How Much Water Should You Drink on Creatine? (Daily Intake Guide)
Creatine is one of the most effective and safest supplements available â but it does change how your body uses water. Not drinking enough when you're supplementing with creatine is one of the most common mistakes people make.
So how much water do you actually need?
The baseline recommendation is 3â4 litres of water per day while taking creatine, adjusted upward based on your body weight, activity level, and climate. Here's why â and how to get it right.
Why Does Creatine Affect Your Water Needs?
Creatine is stored in your muscles as phosphocreatine. When creatine enters muscle cells, it draws water in with it â a process called osmosis. This intracellular water retention is part of what gives creatine its performance-enhancing effects: a higher water content in muscle cells improves the environment for protein synthesis and energy production.
The result: your muscles hold more water than they would without creatine supplementation. This means your body has less freely circulating water for other functions â including keeping you hydrated.
If you don't increase your water intake to compensate, you risk:
- Mild dehydration
- Muscle cramps
- Reduced exercise performance
- Headaches
- Slower creatine uptake (hydration affects absorption)
Exact Water Intake Recommendations by Body Weight
The ISSN and sports nutritionists recommend a baseline of 35â45ml of water per kilogram of body weight per day for active individuals on creatine.
| Body Weight | Minimum Daily Water (sedentary) | Active / Training Days |
|---|---|---|
| 50â60 kg | 2.5 litres | 3.0â3.5 litres |
| 60â70 kg | 2.8 litres | 3.2â3.8 litres |
| 70â80 kg | 3.0 litres | 3.5â4.0 litres |
| 80â90 kg | 3.2 litres | 3.8â4.5 litres |
| 90â100 kg | 3.5 litres | 4.0â5.0 litres |
| 100+ kg | 4.0 litres | 4.5â5.5 litres |
These are targets for total daily water intake â including water from food, coffee, tea, and other beverages (though water itself is best for creatine supplementation).
Water Needs During the Loading Phase
The loading phase â 20g of creatine per day for 5â7 days â requires even more water. You are rapidly saturating your muscles with creatine, which dramatically increases the amount of water being pulled into muscle tissue.
During a loading phase, aim for:
- 3.5â5 litres per day depending on body weight and activity level
- Spread intake throughout the day â don't attempt to drink large amounts at once
- Drink at least 300â500ml of water with each creatine dose
After the loading phase, you can reduce to the standard maintenance recommendations above.
Creatine and Dehydration: What Actually Happens
There's a widespread myth that creatine causes dehydration. This is partly true in one specific scenario: if you take creatine and significantly underdrink water, your muscle cells pull water from your bloodstream, which can lower blood volume and cause dehydration symptoms.
However, studies on athletes taking creatine with adequate hydration consistently show no increased risk of dehydration â and some research suggests creatine may actually improve cellular hydration and heat tolerance.
The key phrase is "adequate hydration." The supplement doesn't cause dehydration on its own â insufficient water intake does.
Signs You're Not Drinking Enough Water on Creatine
Watch for these warning signs, especially in the first 2 weeks of supplementation:
- Dark yellow or amber urine â urine should be pale yellow; dark urine is a clear sign of dehydration
- Muscle cramps â particularly in calves, hamstrings, or feet during or after exercise
- Headaches â especially post-workout or in the afternoon
- Fatigue that doesn't match your training load
- Dry mouth or increased thirst
- Reduced exercise performance despite supplementing
If you notice these symptoms, increase water intake immediately. Most resolve within 24â48 hours of proper rehydration.
Does Drinking More Water Help Creatine Work Better?
Yes. Proper hydration doesn't just prevent side effects â it actively improves how well creatine works.
Water is essential for:
- Creatine transport: Creatine is dissolved in water and absorbed through the intestinal wall into the bloodstream. Dehydration slows this process.
- Muscle saturation: Phosphocreatine storage requires adequate cellular water content.
- Performance output: Even mild dehydration (1â2% body weight) reduces strength and power output â negating some of creatine's benefits.
Think of hydration as a multiplier on your creatine supplementation. Getting it right amplifies results; neglecting it dulls them.
Best Fluids to Drink With Creatine
Best choices:
- Water (always the optimal choice)
- Fruit juice (natural sugars increase insulin, which helps drive creatine into muscles)
- Milk (protein + carbs support creatine uptake)
- Diluted sports drinks (electrolytes help during high-intensity training)
Avoid or limit:
- Alcohol â significantly dehydrating, reduces creatine uptake, and impairs protein synthesis
- Caffeine in large amounts â some research suggests very high caffeine intake may blunt creatine's benefits, though moderate coffee consumption (1â2 cups) is generally fine
- Carbonated drinks as your primary fluid â fine occasionally, but not ideal for meeting large daily water targets
Should You Drink Water at the Same Time as Taking Creatine?
Yes â always dissolve creatine in at least 200â300ml of water when you take your dose. This:
- Helps creatine dissolve fully (monohydrate doesn't dissolve well in small amounts)
- Ensures creatine reaches the bloodstream properly
- Contributes to your daily fluid target
Micronized creatine and creatine HCl dissolve more easily and can be mixed in smaller amounts of liquid, but drinking extra water alongside them is still recommended.
Practical Daily Hydration Strategy
Here's a simple framework to hit your water targets on creatine:
| Time | Action | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Morning (waking) | Large glass of water | 500ml |
| With creatine dose | Water or juice | 300ml |
| Mid-morning | Water bottle | 500ml |
| Lunch | Water with meal | 300ml |
| Pre-workout | Water | 400â500ml |
| During workout | Sips every 15â20 mins | 500â800ml |
| Post-workout | Rehydration | 500ml |
| Evening | Water with dinner | 300ml |
Total: approximately 3.4â4.0 litres, spread across the day. Adjust up or down based on your body weight and sweat rate.
Creatine Hydration by Type
Different creatine forms have slightly different hydration considerations:
| Creatine Type | Relative Hydration Need | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Monohydrate | High | Highest water retention effect |
| Micronized | High | Same molecule, same hydration need |
| Creatine HCl | Moderate | Smaller dose means slightly less water retention |
Regardless of the form, increasing daily water intake by 500mlâ1 litre above your baseline is a good rule of thumb when starting creatine supplementation.
Key Takeaways
- Drink 3â4 litres per day on creatine â more if you're large or training hard
- During loading phase, target 3.5â5 litres per day
- Always take creatine with at least 200â300ml of water
- Dark urine, cramps, and headaches are signs to drink more
- Hydration amplifies creatine's benefits â don't neglect it
Use our creatine dosage calculator to get your personalized daily dose â your result includes a hydration recommendation based on your body weight.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does creatine make you retain water? Yes â intramuscularly. Creatine pulls water into your muscle cells, which is part of how it works. This is not bloating; it's a functional part of creatine's mechanism.
Can drinking too much water on creatine cause problems? Drinking excessive water (hyponatremia risk) is only a concern at very extreme intake levels (10+ litres per day without electrolytes). Normal creatine hydration targets (3â5L/day) are completely safe.
Does creatine cause water weight gain? Yes â typically 1â3kg of intramuscular water in the first 1â2 weeks. This is not fat and does not look like bloating. It contributes to fuller, denser muscles.
Will I lose the water weight when I stop creatine? Yes. If you stop taking creatine, your muscles gradually release the stored water over 2â4 weeks and your weight returns to baseline.
Does creatine affect kidney function and hydration? In healthy individuals, no. Creatine increases serum creatinine (a normal byproduct) but does not damage kidneys when adequate water intake is maintained.