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Ingredient Testing

Creatine Supplement Testing: Purity, Impurities by HPLC, and Creapure Verification

9 min read Updated June 12, 2026

Creatine monohydrate is the most researched sports supplement in the world, but not all creatine is equal. HPLC purity testing distinguishes 99.9%+ pharmaceutical-grade material from bulk generic creatine that may contain creatinine, dicyandiamide (DCD), dihydrotriazine, and heavy metal residues from synthesis. This guide covers the analytical methods, impurity profiles, cost ranges, and how to verify whether you are buying genuine Creapure or an unverified generic.

Quick answer

Creatine monohydrate purity is tested by HPLC-UV at 210 nm following the USP monograph method or the Creapure specification method. The test quantifies creatine monohydrate content (typically reported as anhydrous creatine) and screens for the three regulated impurities: creatinine (degradation product), dicyandiamide (DCD, synthesis byproduct), and dihydrotriazine (reaction product of DCD with creatine). Heavy metals by ICP-MS complete the quality picture. A full purity-impurities-metals panel costs $150-400 per sample with 7-10 business day turnaround.

How creatine purity is tested by HPLC

The USP monograph for creatine monohydrate specifies an HPLC method with UV detection at 210 nm using a C18 column (250 mm x 4.6 mm, 5-micron) and an aqueous mobile phase with phosphate buffer at pH 3.0. Creatine absorbs weakly at 210 nm (end absorption of the guanidine group and carbonyl), which means the detector must be stable and the mobile phase must use high-purity water and reagents to minimize baseline noise.

Sample preparation is straightforward: dissolve the powder in mobile phase at a known concentration (typically 0.1-0.5 mg/mL), filter, and inject. Quantitation is by external standard comparison to a USP creatine reference standard. Results are reported as percentage creatine (anhydrous basis) or percentage creatine monohydrate.

The USP specification for creatine monohydrate is not less than 99.5% and not more than 101.0% on the anhydrous basis. Creapure from AlzChem specifies tighter limits: 99.9-100.2% creatine monohydrate, with each individual impurity limited to below 0.1% and total impurities below 0.5%. Generic creatine frequently falls below 99% purity and may exceed impurity limits.

The three regulated impurities and why they matter

Creatinine: The primary degradation product of creatine. Creatine spontaneously cyclizes to creatinine in aqueous solution, especially at low pH or elevated temperature. Creatinine has no ergogenic benefit and at high levels indicates poor manufacturing or storage conditions. The USP limit for creatinine is not more than 0.5%. Creapure limits it to below 0.1%. Elevated creatinine in a sealed, dry product suggests the material was processed at excessive temperatures or stored improperly before packaging.

Dicyandiamide (DCD): A synthesis byproduct from the reaction of cyanamide and N-methylglycine (sarcosine) during creatine manufacturing. DCD is a dimerization product of cyanamide and is not directly part of the creatine synthesis pathway. USP limits DCD to not more than 0.2%. Creapure limits it to below 0.05%. DCD is considered a low-toxicity impurity, but its presence indicates incomplete purification and the possible presence of other, less-easily-detected synthesis residuals.

Dihydrotriazine (DHT): Formed by the reaction of DCD with creatine during synthesis or storage. DHT is the most toxicologically concerning of the three impurities. The USP limit is not more than 0.1%. Creapure limits it to below 0.01%. Even at trace levels, DHT is a marker of substandard manufacturing because its formation requires both DCD to be present and reaction conditions that favor DHT production (high temperature, alkaline pH). If a creatine sample passes the creatine assay but fails on DHT, the manufacturer likely used high temperature to drive the creatine synthesis reaction faster, sacrificing purity for throughput.

⚠️ Note

Do not accept a COA that reports only creatine assay without impurity data. A creatine product can pass the 99.5% assay specification while exceeding impurity limits for creatinine, DCD, or DHT. Full-specification testing with all three impurities is the minimum requirement for quality verification. Request impurity data in mg/kg or as a percentage, not as "pass/fail."

Creapure vs generic: how to tell the difference

Creapure is a registered trademark of AlzChem Group AG for creatine monohydrate produced in Germany using a proprietary non-chemical synthesis process. Genuine Creapure is traceable from the finished product back to the manufacturer through a supply chain documentation system and Creapure verification certificates.

Analytical differences between Creapure and generic:

  • Creapure is consistently 99.9-100.2% creatine monohydrate. Generic creatine from Asian manufacturers typically ranges 97-99.5%.
  • Creapure creatinine is typically under 0.05%. Generics may be 0.1-0.5% or higher.
  • Creapure DCD and DHT are routinely reported as "not detected" at method detection limits (under 0.01%). Generics commonly show detectable DCD and occasionally DHT.
  • Creapure heavy metal profiles are consistently clean (lead under 0.1 mg/kg). Generics show more variability.

HPLC alone cannot definitively identify Creapure vs a high-quality generic, but a combination of impurity profile, heavy metal profile, and supply chain documentation provides strong evidence. Some third-party certification programs (Informed Sport, NSF Certified for Sport) include Creapure verification as part of their certification process.

Heavy metal testing

Creatine monohydrate is a synthetic chemical, not a botanical extract, and therefore carries lower inherent heavy metal risk than plant-based ingredients. However, heavy metal contamination can be introduced through synthesis reagents, reaction vessel materials, and processing water. The standard screen by ICP-MS includes arsenic, cadmium, lead, and mercury per USP <2232>. Additional metals sometimes screened at brand request include chromium, nickel, and copper (from reaction vessel corrosion). Heavy metal testing for synthetic ingredients costs $100-200 for the four-metal panel.

What to ask the lab for

Specify: (1) creatine assay by USP HPLC method (reported as % creatine, % creatine monohydrate, or both), (2) impurity profile including creatinine, DCD, and dihydrotriazine with quantitative results, (3) heavy metals by ICP-MS for As, Cd, Pb, Hg, (4) loss on drying or moisture content (Karl Fischer) since creatine monohydrate is 12.1% water by weight and assay should be corrected to the anhydrous basis, (5) Creapure authenticity verification if applicable (sample may be sent to AlzChem or tested against Creapure reference material).

Quick Reference

Lab Category Matching

Testing NeedLab Requirement
Creatine purity (assay)HPLC-UV at 210 nm, USP monograph method
Impurity screen (creatinine, DCD, DHT)HPLC with impurity resolution validation
Heavy metalsICP-MS per USP <2232>
Moisture/water contentKarl Fischer titration
Creapure authenticityComparison to Creapure reference material, supply chain verification
Microbiological safetyUSP <2021> panel if manufacturing conditions are unknown

Real Methods Explained

MethodWhat It TestsDetection LimitCost per Sample
HPLC-UV (210 nm)Creatine assay, creatinine, DCD, DHT0.01-0.05% per impurity$80-150
Karl Fischer titrationMoisture content0.01%$40-80
ICP-MSAs, Cd, Pb, Hg0.01-0.05 mcg/g$100-200
Full purity panel (assay + impurities + moisture)All purity parametersVaries$150-300

What Sample to Send

Send 25-50 grams of creatine powder in a clean, sealed container. The lab needs approximately 2-5 grams for the HPLC assay, 5-10 grams for Karl Fischer moisture, and 5-10 grams for heavy metals. A 25-gram sample covers all tests with material to spare for re-runs if needed. If testing capsules instead of powder, send 20-30 capsules (the lab will composite multiple capsules for a representative sample).

Expected Turnaround Time

TestingTypical TAT
Creatine assay (HPLC)5-7 business days
Impurity profile (all 3)5-7 business days (same run)
Heavy metals (ICP-MS)5-7 business days
Moisture (Karl Fischer)3-5 business days
Full panel7-10 business days

Price Ranges

TestingTypical Price Range (per sample)
Creatine assay only$80-150
Assay + 3 impurities$150-250
Heavy metals (4 metals)$100-200
Full quality panel (assay + impurities + metals + moisture)$200-400
Creapure verification letter/documentationVaries by certifier

Country/Region Targeting

US: Creatine is sold as a dietary supplement under DSHEA. No pre-market approval is required, but label claims must be truthful. The USP monograph provides recognized quality specifications. EU: Creatine is regulated as a food supplement under Directive 2002/46/EC. The EU has no official pharmacopoeial monograph for food-grade creatine, but the USP standard is widely accepted. Creapure is manufactured in Germany and carries EU GMP certification. Import testing for generic creatine from China or India should include the full impurity panel plus heavy metals.

FAQ

Q: Can HPLC distinguish Creapure from generic creatine?

HPLC cannot definitively distinguish Creapure from a high-quality generic because both are chemically identical creatine monohydrate. However, the impurity profile provides discriminating evidence. Creapure consistently shows creatinine below 0.05%, DCD not detected, and DHT not detected. Generics frequently show detectable levels of one or more impurities, even if within USP limits. Combined with supply chain documentation (Creapure certificate, traceable lot numbers), the analytical profile can support or refute Creapure claims.

Q: What creatinine level indicates degradation?

In a freshly manufactured creatine monohydrate powder, creatinine should be under 0.1%. Levels of 0.2-0.5% indicate either inadequate purification during manufacturing or partial degradation during storage. Levels above 0.5% fail the USP specification. Creatine stored in hot or humid conditions degrades to creatinine over time. If you receive a shipment with elevated creatinine, the product may have been exposed to high temperatures during shipping or warehouse storage.

Q: Why does moisture content matter for creatine testing?

Creatine monohydrate contains exactly one molecule of water per molecule of creatine (12.1% by weight). The HPLC assay measures creatine content and may be reported on an "anhydrous basis" or "as-is" basis. If the sample has lost moisture (desiccated) or gained moisture (from humidity), the "as-is" assay result will be skewed. Karl Fischer moisture determination corrects for this. A product that tests at 98% creatine "as-is" with 14% moisture (instead of the theoretical 12.1%) may actually contain 99.5%+ creatine on the anhydrous basis. Always ask what basis the result is reported on.

Q: Do I need microbial testing for creatine powder?

Creatine monohydrate is a dry crystalline powder with very low water activity (aw typically under 0.2). At this water activity, microbial growth is not supported. However, if the creatine powder is blended with other ingredients (flavors, sweeteners, flow agents), or if it is processed in a facility with inadequate sanitation, microbial contamination is possible. A standard USP <2021> microbial panel costs $100-200 and is recommended at initial qualification and annually thereafter.

Q: How do HPLC impurities correlate with creatine manufacturing quality?

The three monitored impurities -- creatinine, DCD, and DHT -- are direct indicators of manufacturing process control. Creatinine forms from creatine degradation (time and temperature exposure). DCD forms from excess or unreacted cyanamide in the synthesis. DHT forms when DCD and creatine react under high-temperature or alkaline conditions. A product with detectable DHT is the strongest red flag because it requires both DCD contamination and aggressive processing conditions. This impurity profile indicates a manufacturer that prioritized fast throughput over complete purification.

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