Reading time: 8 minutes · Last updated: June 2026
Table of Contents
- What Is Creatine and How Does It Work?
- The Creatine Loading Protocol — Loading vs Slow Loading
- Does Creatine Loading Actually Work?
- How Much Creatine Should Powerlifters Take?
- When to Take Creatine
- Side Effects and What to Expect
- Creatine During Meet Prep
- Common Mistakes European Lifters Make
- FAQ
- Related Articles
🔬 What Is Creatine and How Does It Work?
Creatine is one of the most researched and consistently effective supplements in strength sports. It’s not a stimulant, not a hormone, and not a shortcut — it’s a naturally occurring compound found in muscle tissue that plays a direct role in the ATP-PCr energy system: the primary fuel source for maximal-effort lifts lasting under ten seconds.
When you perform a heavy squat, bench, or deadlift, your muscles burn through adenosine triphosphate (ATP) almost instantly. Creatine phosphate donates a phosphate group to regenerate ATP, allowing you to sustain maximal force output for slightly longer and recover faster between sets. Supplementing with creatine increases the total creatine phosphate stored in your muscles — giving you more fuel for each maximal attempt.
A landmark meta-analysis in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research found that creatine supplementation produced an average 8% increase in maximum strength and a 14% increase in performance on high-intensity tasks. For an IPF or EPF competitor, that’s meaningful.
📅 The Creatine Loading Protocol — Loading vs Slow Loading
There are two established approaches to creatine supplementation:
| Protocol | Loading Phase | Maintenance | Time to Saturation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Loading Protocol | 20g/day for 5–7 days (4 x 5g doses) | 3–5g/day | 5–7 days |
| Slow Loading | None | 3–5g/day from day 1 | ~28 days |
Both protocols reach the same endpoint — full muscle creatine saturation. The loading protocol gets you there in one week instead of four. For lifters with an IPF or EPF meet coming up, the loading protocol is the practical choice.
📊 Does Creatine Loading Actually Work?
Yes — and the evidence is unusually consistent for a supplement. A review in the International Journal of Sport Nutrition and Exercise Metabolism confirmed that creatine monohydrate is the most effective ergogenic nutritional supplement available for increasing high-intensity exercise capacity and lean body mass during training.
For powerlifters specifically, the benefits are:
- Increased peak power output on maximal attempts
- Faster recovery between sets during training
- Greater training volume tolerance over a training block
- Modest lean mass increase (partly from intramuscular water retention)
⚖️ How Much Creatine Should Powerlifters Take?
| Phase | Daily Dose | Timing | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Loading | 20g (4 x 5g) | Spread across the day with meals | 5–7 days |
| Maintenance | 3–5g | Post-workout or with a meal | Ongoing |
| Slow loading | 3–5g | Post-workout or with a meal | 28+ days to saturate |
Use creatine monohydrate — it’s the most researched form, the cheapest, and performs identically to more expensive variants. Don’t pay a premium for marketing.
⏰ When to Take Creatine
Timing matters less than consistency. A study in the Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition found a slight advantage to post-workout creatine supplementation. Take your maintenance dose post-workout with a carbohydrate-containing meal. During loading, split 20g into four 5g doses spread across the day.
⚠️ Side Effects and What to Expect
Water retention: Expect 1–2kg of scale weight increase during the loading phase. This is intramuscular water — it goes into the muscle cells, not under the skin. Factor it into your weight class strategy.
GI discomfort: Some lifters experience bloating during the loading phase at 20g/day. If this happens, switch to slow loading at 3–5g/day.
Non-responders: Approximately 25–30% of people are creatine non-responders. If you see no benefit after 4–6 weeks, you may be one of them.
🏋️ Creatine During Meet Prep
For IPF and EPF competitors managing weight classes:
- Not cutting weight: Load 4–6 weeks out and maintain through the meet.
- Cutting weight: Account for the 1–2kg water retention in your pre-cut bodyweight target. Do not stop creatine during meet prep.
- Post weigh-in: Continue maintenance dosing. Creatine does not need to be cycled.
For the full weight management protocol, see our Carb Loading for Powerlifting — Europe guide.
⚠️ Common Mistakes European Lifters Make
Buying expensive creatine variants. Creatine monohydrate is the gold standard. Save your money.
Cycling creatine. There is no evidence that creatine needs to be cycled. Take it daily, indefinitely.
Not drinking enough water. Increase your daily water intake by 500–750ml during the loading phase.
Expecting immediate strength gains. The strength gains come from the training you do with improved capacity — not from creatine overnight.
🏋️ Supplement Smart. Lift Right.
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❓ FAQ
Do I need to load creatine?
No — but it gets you to full saturation faster. Loading (20g/day for 5–7 days) saturates in one week. Slow loading (3–5g/day) takes about four weeks. Same endpoint.
Is creatine safe for powerlifters?
Yes. Creatine monohydrate has an extensive safety record. It is not a banned substance under IPF, EPF, or WADA rules.
Will creatine make me gain weight?
Yes — 1–2kg of intramuscular water retention during loading. Factor it into your weight class strategy.
When should I take creatine?
Post-workout with a carbohydrate-containing meal is slightly optimal. Consistency matters more than exact timing.
Should I take creatine on rest days?
Yes. Take your maintenance dose (3–5g) daily, including rest days, to maintain muscle saturation.
📚 Related Articles
- Carb Loading for Powerlifting — Europe
- Pre-Training Meal for Powerlifting — Europe
- Eating for Strength — Europe
- Creatine Loading Guide — UK Version
Written by T-K — Brand Strategist, Castiron Lift