The Origin of the Hair Loss Concern
The creatine-hair loss connection stems from a single 2009 study conducted on South African rugby players. This study found that creatine supplementation increased levels of DHT (dihydhydrotestosterone) by about 56% during a loading phase and maintained elevated levels (about 40% above baseline) during maintenance dosing.
Why DHT Matters
DHT is a potent androgen derived from testosterone. In individuals genetically predisposed to male pattern baldness (androgenetic alopecia), DHT binds to receptors in hair follicles on the scalp, causing them to miniaturize and eventually stop producing visible hair. This is why drugs like finasteride, which block DHT production, are used to treat hair loss.
What the Research Actually Shows
Here's the critical context that's often missing from the creatine-hair loss discussion:
The 2009 Study Limitations
- Only 20 participants — extremely small sample size
- Only one study has ever shown this DHT increase
- No study has directly measured hair loss from creatine use
- The study has never been replicated
Broader Research Context
- A 2021 systematic review examined 12 studies on creatine and testosterone/DHT
- Only the one 2009 study found significant DHT increases
- Multiple studies found no effect on testosterone or DHT
- No clinical evidence links creatine supplementation to actual hair loss
The Expert Consensus
Most sports nutrition researchers and dermatologists consider the creatine-hair loss link to be unsupported by current evidence. The International Society of Sports Nutrition's position stand on creatine does not list hair loss as a side effect.
Should You Be Concerned?
If you're genetically predisposed to male pattern baldness, it's understandable to be cautious. Here's a practical approach:
- If you're already losing hair: Creatine is very unlikely to be the cause, but you could try discontinuing for 3 months to see if anything changes
- If you have a family history: The risk is theoretical, not proven. Most experts say the benefits of creatine outweigh this unproven concern
- If you have no hair loss risk factors: There's essentially no reason to worry
The Bottom Line
One small, unreplicated study is not strong evidence. The overwhelming body of creatine research — spanning decades and thousands of participants — does not support a connection between creatine and hair loss. However, science is never fully settled, and more research on this specific question would be welcome.