Evidence Review · 6 min read
The Creatine and Hair Loss Claim: What the Research Shows
The claim that creatine causes hair loss originates from a single 2009 study in the Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine. It found that rugby players taking creatine had increased DHT (dihydrotestosterone) levels — a hormone linked to male pattern baldness. This study is frequently misinterpreted. Here is what actually happened.
What the 2009 Study Actually Found
The study found a 56% increase in DHT:testosterone ratio after 3 weeks of creatine supplementation. However: (1) absolute DHT levels were not reported, only the ratio; (2) the DHT values remained within the normal reference range throughout; (3) the study was never replicated — multiple subsequent studies failed to confirm this DHT increase; (4) hair loss was never directly measured — it was an assumed outcome based on DHT correlation.
What Subsequent Research Shows
No controlled trial has demonstrated that creatine supplementation causes measurable hair loss. A 2021 systematic review examined all available evidence and found insufficient evidence to conclude creatine causes hair loss. Multiple large-scale creatine studies involving thousands of participants over years report no increase in hair loss as an adverse effect.
The Bottom Line
Creatine is extremely unlikely to cause clinically meaningful hair loss in the vast majority of people. The theoretical mechanism exists (DHT can accelerate male pattern baldness in those with the DHT-sensitive hair follicle gene variant), but the evidence linking creatine to actual hair loss is extremely weak. The 1,000+ clinical studies on creatine spanning 30 years consistently show it is safe, with no reliable reports of hair loss as an adverse effect.
If you are highly concerned: Those with strong family history of male pattern baldness and significant DHT sensitivity may choose to be cautious. For everyone else, the benefits of creatine far outweigh this theoretical and unproven risk.
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