Guest article from Nutritionist and Motivational Speaker, Jess Wilson
One of the most common questions I get asked is, “Does creatine increase water retention in women?”.
And I get it. The last thing most women want is to feel puffy, swollen or uncomfortable in their own skin. Especially if you’re already navigating hormonal shifts, gut issues, or that frustrating “why do I feel inflamed?” phase of life.
So, let’s clear it up.
Creatine is one of the most well-researched, evidence-based supplements we have. It increases muscle strength, improves athletic performance, supports lean muscle mass, and enhances recovery. For women, that’s powerful, especially as we move through our 30s and beyond when maintaining muscle becomes essential for metabolic health, bone density, insulin sensitivity and long-term resilience.
But here’s where the confusion comes in.
Creatine helps your muscles make energy more efficiently by topping up their natural energy stores. It also draws water into the muscle cell, which is called intracellular hydration.
That is not the same thing as fluid retention.
Fluid retention, the kind that makes you feel swollen, puffy or like your rings don’t fit, is extracellular. It’s water that sits outside of your cells, often under the skin. And that’s usually driven by sodium imbalance, inflammation, hormonal fluctuations (hello luteal phase), poor gut function, stress, or low-quality supplements packed with fillers.
Creatine itself doesn’t make your body “hold fluid”. In fact, intracellular hydration inside the muscle is a good thing because it supports performance, recovery and muscle tone. It’s part of why muscles look fuller and stronger.
So, when women say, “Creatine made me bloated,” I immediately look at the product quality. Because more often than not, it’s not the creatine. It’s what’s added to it.
Additives. Gums. Artificial sweeteners. Thickeners. Preservatives. Flavours. Cheap fillers.
These ingredients can disrupt your gut microbiome, irritate the digestive lining, increase gas production (bloating), and trigger inflammation. And if your gut is already sensitive, or you’re in perimenopause when digestion naturally slows - you’ll feel that.
This is why I am so particular about supplement quality. A pure creatine monohydrate, free from unnecessary additives, is very different from a flavoured, bulked-out product.
Your body is responding to the ingredients, and when you give it clean, bioavailable ingredients, it tends to respond beautifully.
That’s why I choose Chief Nutrition Creatine Focus+ – it’s clean, it’s quality, and no water-logging in sight.