Last updated: April 2026 | Reading time: 8 min | Author: T-K
Table of Contents
- How Creatine Works
- The Evidence for Strength Athletes
- Dosing: How Much to Take
- Loading vs Maintenance
- Timing: When to Take Creatine
- Which Form of Creatine?
- FAQ
Creatine is the most researched and most effective legal performance supplement available to strength athletes. For powerlifters and weightlifters, it is one of the few supplements with a robust evidence base for improving strength, power, and training capacity.
How Creatine Works
Creatine is stored in the muscles as phosphocreatine (PCr). During high-intensity exercise — heavy squats, deadlifts, and bench press sets — the body uses ATP as its primary energy source. Phosphocreatine donates a phosphate group to regenerate ATP, extending the duration of maximal effort before fatigue sets in.
Supplementing with creatine increases phosphocreatine stores, allowing:
- More reps at a given weight before fatigue
- Faster recovery between sets
- Greater training volume over time, leading to more muscle and strength gains
The Evidence for Strength Athletes
- A 2017 meta-analysis in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research confirmed creatine supplementation increases 1RM strength by an average of 8% compared to placebo
- Creatine increases lean body mass by 1-2kg (2-4lbs) during the first 4 weeks — primarily intramuscular water retention
- Creatine improves performance on high-intensity efforts of 1-30 seconds — the exact duration of a powerlifting or weightlifting attempt
- Creatine is safe for long-term use in healthy adults, confirmed by the International Society of Sports Nutrition
Dosing: How Much to Take
The evidence-based dose is 3-5g of creatine monohydrate per day.
- Smaller lifters (under 70kg / 155lbs): 3g per day
- Most lifters (70-90kg / 155-200lbs): 4-5g per day
- Larger lifters (90kg+ / 200lbs+): 5g per day
There is no evidence that doses above 5g per day provide additional benefit.
Loading vs Maintenance
| Approach | Protocol | Time to Saturation | GI Risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Loading | 20g/day for 5-7 days, then 3-5g/day | 5-7 days | Higher |
| No loading | 3-5g/day from day one | 3-4 weeks | Lower |
For most lifters not in immediate competition preparation, the no-loading approach is preferred — same end result, lower GI risk.
Timing: When to Take Creatine
Creatine timing is largely irrelevant — consistent daily supplementation is what matters. A 2013 study in the Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition found a small advantage to post-workout supplementation, but consistency matters far more than timing.
Which Form of Creatine?
Creatine monohydrate is the only form with robust evidence for strength athletes. It is the most researched, most effective, and least expensive form. Other forms — creatine HCl, buffered creatine, creatine ethyl ester — are not supported by evidence of superior efficacy.
Look for NSF Certified for Sport or Informed Sport certification to ensure it is free from banned substances — important for competitive powerlifters and weightlifters.
🏋️ Supplement Smart. Train with the Right Gear.
— IronLifter 1 — Squats
— TurboLifter 1 — Deadlifts
— Magnesium Chalk Powder — Grip
Ships to the USA and Canada. 🇺🇸 🇨🇦
FAQ
Is creatine safe?
Yes — creatine monohydrate is safe for long-term use in healthy adults, confirmed by the ISSN and major sports science bodies worldwide.
Will creatine make me gain weight?
Yes — approximately 1-2kg (2-4lbs) of intramuscular water during the first 4 weeks. Associated with improved performance, not fat gain.
Is creatine legal in powerlifting competition?
Yes — creatine is not a banned substance in any major strength sport federation worldwide, including USAPL and CPU.
Do I need to cycle creatine?
No — take 3-5g daily consistently. No evidence that cycling provides any benefit.
Final Thoughts
Creatine monohydrate is the highest-evidence, lowest-cost performance supplement available to strength athletes. Take 3-5g daily, consistently. Combine it with the right training, nutrition, and equipment — the IronLifter 1 for squats and the TurboLifter 1 for deadlifts.
Read next: Protein for Strength Athletes 2026 | Powerlifting Tips for Beginners 2026 | Competition Day Guide 2026
Train with intention. Lift with the right gear. Own the platform.