Supplements: DIY Pre-Workout — Cost and Protocol
Commercial pre-workouts charge $1.50-3.00 per serving. The identical five-ingredient clinical stack from bulk suppliers costs $0.35-0.45 per serving — roughly 3-5× cheaper with transparent, full clinical doses.
| Measure | Value | Unit | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Evidence Tier | 1–2 | tier | All five core DIY ingredients have Tier 1-2 evidence; commercial blends often underdose the same ingredients |
| DIY Cost Per Serving | 0.35–0.45 | USD | Five-ingredient stack from bulk suppliers at clinical doses |
| Commercial Pre-Workout Cost | 1.50–3.00 | USD/serving | Typical retail range for branded pre-workout products |
| Cost Savings | 75–85 | % | Relative to commercial options; savings widen with bulk purchasing |
| Creatine Cost Bulk | 0.04 | USD per 5g serving | Monohydrate from bulk suppliers; 500g tub ~$15-20 = ~100 servings |
| Citrulline Malate Cost Bulk | 0.18 | USD per 8g serving | 2:1 citrulline malate from bulk suppliers; most expensive component in the stack |
The business model of pre-workout supplements relies on branding, flavoring, and marketing absorbing the cost difference between raw ingredients and retail pricing. The gap is substantial.
The Economic Case
A commercial pre-workout at $45-60 for 30 servings charges $1.50-2.00 per serving. Premium products exceed $3.00 per serving. The underlying ingredients — creatine monohydrate, citrulline malate, beta-alanine, caffeine anhydrous, and L-theanine — cost a fraction of that at wholesale bulk prices. Critically, commercial products frequently underdose these ingredients anyway, while the DIY stack uses full clinical doses.
The Five-Ingredient DIY Stack
This stack covers every mechanistically supported pre-workout ingredient with Tier 1-2 evidence:
- Creatine monohydrate: 5g — PCr replenishment, strength and power
- Citrulline malate 2:1: 8g — vasodilation, reduced muscle fatigue
- Beta-alanine: 3.2g — carnosine buffering, endurance in 1-4 min efforts
- Caffeine anhydrous: 200mg — adenosine antagonism, alertness, performance
- L-Theanine: 200mg — reduces caffeine anxiety, smoother focus curve
Cost Breakdown Per Serving
| Ingredient | Dose | Bulk Cost/Serving | Commercial Equivalent Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Creatine monohydrate | 5g | $0.04 | $0.20-0.40 | Monohydrate has equal evidence to all premium forms |
| Citrulline malate 2:1 | 8g | $0.18 | $0.40-0.80 | Provides ~5.3g pure citrulline + 2.7g malate |
| Beta-alanine | 3.2g | $0.06 | $0.15-0.30 | Full clinical dose; most products use 1.6g |
| Caffeine anhydrous | 200mg | $0.02 | $0.10-0.20 | Weigh precisely — high concentration powder |
| L-Theanine | 200mg | $0.05 | $0.10-0.20 | 1:1 ratio with caffeine; reduces jitteriness |
| DIY Total | — | $0.35 | $0.95-1.90 (ingredient value) | Savings vs retail: 75-85% |
| Typical commercial | Variable (underdosed) | — | $1.50-3.00 | Often pixie-dusted at these doses |
Commercial Brand Comparison
| Product Category | Typical Serving Cost | DIY Equivalent | DIY Cost | Savings | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Budget pre-workout | $0.75-1.00 | Full clinical stack | $0.35-0.45 | 50-65% | DIY wins on dose quality |
| Mid-range pre-workout | $1.50-2.00 | Full clinical stack | $0.35-0.45 | 75-80% | DIY wins significantly |
| Premium pre-workout | $2.50-3.50 | Full clinical stack | $0.35-0.45 | 85-90% | DIY wins decisively |
| ”Transparent” pre-workout | $1.75-2.50 | Full clinical stack | $0.35-0.45 | 80-85% | DIY still cheaper |
Safety Note on Caffeine Anhydrous
Caffeine anhydrous powder is approximately 3× more concentrated than coffee on a volume basis and requires milligram-accurate measurement. A kitchen teaspoon holds approximately 2,000mg of caffeine — a potentially lethal dose. Use a digital scale with 0.01g or better precision. Pre-measure individual caffeine servings into capsules if this is a concern.
Related Pages
Sources
- Kerksick CM et al. ISSN exercise & sports nutrition review update: research & recommendations. J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2018;15(1):38.
- Grgic J et al. Effects of caffeine intake on muscle strength and power: a systematic review and meta-analysis. J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2018;15:11.
- Pérez-Guisado J, Jakeman PM. Citrulline malate enhances athletic anaerobic performance and relieves muscle soreness. J Strength Cond Res. 2010;24(5):1215-1222.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is DIY pre-workout safe?
Yes, when using pharmaceutical-grade bulk ingredients from reputable suppliers. The risk is measurement precision: caffeine anhydrous is extremely potent — 200mg is a rational dose, but 2000mg can be dangerous. Use a milligram-accurate scale (0.001g resolution) for caffeine, not measuring spoons. Citrulline, beta-alanine, and creatine are all safe in gram quantities with standard measuring tools.
Where do I buy bulk pre-workout ingredients?
BulkSupplements, Pure Bulk, and Nootropics Depot are established US suppliers with third-party testing. Labdoor and Informed Sport certification adds additional quality assurance. Avoid the cheapest unknown suppliers on Amazon or eBay, as contaminant risk is higher. Stick to companies that publish certificates of analysis.
Can I pre-mix all the ingredients together?
Yes. Mix a 30-serving batch by scaling all ingredients by 30 and combining in an airtight container. Shake thoroughly before each serving. Beta-alanine and caffeine anhydrous are both hygroscopic (absorb moisture), so store in a cool, dry location. Pre-mixed batches are convenient and stay fresh for months if sealed properly.
Do I need to add any flavoring to DIY pre-workout?
Optional. Citrulline malate has a mildly sour taste; caffeine is bitter. Many people mix their DIY stack into juice, flavored BCAAs, or a small amount of Crystal Light. Plain water works if you take it as a shot. Unflavored bulk powders from quality suppliers are neutral enough that flavoring is a preference, not a necessity.
What about proprietary ingredients like AgmaSSP or citrulline-nitrate?
Patented branded ingredients are often marketed with premium claims, but the cost premium rarely matches additional evidence. Plain citrulline malate 2:1 from bulk suppliers has as much or more research support than most branded forms. The DIY stack focuses on ingredients with the strongest generic evidence and lowest cost.