Supplements: Creatine — Complete Guide (Monohydrate vs All Forms)
Creatine monohydrate at 3–5g/day increases muscle phosphocreatine ~20%. At $0.03–0.05/g it is the lowest cost-per-evidence supplement available. Cognitive meta-analysis (Avgerinos 2018, PMID 29704637) showed improved memory in older adults; McMorris 2007 (PMID 17828627) reversed cognitive decline after 24h sleep deprivation with 20g creatine.
| Measure | Value | Unit | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Evidence Tier | 1 | tier | Tier 1 — hundreds of RCTs, multiple independent meta-analyses, replicated across labs and populations |
| Standard Daily Dose | 3–5 | g/day | Maintenance dose for creatine monohydrate; effective without loading protocol |
| Loading Protocol | 20 | g/day × 5 days | Loading achieves full muscle creatine saturation in ~1 week vs ~28 days at 3–5g/day; outcome is equivalent |
| Muscle Phosphocreatine Increase | ~20 | % | Average PCr increase with full saturation; ~20–40% of people are 'non-responders' with low baseline PCr |
| Monohydrate Cost per Gram | $0.03–0.05 | USD/g | Creatine monohydrate is a commodity; Creapure (German-manufactured) runs slightly higher but is same molecule |
| Creatine HCl Cost per Gram | $0.30–0.60 | USD/g | ~10× the cost of monohydrate with no evidence of superior muscle uptake; better solubility only |
| Brain Creatine Increase (supplementation) | 5–15 | % | Oral creatine supplementation increases brain creatine 5–15%; higher doses and longer durations increase this |
| Sleep Deprivation Cognitive Reversal | 20g | g (acute) | McMorris 2007 (PMID 17828627): 20g creatine reversed cognitive decline after 24 hours of sleep deprivation |
Mechanism: Phosphocreatine and ATP Regeneration
ATP (adenosine triphosphate) is the universal cellular energy currency. During maximum-intensity efforts (sprinting, heavy lifting), ATP depletion occurs within 1–3 seconds. Phosphocreatine (PCr) stored in muscle rapidly donates a phosphate group to ADP to regenerate ATP — this reaction is catalyzed by creatine kinase and occurs in milliseconds, sustaining high-power output for 5–15 additional seconds.
Creatine supplementation increases total muscle creatine and phosphocreatine content by approximately 20% at saturation. This translates to: more total work per sprint, less fatigue accumulation across repeated sprints, and greater training volume in high-rep resistance exercise.
Creatine Forms: Direct Comparison
| Form | Evidence Strength | Cost per Gram (USD) | Solubility | Muscle Uptake vs Monohydrate | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Creatine Monohydrate | Tier 1 — 500+ RCTs | $0.03–0.05 | Moderate (dissolves in water) | Reference (100%) | Best choice for virtually everyone |
| Creapure (micronized monohydrate) | Tier 1 | $0.05–0.08 | High (smaller particle size) | Equivalent | Worth it if GI issues with standard; same molecule |
| Creatine HCl | Tier 2 | $0.30–0.60 | Very high | No evidence of superiority (no head-to-head RCTs) | Not worth the cost premium |
| Creatine Ethyl Ester | Tier 2–3 | $0.15–0.30 | High | Inferior — converts to creatinine faster (Spillane 2009) | Avoid — degraded form |
| Buffered Creatine (Kre-Alkalyn) | Tier 2–3 | $0.20–0.40 | Moderate | No advantage (Jagim 2012, PMID 22432515) | Marketing product; no benefit over monohydrate |
| Creatine Magnesium Chelate | Tier 3 | $0.25–0.50 | Moderate | Insufficient comparative data | Insufficient evidence to recommend over monohydrate |
| Creatine Nitrate | Tier 3 | $0.35–0.65 | High | No published comparative uptake data | Dual-compound claim not validated |
| Tri-Creatine Malate | Tier 3 | $0.20–0.40 | High | No published comparative uptake data | No evidence of superior performance outcomes |
The Cognitive and Neurological Evidence
Creatine’s role in brain energy metabolism is biologically plausible — neurons are among the most metabolically demanding cells in the body, and brain PCr stores are tightly regulated. Oral creatine supplementation increases brain creatine by approximately 5–15%, measurable via phosphorus MRS neuroimaging.
Sleep deprivation (McMorris et al. 2007, PMID 17828627): A randomized crossover study found that 20g/day creatine for 7 days significantly attenuated deterioration in complex cognitive tasks after 24 hours of sleep deprivation. The effect was most pronounced in tasks relying on prefrontal cortex function.
Aging and memory (Avgerinos et al. 2018, PMID 29704637): Systematic review of 6 RCTs found consistent improvements in memory performance in older adults (60+). Effect was significant for immediate and delayed recall. Younger well-nourished adults showed smaller and less consistent effects.
TBI and neuroprotection: Emerging preclinical and limited clinical evidence suggests creatine may reduce oxidative stress and neuronal death following traumatic brain injury. This area requires substantially more human trial data before clinical recommendations are appropriate.
For a comprehensive dive into creatine’s cognitive mechanisms and neural applications, see cognition.towerofrecords.com.
For training protocol context — how creatine fits into periodized resistance and power training — see hypertrophy.towerofrecords.com.
Dosing Protocols
Standard (no loading): 3–5g/day at any time. Timing relative to workouts shows minimal impact in meta-analyses. Consistency matters more than timing.
Loading: 20g/day divided into 4 × 5g doses for 5–7 days, then 3–5g/day maintenance. GI discomfort risk is reduced by splitting doses and taking with food.
Higher-dose cognitive protocols: Some sleep-deprivation and TBI research uses 20g/day for acute periods. Not necessary for general performance use.
Non-responders: Approximately 20–30% of individuals show minimal muscle PCr increase with supplementation, typically because their baseline muscle creatine is already high (common in heavy red-meat consumers). Testing PCr via muscle biopsy is the only direct measure; surrogate indicator is lack of 1–2kg of rapid weight gain (water retention) in the first 1–2 weeks of loading.
Related Pages
Sources
- Spillane M et al. (2009). The effects of creatine ethyl ester supplementation combined with heavy resistance training on body composition, muscle performance, and serum and muscle creatine levels. J Int Soc Sports Nutr 6:6. PMID 19228401.
- Jagim AR et al. (2012). A buffered form of creatine does not promote greater changes in muscle creatine content, body composition, or training adaptations than creatine monohydrate. J Int Soc Sports Nutr 9:43. PMID 22432515.
- McMorris T et al. (2007). Creatine supplementation and cognitive performance in elderly individuals. Aging Neuropsychol Cogn 14(5):517–528. PMID 17828627.
- Avgerinos KI et al. (2018). Effects of creatine supplementation on cognitive function of healthy individuals: a systematic review of randomized controlled trials. Exp Gerontol 108:166–173. PMID 29704637.
- Greenhaff PL et al. (1994). Influence of oral creatine supplementation of muscle torque during repeated bouts of maximal voluntary exercise. Clin Sci 87(4):415–419.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is creatine loading necessary?
No. Loading (20g/day in 4 divided doses × 5–7 days) saturates muscle phosphocreatine stores in about 1 week. The same saturation point is reached with 3–5g/day without loading in approximately 28 days. If you want faster results (e.g., before a competition in 2 weeks), loading accelerates saturation. The long-term muscle creatine level achieved is identical. Loading increases GI discomfort risk; split dosing (4 × 5g) mitigates this.
Is creatine HCl or Kre-Alkalyn worth the premium?
No. Creatine HCl has superior solubility — it mixes more easily and causes less stomach upset at equivalent doses. But there is no published evidence it produces greater muscle creatine uptake than monohydrate. It costs approximately 10× more per gram. Kre-Alkalyn (buffered creatine) was specifically compared to monohydrate in Jagim et al. 2012 (PMID 22432515) and showed no advantage in muscle creatine content, body composition, or performance outcomes.
Does creatine cause kidney damage?
No, in healthy individuals with normal kidney function. Creatine is metabolized to creatinine, which is a standard kidney function marker — this causes creatinine to rise in blood tests during supplementation, which can look concerning but reflects normal metabolism, not kidney damage. Multiple long-term studies (up to 5 years of continuous use) show no adverse effects on kidney function in healthy people. Those with pre-existing kidney disease should consult a physician.
What are the cognitive effects of creatine?
Creatine's cognitive benefits are most pronounced under conditions of metabolic stress. Avgerinos et al. 2018 (PMID 29704637) meta-analysis found improved memory performance in older adults. McMorris et al. 2007 (PMID 17828627) showed that 20g creatine reversed cognitive deficits caused by 24-hour sleep deprivation. Vegetarians and vegans — who have lower baseline dietary creatine — show larger cognitive responses to supplementation. For well-rested, meat-eating young adults, cognitive effects are smaller but present.
What does creatine do for high-intensity exercise?
Creatine's primary mechanism is phosphocreatine (PCr) resynthesis — PCr donates a phosphate group to ADP to regenerate ATP within seconds during maximal intensity efforts. Higher PCr stores allow more work before fatigue within explosive efforts (0–30 seconds) and faster recovery between sprint repetitions. Effects are most pronounced in repeated sprint and high-rep resistance training contexts. Endurance performance over continuous aerobic efforts shows minimal benefit.