Typical bulk creatine
- ✕Mystery purity, no impurity data
- ✕Coarse 200 mesh, gritty in gummies
- ✕China-direct, no recourse if a lot fails
- ✕The powder behind failed lab tests
Verified 99.9% pure, ultra-fine 500 mesh, tested every batch, shipped from the EU. The ingredient behind brands that get lab-tested, and pass.
Most bulk creatine is a commodity gamble. Creavante is the same molecule, proven on paper and built for the formats that sell.
Half of creatine gummy brands failed a lab test last year.
Underdosed, degraded, contaminated. In a market that now gets tested in public, the cheapest creatine is the most expensive mistake. Creavante is the boring, provable opposite.
Independent testing: SuppCo (2025) · NOW Foods, via Nutraceuticals World
First order landed in Ljubljana in 4 days with the CoA attached. Ran it through our own lab, matched the spec exactly. Switched our whole line over.
We got flagged in a third-party gummy test last year. Never again. Every Creavante lot comes with the full impurity panel, so we pass every audit now.
The 500 mesh is the real difference for us. Zero grit in the gummies, mixes clean in the RTD. Our old 200 mesh supplier never came close.
Sampled it, tested it, approved it in a week. No container minimum to start was the thing that sold me.
We were paying a premium for branded German creatine and still couldn't get the volume we needed. Creavante matched the purity on paper, we verified it independently, and we cut ingredient cost meaningfully without changing the product.
Margins and cash flow both up. For any brand scaling hard, having a supplier that just hands you the documentation is a real advantage.
Honestly the documentation is what makes this work. Our buyers ask for a CoA and we just forward the lot certificate. It turned our 'trust us' pitch into 'here are the numbers,' and that's been game-changing for landing retail.
Reply with your target format and volume. We send a sample lot with its certificate of analysis and a landed price, so you decide on data, not a pitch.
The parameters that define creatine quality, the EFSA impurity limits behind them, and how to read them on a certificate of analysis.
Read →A brand-focused guide to the forms of creatine, and why verified monohydrate wins for almost every product.
Read →Why verified generic creatine is the practical Creapure alternative, and when switching makes sense.
Read →China makes most of the world's creatine. Safety comes down to purity control, testing, and documentation, not the country of origin itself.
Read →Ultra-fine 500 mesh creatine (about 25 microns): what it is, which formats need it, and how to source it verified from EU stock.
Read →What creatine mesh sizes mean in microns, which grade fits which format, and how fine grades are honestly measured.
Read →Creatine gummies can work, but many failed lab testing. The stability problem, what the tests found, and what to demand from your supplier.
Read →A B2B checklist for vetting a creatine supplier: CoA, impurities, certifications, minimums and reliability, in the order that matters.
Read →Bulk creatine pricing in 2026: the China-to-EU price ladder, what drives it, and how to compare quotes on more than the number.
Read →The EU rules for creatine: authorized EFSA claim wording, novel food status, national limits, and food business obligations.
Read →