Everything you need to know about creatine monohydrate: scientific studies, debunked myths, dosage, and my personal experience after 2 months of supplementation.

When I first started lifting, creatine scared me. There, I said it. I had read so many forum posts, watched so many videos, and scrolled through so many comment sections that I had built up this mental image of creatine as something borderline dangerous — a substance that would wreck my kidneys, bloat me with water, and basically act as "steroids lite." The internet has a way of turning a well-studied, naturally occurring molecule into a bogeyman, and I fell for it.
For context, my training week looks like this: two strength training sessions, two swimming sessions, and one running session. I am not a competitive bodybuilder. I am not trying to become the next Mr. Olympia. I am just someone who enjoys pushing his body across multiple disciplines and wants to optimize recovery and performance in a way that is safe and grounded in evidence.
So what changed? I decided to stop reading Reddit threads and actually look at the published research. What I found surprised me — not because the science was ambiguous, but because it was overwhelmingly clear. Creatine monohydrate is one of the most studied supplements in sports nutrition history, and the consensus is remarkably consistent.
I started taking 3 grams per day in January 2026. Two months in, I want to share everything I have learned — the science, the myths, the practical details — and my honest personal experience so far.
Before diving into benefits and dosages, let us get the basics straight. Creatine is a naturally occurring molecule that your body already produces. Your liver, kidneys, and pancreas synthesize roughly 1 to 2 grams of creatine every single day from the amino acids glycine, arginine, and methionine. You also get creatine from food — primarily red meat and fish. A pound of raw beef contains about 2 grams of creatine.
So what does it actually do in your body? Creatine plays a central role in the phosphocreatine energy system. Here is the short version: your muscles run on a molecule called ATP (adenosine triphosphate). When you contract a muscle — lifting a weight, sprinting, pushing off a wall in the pool — ATP donates a phosphate group and becomes ADP (adenosine diphosphate). That reaction releases energy. The problem is that your muscles only store enough ATP for a few seconds of maximum effort.
This is where creatine steps in. About 95% of the creatine in your body is stored in skeletal muscle as phosphocreatine. Phosphocreatine rapidly donates its phosphate group back to ADP, regenerating ATP so your muscles can keep firing at high intensity. More creatine in your muscles means a larger phosphocreatine reservoir, which means you can sustain high-intensity efforts for slightly longer before fatigue sets in.
That is it. No hormonal manipulation. No receptor binding. No exotic pharmacology.
Let's be clear
Creatine is not a steroid, not a hormone, and not a stimulant. It is a naturally occurring compound — closely related to amino acids — that your body already makes and that you already consume through food. Supplementation simply tops off your muscle stores beyond what diet alone provides.
One thing that struck me when I started reading the literature is the sheer volume of research on creatine. We are not talking about a handful of small studies — we are talking about hundreds of trials, systematic reviews, and meta-analyses spanning decades. Here are the areas where the evidence is strongest.
This is the classic use case, and the data is robust. A comprehensive meta-analysis by Zhang et al., published in PeerJ in 2025, examined creatine's effects on muscular strength and found significant improvements, particularly in individuals who were previously untrained or recreationally active. Interestingly, the analysis found that lower daily doses (2.5 to 7.56 grams per day) were more effective than very high doses, suggesting that more is not necessarily better. The mechanism is straightforward: more phosphocreatine means more ATP regeneration during short, intense efforts like heavy sets of squats or bench press. You can squeeze out an extra rep or two, and over weeks and months, that additional training volume compounds into meaningful strength gains.
This one surprised me, because creatine is typically associated with powerlifting and bodybuilding, not with swimming or running. But the research tells a more nuanced story. A systematic review by Forbes et al., published in the Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition (JISSN) in 2023, found that creatine supplementation improved time to exhaustion during high-intensity efforts and was particularly effective for activities involving repeated bursts or rhythm changes — think interval training, sprint sets in the pool, or tempo runs with surges.
This was a big deal for me personally. Two of my five weekly sessions are swimming, and one is running. Knowing that creatine could help with those disciplines, not just with my barbell work, was a deciding factor.
Beyond performance, creatine has measurable effects on body composition. A meta-analysis by Pashayee-Khamene et al., published in JISSN in 2024, aggregated data from multiple randomized controlled trials and found that creatine supplementation led to an average gain of +0.82 kilograms of lean body mass and a reduction of -0.28% in body fat percentage. These are modest numbers in absolute terms, but they are statistically significant and consistent across studies. The lean mass gains are not just water — they reflect actual increases in muscle protein content, driven by the ability to train harder and recover more effectively.
This is the benefit that gets the least attention but may be the most fascinating. A meta-analysis by Xu et al., published in Frontiers in Nutrition in 2024, found that creatine supplementation improved several markers of cognitive function, including memory, attention, and processing speed. The brain, like muscle, relies on ATP for energy-intensive processes, and creatine supplementation appears to enhance cerebral energy metabolism. The effects were most pronounced under conditions of stress, sleep deprivation, or high cognitive demand. As someone who balances training with a demanding work schedule, I find this benefit particularly appealing.
The big picture
Creatine is not just for powerlifters. The research supports benefits for strength, high-intensity endurance, body composition, and even cognitive function. It is one of the few supplements with a genuinely broad evidence base across multiple domains.
If you have ever searched "creatine side effects" online, you have probably encountered a wall of alarming claims. Let us go through the most common ones and see what the actual evidence says.
This is the myth that kept me away from creatine for the longest time. It sounds scary, and it gets repeated so often that it feels like established fact. But the research paints a very different picture.
A meta-analysis by Naeini et al., published in BMC Nephrology in 2025, examined 21 studies on creatine supplementation and kidney function in healthy individuals. The conclusion was unambiguous: creatine supplementation does not impair renal function in people with healthy kidneys. The confusion often stems from serum creatinine levels. Creatinine is a breakdown product of creatine, and supplementing with creatine naturally raises creatinine levels in blood tests. But elevated serum creatinine in this context reflects increased creatine turnover, not kidney damage. It is a measurement artifact, not a sign of renal insufficiency. Any doctor familiar with sports nutrition will tell you the same thing.
This myth originates from a single 2009 study on rugby players that found an increase in dihydrotestosterone (DHT) — a hormone linked to male pattern baldness — after a creatine loading phase. The problem? That study has never been replicated. Not once. A position stand by Antonio et al., published in JISSN in 2021, reviewed the totality of evidence and found that creatine supplementation does not increase total testosterone, free testosterone, or DHT levels. There are no documented clinical cases of creatine-induced hair loss in the literature. If you are genetically predisposed to male pattern baldness, it will happen regardless of creatine. The supplement is not the culprit.
There is a kernel of truth here, but it is misleading. When creatine is transported into muscle cells, water follows — this is basic osmotic physiology. So yes, there is an initial increase in intracellular water content. But this is water inside the muscle cells, not subcutaneous bloating that makes you look puffy. More importantly, the lean mass gains observed in long-term studies go beyond what water retention alone can explain. The meta-analysis by Pashayee-Khamene et al. (2024) confirmed genuine increases in lean tissue mass over time. You are building real muscle, not just holding water.
The traditional protocol calls for a "loading phase" of 20 grams per day for 5 to 7 days, followed by a maintenance dose of 3 to 5 grams per day. While this approach does saturate muscle creatine stores faster, it is not mandatory. Taking 3 to 5 grams per day from the start will achieve full saturation in approximately 3 to 4 weeks instead of one. The end result is the same. I opted to skip the loading phase entirely — partly because 20 grams per day can cause gastrointestinal discomfort in some people, and partly because I saw no reason to rush. Patience costs nothing.
Important caveat
While creatine is safe for healthy individuals, anyone with a pre-existing kidney condition, a history of renal disease, or concerns about kidney function should consult a doctor before starting supplementation. The safety data applies to people with normal kidney function — if yours is compromised, the standard recommendations may not apply to you.
One of the things I appreciate about creatine is its simplicity. There is no complicated protocol, no cycling schedule, no timing gymnastics. Here is what the evidence supports.
Take 3 to 5 grams per day of creatine monohydrate. That is it. No loading phase required, although you can do one if you want faster saturation. I personally take 3 grams per day, which is on the lower end but aligns with the Zhang et al. (2025) finding that lower doses are often more effective than higher ones. For most people, 3 to 5 grams is the sweet spot.
The short answer is that it does not matter much. Creatine works through chronic saturation of muscle stores, not through acute timing effects. That said, some research suggests that taking creatine post-workout alongside carbohydrates and protein may slightly enhance uptake, because insulin-mediated muscle creatine transport is more active when glycogen replenishment is occurring. I typically mix mine into my post-workout protein shake out of convenience, but I would not lose sleep over it if I took it at a different time.
Creatine monohydrate. Full stop. The supplement industry has produced dozens of "advanced" creatine forms — creatine ethyl ester, creatine hydrochloride, buffered creatine, creatine magnesium chelate — but none of them have been shown to be superior to plain monohydrate. The Pashayee-Khamene et al. (2024) meta-analysis specifically noted that creatine monohydrate remains the most studied and most effective form. It is also the cheapest. Do not pay a premium for marketing buzzwords.
There is no need to cycle creatine. Some people take it for a few weeks, stop, and restart, believing that the body needs a "break." There is no scientific basis for this. Creatine does not downregulate its own transport mechanisms or lose effectiveness over time. Take it consistently, every day, indefinitely.
Creatine draws water into muscle cells. While this is not dangerous, it does mean you should be mindful of your water intake, especially if you train in hot environments or do long endurance sessions. I have not needed to dramatically increase my water consumption, but I do make a conscious effort to stay well-hydrated throughout the day — which is something I should be doing anyway as someone who swims and runs regularly.
Keep it simple
Creatine monohydrate is the most studied, most effective, and most affordable form of creatine. Take 3 to 5 grams per day, every day, with or without food. No loading, no cycling, no overthinking.
I want to be honest here, because I think honesty is more useful than hype. Creatine is not a magic powder. I did not wake up the morning after my first dose feeling like a superhero. The effects are subtle, cumulative, and easy to miss if you are not paying attention.
I started in January 2026 after spending about two weeks reading meta-analyses and position papers. My main hesitation was the kidney myth — I had heard it so many times that it felt irresponsible to just dismiss it. But once I saw the actual data, particularly the Naeini et al. (2025) meta-analysis with 21 studies all pointing in the same direction, my concerns evaporated. I also spoke with my doctor, who confirmed that creatine supplementation was safe for me and that any changes in my serum creatinine on blood work would be expected and not a cause for concern.
I started at 3 grams per day with no loading phase, mixed into water or a protein shake. The first couple of weeks, I noticed nothing at all. By the third and fourth week — around the time muscle creatine stores would have reached saturation — I started noticing small differences.
In strength training, the most obvious change was at the end of my sets. Where I would normally hit a wall at rep 8 or 9 on heavy compound movements, I found myself getting to 10 or even 11 with the same weight. It is not a dramatic difference on any single set, but across an entire session, those extra reps add up to meaningfully more training volume. Over weeks, that additional volume translates to faster progress.
In the pool, the effect was different but noticeable. My sprint sets — 50-meter and 100-meter repeats — felt more sustainable. I could maintain my pace across more intervals before my performance started to drop off. The recovery between sets seemed slightly faster, which allowed me to keep the intensity higher throughout the session.
Running was where I noticed the least impact, which makes sense given that my runs tend to be longer and more aerobic. Creatine's primary benefit is for short, high-intensity efforts, not sustained low-intensity work. That said, on tempo runs where I mix in faster surges, I did feel a bit more pop in those higher-intensity segments.
Beyond training, I have noticed what I can only describe as a general sense of better recovery. I feel less drained the day after a hard session. My sleep has not changed, my mood has not changed, and I have not experienced any side effects — no bloating, no gastrointestinal issues, no skin changes, no hair loss. It has been remarkably uneventful, which is exactly what you want from a supplement.
My advice if you are on the fence
Do not trust anecdotes — including mine. Read the studies yourself. The JISSN position stands are freely available and written in accessible language. Talk to your doctor if you have concerns. And if you do start, give it at least 4 weeks before judging. Creatine is a slow build, not an instant hit.
After two months of supplementation and dozens of hours spent reading the research, here is where I land: creatine monohydrate is the most studied, most evidence-backed, and safest sports supplement available. The benefits for strength, high-intensity performance, body composition, and cognitive function are well-documented across hundreds of studies. The supposed risks — kidney damage, hair loss, dangerous water retention — are either outright myths or gross distortions of the data.
That said, I believe everyone should do their own research. Do not take my word for it, and do not take a random forum post's word for it either. Read the meta-analyses. Look at the actual numbers. Consult a healthcare professional if you have any pre-existing conditions or concerns.
For me, creatine has been a quiet, consistent addition to my routine — nothing flashy, nothing dramatic, just a small edge that compounds over time. And as someone who trains across multiple disciplines, knowing that the evidence supports benefits beyond just the weight room makes it feel like a worthwhile investment.
The science is clear. The myths are debunked. The rest is up to you.
Raphaël Raclot is a French full stack developer passionate about cybersecurity and modern web technologies. He specializes in React, Next.js, and TypeScript, and shares his discoveries, projects, and insights here.
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