The supplement aisle is very good at separating you from your money — a tub for this, a packet for that, a powder for the other thing, each one a single job at a premium price. Creatine doesn't have to be one of those line items. The honest version of the math is almost boringly cheap.
Do the math$34.99 ÷ 30 = about $1.17.
Ceremonial Creatine is $34.99 for 30 full servings. That works out to roughly $1.17 a scoop — and each scoop is a real 5 grams of creatine monohydrate plus a built-in electrolyte blend. Not a teaser dose. The whole thing.
Two for oneYou were going to buy both anyway.
Plenty of people already run creatine and a separate electrolyte/hydration packet — two products, two prices, two scoops. Ceremonial Creatine folds them into one. A single daily scoop covers the creatine and the sodium, magnesium, and potassium you lose through sweat. One purchase instead of two, and one less thing on the counter.
"Daily strength shouldn't be a luxury line item. About a dollar a day is the whole pitch."
Why daily mattersThe cheap part is also the effective part.
Creatine works on consistency — it's a daily habit, not a once-in-a-while scoop. Which is exactly why the per-day cost is the number that matters. At about $1.17 a day, the math makes the habit easy to keep: a real dose, a clean label, and a price that doesn't make you ration it.
The clean partAnd you can actually read the label.
Cheap shouldn't mean junky. Ceremonial Creatine is sweetened with stevia leaf and natural flavors — no artificial sweeteners or dyes. The form is creatine monohydrate, the one that's actually been studied. You're not trading quality for the price; you're just skipping the markup.
5g of creatine. For about a buck a day.
Ceremonial Creatine — 30 servings, $34.99. Creatine + electrolytes in one scoop.
Start the habitAlso worth a read → Most creatine is underdosed. This one isn't.