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Does Creatine Help You Build Muscle? A Certified Nutrition Coach Weighs In

When you’re serious about building muscle, you likely stay on top of the latest information on what else you can do to aid all the lifting, eating, and sleeping. Creatine is a tried and true supplement that’s been popular for a while — but does creatine help you build muscle? Good news — research suggests that when you train consistently and eat enough, creatine may indeed help increase muscle mass.

Two scoops full of powdered supplements, tablets and dumbbells wrap with measuring tape.
Credit: Halk-44 / Shutterstock

Here, we’ll explain how creatine supplementation affects your muscle fibers and can lead to more muscle gains. It all starts with boosting your exercise performance when you lift, which may also increase muscle strength. Here’s what you need to know.

Editor’s Note: The content on BarBend is meant to be informative in nature, but it should not be taken as medical advice. When starting a new training regimen and/or diet, it is always a good idea to consult with a trusted medical professional. We are not a medical resource. The opinions and articles on this site are not intended for use as diagnosis, prevention, and/or treatment of health problems. They are not substitutes for consulting a qualified medical professional.

What Is Creatine?

Many types of supplements are popular in bodybuilding and strength training. From pre-workout to whey protein, all sorts of supps have their place in your stack. Creatine is an amino acid; you already have it in your skeletal muscles and brain. Getting more of it may increase muscle growth, strength, and performance and potentially boost brain health.

You can increase creatine in your muscle cells through creatine supplementation or eating animal-based protein sources like red meat. Vegetarians and vegans can eat foods that contain the three amino acids that serve as creatine precursors: arginine, glycine, and methionine. (1)

[Read More: What Does Creatine Do? Here’s How the Mass-Boosting Supplement Works]

Creatine is considered a safe dietary supplement with no harmful side effects for healthy individuals. The main potential side effect of creatine supplementation is short-term water retention, which may lead to temporary weight gain. It was initially thought to harm your kidneys but is now considered safe for people without kidney disease. (2)

Does Creatine Help You Build Muscle?

Creatine doesn’t build muscle by itself. But when you take it along with strength training and proper nutrition, over 50 years of research and thousands of studies suggest it helps increase lean body mass, muscle strength, and athletic performance. (3)

Research indicates creatine helps build muscle through the following process. It may increase IGF-1 (a growth hormone) and new proteins that stimulate muscle protein synthesis, leading to muscle hypertrophy. (4)(5)

[Read More: The Best Pre-Workout Supplements]

Below is a breakdown of significant studies and reviews on creatine supplementation, resistance training, and muscle-building.

Does Creatine Help You Get Stronger?

One of the primary benefits of creatine is that it may help you to increase strength. It’s not magic — but it does give your muscles more energy to crank out a few more high-quality reps in your weightlifting sessions. Let’s break it down.

How Does Creatine Work?

How exactly does creatine help you get these sweet gains? 

When you take creatine, your body turns it into creatine phosphate (or phosphocreatine) and sticks it in your muscle cells. Think of phosphocreatine as stored energy; when you have more of it, more is available for lifting. 

Phosphocreatine helps your body create and replenish your ATP (adenosine triphosphate) more quickly. ATP is your body’s energy source for short-duration, high-intensity training activities like sprinting, weightlifting, plyometrics, and sports performance. (15)

Credit: Prostock-studio / Shutterstock

[Read More: Does Creatine Make You Gain Weight?]

Without having extra muscle creatine packed away, you’ll burn through your ATP in two to three seconds before you fatigue. When you have more stored phosphocreatine, your ATP replenishes much quicker, and you can do a few more repetitions before you fatigue

When trying to hit a new PR on your bench press, beat your time in a CrossFit benchmark workout, or your high-intensity exercise of choice, those few extra seconds before fatigue can add up. Over the weeks and months of training, with a few more quality reps in every session — big-time muscle gains.

Types of Creatine

There are a few forms of creatine. However, research repeatedly shows creatine monohydrate is the most effective at improving athletic performance, increasing muscle mass, and boosting muscle strength. (1)

Here are some other types of creatine on the market, though research insists that creatine monohydrate supplementation is the way to go. (2)

[Read More: 14 Foods with Creatine to Fuel Your Next Workout]

If you want to try it out, it’s no longer universally recommended that you do a creatine loading phase, where you gradually build up your creatine stores. Instead, the International Society of Sports Nutrition (ISSN) recommends the following protocol. (1)

Takeaways

FAQs

Let’s wrap up with some common questions about creatine.

Will creatine make my muscles bigger?

When you perform resistance training and eat enough calories and macros, creatine can help make your muscles bigger.

How long does it take for creatine to show results in muscle growth? 

After four weeks of taking creatine, your creatine stores should be full, and you may start to notice results. 

Does creatine build muscle better than protein? 

You still need protein to build muscle. If you’re deciding between a creatine or protein supplement, you can reach your protein intake goal through food alone. Creatine supplementation is more efficient than getting enough through food, especially if you don’t eat animal products.

Are creatine gains permanent?

It depends on your work. Your creatine gains should stay with you as long as you stay consistent with training and nutrition.

References

  1. Kreider RB, Kalman DS, Antonio J, Ziegenfuss TN, Wildman R, Collins R, Candow DG, Kleiner SM, Almada AL, Lopez HL. International Society of Sports Nutrition position stand: safety and efficacy of creatine supplementation in exercise, sport, and medicine. J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2017 Jun 13;14:18. 
  2. Antonio, J., Candow, D.G., Forbes, S.C. et al. Common questions and misconceptions about creatine supplementation: what does the scientific evidence really show?. J Int Soc Sports Nutr 18, 13 (2021).
  3. Buford TW, Kreider RB, Stout JR, Greenwood M, Campbell B, Spano M, Ziegenfuss T, Lopez H, Landis J, Antonio J. International Society of Sports Nutrition position stand: creatine supplementation and exercise. J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2007 Aug 30;4:6. 
  4. Burke DG, Candow DG, Chilibeck PD, MacNeil LG, Roy BD, Tarnopolsky MA, Ziegenfuss T. Effect of creatine supplementation and resistance-exercise training on muscle insulin-like growth factor in young adults. Int J Sport Nutr Exerc Metab. 2008 Aug;18(4):389-98.
  5. Deldicque L, Theisen D, Bertrand L, Hespel P, Hue L, Francaux M. Creatine enhances differentiation of myogenic C2C12 cells by activating both p38 and Akt/PKB pathways. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol. 2007 Oct;293(4):C1263-71. 
  6. Volek JS, Duncan ND, Mazzetti SA, Staron RS, Putukian M, Gómez AL, Pearson DR, Fink WJ, Kraemer WJ. Performance and muscle fiber adaptations to creatine supplementation and heavy resistance training. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 1999 Aug;31(8):1147-56. 
  7. Delpino FM, Figueiredo LM, Forbes SC, Candow DG, Santos HO. Influence of age, sex, and type of exercise on the efficacy of creatine supplementation on lean body mass: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials. Nutrition. 2022 Nov-Dec;103-104:111791. 
  8. Wu SH, Chen KL, Hsu C, Chen HC, Chen JY, Yu SY, Shiu YJ. Creatine Supplementation for Muscle Growth: A Scoping Review of Randomized Clinical Trials from 2012 to 2021. Nutrients. 2022 Mar 16;14(6):1255.
  9. Candow DG, Forbes SC, Chilibeck PD, Cornish SM, Antonio J, Kreider RB. Effectiveness of Creatine Supplementation on Aging Muscle and Bone: Focus on Falls Prevention and Inflammation. J Clin Med. 2019 Apr 11;8(4):488. 
  10. Chilibeck PD, Kaviani M, Candow DG, Zello GA. Effect of creatine supplementation during resistance training on lean tissue mass and muscular strength in older adults: a meta-analysis. Open Access J Sports Med. 2017 Nov 2;8:213-226. 
  11. Smith-Ryan, Abbie E, Hannah E Cabre, Joan M Eckerson, and Darren G Candow. 2021. “Creatine Supplementation in Women’s Health: A Lifespan Perspective” Nutrients 13, no. 3: 877.
  12. Wax B, Kerksick CM, Jagim AR, Mayo JJ, Lyons BC, Kreider RB. Creatine for Exercise and Sports Performance, with Recovery Considerations for Healthy Populations. Nutrients. 2021 Jun 2;13(6):1915. 
  13. Mills S, Candow DG, Forbes SC, Neary JP, Ormsbee MJ, Antonio J. Effects of Creatine Supplementation during Resistance Training Sessions in Physically Active Young Adults. Nutrients. 2020 Jun 24;12(6):1880. 
  14. Rawson ES, Venezia AC. Use of creatine in the elderly and evidence for effects on cognitive function in young and old. Amino Acids. 2011 May;40(5):1349-62.
  15. Dunn J, Grider MH. Physiology, Adenosine Triphosphate. [Updated 2023 Feb 13]. In: StatPearls [Internet]. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2024 Jan-.

Featured Image: Halk-44 / Shutterstock

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