Creatine goes mainstream with Gen Z and millennials
Creatine goes mainstream with Gen Z and millennials
For decades, creatine was associated with a specific kind of consumer: athletes and gym regulars using it to push through high-intensity training. Today, it shows up in gummy form, and the person taking it may be heading into a board meeting, not a workout.
is one of them. She discovered creatine through TikTok rather than a structured training program. 鈥淧hysically, it has enhanced my muscle growth,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 also helped with mental clarity and managing anxiety.鈥
Her experience is no longer unusual. Millions of young Americans are reaching for creatine daily, and the reasons go well beyond the gym, reports.
Beyond the Weight Room
, former director of sport science and health in the NBA, describes a broader change where creatine is now discussed in the context of overall health and longevity rather than performance alone.
"We now know that creatine not only helps athletes perform at a high level, but it also supports muscle maintenance, brain function, and healthy aging," he said.
That wider lens is reflected in the numbers. The global creatine supplements market was valued at about $1.3 billion in 2025 and is projected to reach $8.6 billion by 2033, according to , signaling rapid growth as interest moves beyond its traditional use.
Scientific research is expanding alongside it. "Creatine has been well-established in the sports world for decades, but what's new is the breadth of research," said , MS, RDN, CSSD, senior dietitian at UCLA Santa Monica Medical Center. While the strongest evidence remains well-established, other areas are still being explored.
鈥淎s research expands, creatine may continue to evolve from a sports supplement into a broader tool for healthy aging and daily function,鈥 says Matt Weik, BS, CSCS, CPT, CSN, writer with NutraBio.
What the Science Clearly Supports
The performance evidence for creatine is, by scientific standards, unusually solid. describes creatine monohydrate as "the most effective ergogenic nutritional supplement currently available to athletes" for increasing high-intensity exercise and lean body mass during training.
reinforce that position, showing that creatine, alongside resistance training, improves upper- and lower-body strength and adds lean mass more reliably than training alone.
Yasi Ansari notes that supplementation can raise muscle creatine stores by , which 鈥渟upports short-burst energy for high-intensity movement and may aid recovery between bouts of activity.鈥
Recovery is another well-documented benefit, with studies showing reductions in muscle damage and faster recovery between training sessions. , who used creatine with the Denver Broncos during back-to-back Super Bowl runs, described it simply: "It helps you recover quicker."
Even the more granular findings point in the same direction. Benefits appear strongest in repeated, high-output efforts such as lifting, sprint work, and other explosive training, where small gains in output can compound over time.
The New Frontier: Brain and Mood
Interest now extends into how creatine may influence the brain, where early research is beginning to map a more complex role. The brain accounts for roughly , and creatine plays a role in maintaining ATP levels during cognitively demanding tasks. Studies suggest that those stores can increase with supplementation.
The most consistent findings involve conditions where the brain is already under stress. A found that creatine improved cognitive performance and altered brain energy metabolism during sleep deprivation, a condition increasingly relevant to younger consumers navigating demanding work schedules.
Research also points to potential benefits in , though larger clinical trials are still needed.
The mood research is earlier still. Some suggest creatine may support antidepressant treatment as an adjunct, with researchers pointing to brain energy metabolism as a possible mechanism.
Yet researchers are careful to emphasize that creatine is not a mental health treatment, and while the cognitive findings are promising, they remain inconclusive.
The Market Boom
The science alone does not explain the sales numbers. Consumer behavior does. Total creatine sales at The Vitamin Shoppe spiked , according to company data, and growth continues at a double-digit pace.
鈥淐reatine is undergoing a major transformation鈥攆rom a niche sports nutrition supplement to a versatile tool for daily health and longevity,鈥 said Muriel Gonzalez, president of The Vitamin Shoppe.
That growth is being shaped by who is buying and how they prefer to take it. SPINS data shows year-over-year category growth of , driven by an expanding consumer base that now includes women, Gen X, and older adults alongside traditional gym users.
Gummies have emerged as the fastest-growing format, with North America seeing a in new creatine gummy products over the past year.
Convenience is central to that rise. Gummies remove the friction of powders and shakers, making daily supplementation accessible to consumers who may not have considered creatine before. 鈥淲hat consumers want more than anything is convenience and formats that can slot seamlessly into everyday routines,鈥 said .
The trade-off is cost and consistency. The price per gram in gummy form can run nearly three times that of powder, and some products have faced scrutiny over actual creatine content. Powder still leads in overall sales, but gummies are expanding the category鈥檚 reach.
Safety and Misconceptions
Growth at this scale tends to revive old anxieties, and creatine has carried its share. The most persistent is the kidney concern. Research consistently shows 鈥,鈥 with recent meta-analyses confirming no significant impact at recommended doses.
The confusion often traces back to a single lab marker. 鈥淧eople who take creatine may see a small rise in their blood creatinine levels, but that does not necessarily mean their kidneys are being damaged,鈥 Ansari notes. 鈥淚t simply means their doctor may need to look more closely when checking kidney function.鈥
Those with existing kidney conditions or anyone taking medications that affect kidney function, should consult a physician before starting creatine.
Reality Check
Creatine's credibility is real, but so are its limits. Not every person responds to it the same way, and not every study points in the same direction. Results vary depending on dose, duration, training status, and how benefits are measured.
One found no additional lean-mass benefit under specific conditions. That variability makes sense given how creatine works: Its effects are most consistent when paired with resistance training, where greater energy availability compounds over repeated sessions. Outside that context, outcomes tend to be more modest and harder to predict.
Side effects are generally mild but worth noting. Some people experience bloating or stomach upset, particularly at higher doses. Experts suggest starting lower and skipping the loading phase to reduce those effects.
Creatine is one of the most evidence-backed supplements available. It is not, however, a substitute for consistent training, adequate nutrition, or sleep.
Where Creatine Goes From Here
Few supplements have earned the kind of scientific credibility creatine now carries, and fewer still have managed to cross from locker rooms into the daily routines of people who have never touched a barbell. For Gen Z and Millennials, that credibility is precisely the point.
A generation that researches ingredients, reads labels, and treats wellness as a daily practice is not reaching for creatine because it is trendy. They are reaching for it because decades of research have made a compelling case that it works, with benefits that extend further than a gym membership ever suggested.
鈥淐reatine can support performance and long-term wellness, but it's most effective when used thoughtfully, alongside healthy daily habits,鈥 .
The supplement may well become a permanent fixture in daily routines well beyond the gym. Or it may settle as a fitness product with broader appeal than it once had. Either way, the conversation around it has fundamentally changed.
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