in freezer-safe jars for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge. The texture changes slightly (slightly more dense) but it’s still excellent.

Travel: These travel perfectly in a sealed jar. Add an ice pack and they’re fine for 4–5 hours.


The Mistakes That Ruin Overnight Oats

❌ Using instant oats. They turn to mush overnight. Always rolled oats (old-fashioned oats). Steel-cut oats work too but need 12+ hours and have a chewier texture.

❌ Too much liquid. The mixture should look thick when you seal the jar. It loosens overnight. If you add too much milk upfront, you’ll have soup by morning.

❌ Skipping the salt. A pinch of salt in the base amplifies all the other flavors. It’s not optional.

❌ Adding berries the night before. They bleed into the oats, make everything pink, and release moisture that throws off the texture. Always add fresh in the morning.

❌ Not tasting before sealing. Give the base a quick taste before refrigerating. Adjust sweetness now — you can’t easily fix it in the morning.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can I make high protein overnight oats without Greek yogurt? Yes — replace the yogurt with an extra ½ cup of cottage cheese and 2 tablespoons of milk. You’ll lose some tang but keep most of the protein. Alternatively, plain Skyr (Icelandic yogurt) has an even higher protein content than Greek yogurt and works identically.

Does cottage cheese taste weird in overnight oats? Not at all — and I say this as someone who actively dislikes cottage cheese eaten plain. Overnight, the curds fully dissolve into the oats. By morning, the texture is indistinguishable from yogurt. If you’re still nervous, blend it smooth before adding.

Can I use flavored Greek yogurt? I’d avoid it — flavored yogurts have added sugars and the sweetness becomes overwhelming once combined with oats and toppings. Plain yogurt gives you full control over the flavor.

Are overnight oats actually healthy? Rolled oats are one of the better breakfast carbohydrate sources — they’re high in beta-glucan fiber, which research links to improved cholesterol levels and sustained fullness. Combined with high-protein dairy, this is a genuinely balanced breakfast, not just a trend.

Why are my overnight oats too sour? Full-fat Greek yogurt has natural tang. If it’s too sharp for you, add an extra teaspoon of maple syrup, use a milder yogurt brand, or reduce the yogurt by 2 tablespoons and increase the milk slightly.

Can I eat overnight oats warm? Yes — microwave the jar (lid off) for 60–90 seconds, stir, and add toppings. The texture shifts slightly but it’s excellent on cold mornings.


What to Serve With High Protein Overnight Oats

On its own, this jar is a complete breakfast. But if you want to build a bigger morning meal:

  • A soft-boiled egg on the side pushes protein above 46g
  • Black coffee or green tea — nothing competes with the flavor
  • A small handful of mixed nuts if you need extra calories for a heavy training day

Products I Use for This Recipe


Made this recipe? I read every comment. Tell me which variation you tried first — the chocolate peanut butter one has a surprising number of converts.

For more high-protein breakfast ideas, check out all recipes on Healthyumami.


Sources

  • Blom WAM et al. (2006). “Effect of a high-protein breakfast on the postprandial ghrelin response.” American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 83(2), 211–220. https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcn/83.2.211
  • USDA FoodData Central.