Reading time: 9 minutes · Last updated: June 2026
Table of Contents
- What Is Carbohydrate Loading?
- Why Carbs Matter for Powerlifting Performance
- When to Start Loading — The European Meet Week Timeline
- What to Eat — Best Carb Sources for Powerlifters
- How Many Carbs Do You Actually Need?
- Common Mistakes European Lifters Make
- Carb Loading and Weight Class Management
- Meet Day Nutrition — Hour by Hour
- FAQ
- Related Articles
🔬 What Is Carbohydrate Loading?
You've trained for months. The platform is booked. Your IPF-sanctioned meet is three days out. Now the question isn't how strong you are — it's whether your body has the fuel to express it.
Carbohydrate loading is the deliberate process of maximising muscle glycogen stores in the days before a competition. For powerlifters, glycogen — the stored form of glucose in muscle tissue — is the primary fuel source for maximal-effort lifts lasting under ten seconds. When those stores are full, your muscles fire harder, recover faster between attempts, and resist fatigue across a long competition day.
Research published on PubMed confirms that muscle glycogen availability directly influences high-intensity exercise performance. For a sport built on three maximal attempts per lift, that matters more than most lifters realise.
💪 Why Carbs Matter for Powerlifting Performance
Powerlifting is not an endurance sport — but it is a long day. A full IPF or EPF meet can run six to eight hours. You'll warm up, wait, lift, recover, and repeat across squat, bench, and deadlift. Each maximal attempt draws heavily on phosphocreatine and glycolytic pathways. Both depend on glycogen availability.
A study in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research found that glycogen-depleted athletes showed measurable decreases in peak power output during repeated high-intensity efforts — exactly the scenario you face across nine competition attempts.
The takeaway: arriving at the platform glycogen-depleted is leaving kilograms on the platform.
📅 When to Start Loading — The European Meet Week Timeline
Most European lifters competing under IPF or EPF rules follow a standard meet-week structure. Here's how to align your carbohydrate strategy with it:
| Day | Phase | Carb Target |
|---|---|---|
| Monday (–5 days) | Normal training, moderate carbs | 4–5g per kg bodyweight |
| Tuesday (–4 days) | Deload begins, carbs increase | 5–6g per kg bodyweight |
| Wednesday (–3 days) | Full deload, loading begins | 7–8g per kg bodyweight |
| Thursday (–2 days) | Peak loading day | 8–10g per kg bodyweight |
| Friday (–1 day) | Weigh-in day — manage carefully | 4–6g per kg (post weigh-in) |
| Saturday (Meet Day) | Performance day | 1–2g per kg pre-meet + intra-meet snacks |
🍚 What to Eat — Best Carb Sources for Powerlifters
Not all carbohydrates are equal for loading purposes. You want high-glycaemic, easily digestible sources that fill glycogen stores without causing GI distress on the platform.
Top loading sources:
- White rice — fast-digesting, low fibre, easy on the gut
- White pasta — calorie-dense, familiar, easy to prepare in bulk
- Potatoes and sweet potatoes — whole food option, moderate fibre
- White bread and bagels — convenient, portable, high GI
- Fruit juice and bananas — fast carbs for meet-day top-ups
- Rice cakes — ideal intra-meet snack between flights
Avoid during loading:
- High-fibre vegetables and legumes — bloating risk
- Excessive fat with carbs — slows gastric emptying
- New foods you haven't tested in training
The NSCA's position on competition nutrition supports prioritising familiar, low-residue carbohydrate sources in the 24–48 hours before competition.
📊 How Many Carbs Do You Actually Need?
The research-backed range for glycogen supercompensation sits at 7–12g of carbohydrate per kilogram of bodyweight per day across the loading phase, according to guidelines from the American College of Sports Medicine.
| Weight Class | Bodyweight (kg) | Loading Target (8g/kg) | Loading Target (10g/kg) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 59kg | 59 | 472g carbs/day | 590g carbs/day |
| 66kg | 66 | 528g carbs/day | 660g carbs/day |
| 74kg | 74 | 592g carbs/day | 740g carbs/day |
| 83kg | 83 | 664g carbs/day | 830g carbs/day |
| 93kg | 93 | 744g carbs/day | 930g carbs/day |
| 105kg | 105 | 840g carbs/day | 1,050g carbs/day |
| 120kg | 120 | 960g carbs/day | 1,200g carbs/day |
⚠️ Common Mistakes European Lifters Make
Starting too late. One night of pasta does not constitute a loading protocol. Glycogen supercompensation requires 48–72 hours of sustained elevated carbohydrate intake.
Eating too much fat alongside carbs. High-fat meals slow gastric emptying and reduce the rate of glycogen synthesis. Keep fat moderate during the loading window.
Ignoring water retention. Every gram of glycogen stored pulls approximately 3g of water into the muscle. Expect 1–2kg of scale weight increase during loading — this is normal, expected, and a sign it's working. Factor this into your weight-class strategy.
Trying new foods. Meet week is not the time to experiment. Every food in your loading protocol should have been tested in training.
Skipping intra-meet carbs. Loading fills the tank. Intra-meet snacks keep it topped up across a six-to-eight-hour competition day. Rice cakes, bananas, and sports drinks between flights are non-negotiable.
⚖️ Carb Loading and Weight Class Management
For European lifters managing a water cut before weigh-in, carbohydrate loading interacts directly with rehydration strategy. The sequence matters:
- Complete your water cut and make weight
- Begin aggressive rehydration immediately post weigh-in
- Start carbohydrate loading with your first post-weigh-in meal
- Prioritise fast-digesting carbs in the first two hours — white rice, fruit, sports drinks
- Continue loading through the evening and into meet morning
If you're competing in an IPF or EPF meet with a 24-hour weigh-in, you have a full day to reload. Use it. A PubMed review on rapid weight recovery found that athletes who prioritised carbohydrate and fluid intake in the 24 hours post weigh-in recovered performance markers significantly better than those who focused on protein alone.
For more on the weight cut itself, see our guide on Weight Cutting for Powerlifting Meets.
⏱️ Meet Day Nutrition — Hour by Hour
| Time | Action | Food/Drink |
|---|---|---|
| –3 hours | Pre-meet meal | White rice + chicken or eggs, 80–100g carbs |
| –1 hour | Top-up snack | Banana + rice cake, 30–40g carbs |
| Between squat flights | Intra-meet | Rice cake + sports drink, 20–30g carbs |
| Between bench flights | Intra-meet | Banana or fruit pouch, 20g carbs |
| Between deadlift flights | Intra-meet | Sports drink + rice cake, 20–30g carbs |
| Post-meet | Recovery | Full meal — protein + carbs, 60–80g carbs |
🏋️ The Platform Starts With the Shoe
Your carb loading protocol puts fuel in the tank. Your competition lifting shoes make sure none of it leaks through the floor. Castiron Lift is built for the platform — stable heel, locked-in fit, IPF-legal construction. Ships across Europe from our international warehouse.
→ Shop Competition Lifting Shoes — EU Sizing Available
❓ FAQ
Does carbohydrate loading work for powerlifting?
Yes. While carb loading is most studied in endurance sports, the underlying mechanism — glycogen supercompensation — applies directly to powerlifting. Maximal-effort lifts and repeated high-intensity attempts across a long competition day all draw on glycogen stores.
How much weight will I gain from carb loading?
Expect 1–2kg of scale weight increase due to water retention alongside glycogen storage. This is normal and expected. Plan your weight-class strategy around it.
Should I carb load if I'm not cutting weight?
Yes. Even without a water cut, arriving at a meet with fully loaded glycogen stores improves performance. Start your loading protocol 48–72 hours out regardless of whether you're cutting.
What are the best carbs to eat the night before a powerlifting meet?
White rice, white pasta, potatoes, and white bread are the most reliable options — high GI, low fibre, easy to digest. Avoid anything new or high in fat.
Can I carb load and still make weight?
Yes, with planning. Account for the 1–2kg water retention from glycogen storage when setting your pre-cut bodyweight target. Most experienced lifters build this into their meet-week weight management strategy.
Do Nordic federation meets follow the same weigh-in rules as IPF?
Most IPF-affiliated Nordic federations follow IPF rules including the 24-hour weigh-in at international events. Check your specific federation rulebook for national-level meets.
📚 Related Articles
- Weight Cutting for Powerlifting Meets — the full cut-and-reload protocol
- Eating for Strength — daily nutrition foundations for European lifters
- Carb Loading for Powerlifting — UK Version
- Pre-Workout Meals for Strength Training (coming soon)
- Creatine Loading Guide (coming soon)
Written by T-K — Brand Strategist, Castiron Lift