When should you take creatine? Timing, honestly
Before or after the workout? On an empty stomach? What about rest days? It's the most-asked creatine question — and the honest answer is refreshingly boring: the clock barely matters. Consistency does.
Why timing is a small lever
Creatine doesn't work like caffeine, with an acute hit you feel that session. It works by slowly saturating the creatine stores in your muscle over days and weeks of daily intake. Once your stores are full, they stay full as long as you keep topping them up. That mechanism is why when you take a given dose is a minor detail — you're maintaining a reservoir, not timing a spike.
What the research actually found
Researchers have looked at this directly. A 2021 review in Nutrients concluded that while some emerging evidence hints at a small advantage to taking creatine after exercise rather than before, methodological limits mean no firm conclusion can be drawn (Ribeiro et al., 2021). A 2022 review with the fitting title Creatine O'Clock reached the same place: any timing effect on muscle mass and performance is small and inconsistent (Forbes & Candow, 2022).
So: a slight, unproven lean toward post-workout — not enough to lose sleep over, and not enough to skip a dose because you "missed the window."
The practical answers
- Before vs after training: either is fine. If you want to follow the faint post-workout signal, take it with your post-training meal — pairing it with carbs and protein may help uptake a little. But don't overthink it.
- Rest days: still take it. You're maintaining saturation, not fuelling a session, so a rest day is no different from a training day.
- Empty stomach or with food: doesn't meaningfully matter. With food is marginally gentler on the stomach for some.
- The one that actually matters: take it every day, at whatever time you'll reliably remember. A missed dose here and there won't undo you, but the daily habit is the whole strategy.
Loading is a timing question too
You don't need a loading phase. Loading (around 20 g/day split over a week) fills stores faster, but a steady daily dose gets you to the same place within a few weeks and is gentler on the gut. The numbers are in how much creatine you actually need.
In short
The best time to take creatine is the time you'll actually stick to. Pick a daily anchor — with breakfast, with your post-workout shake, whenever — and let saturation do the slow work. That's exactly why we built ours as a single daily stick: the habit is the point. More in the simple guide.
Sources
- Ribeiro et al. (2021). Timing of Creatine Supplementation around Exercise: A Real Concern? Nutrients.
- Forbes & Candow (2022). Creatine O'Clock: Does Timing of Ingestion Really Influence Muscle Mass and Performance? Frontiers in Sports and Active Living.
- Kreider et al. (2017). International Society of Sports Nutrition position stand: safety and efficacy of creatine supplementation in exercise, sport, and medicine. Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition. (Saturation and daily maintenance.)