FSSAI-Approved Creatine Monohydrate
Licensed, lab-tested and made in India — what to look for before you buy creatine, and how Coremax is certified.
Why FSSAI approval matters when buying creatine in India
Creatine is the most researched sports supplement in the world — but in India the market is flooded with unverified imports and outright fakes. The single easiest way to protect yourself is to check for an FSSAI licence. The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India licenses both the manufacturer and the marketer of a supplement, which means:
- The product is legally registered as a food/nutraceutical in India — not a grey import with no accountability.
- The facility that makes it is audited for hygiene and process control.
- The label claims (ingredients, weight, nutrition facts) are traceable to a responsible company you can actually reach.
How to verify an FSSAI licence number
Don't take a licence number on a label at face value — anyone can print 14 digits. Confirm it in under a minute on the government's own portal:
- Find the 14-digit FSSAI licence number printed on the pack (Coremax prints both the manufacturer and marketer numbers).
- Go to the FSSAI FoSCoS portal at foscos.fssai.gov.in → "FBO Search" / "Verify licence".
- Enter the number. A valid licence shows the registered company name, address, status (active) and validity dates.
- Check that the company name matches the brand on the jar. A mismatch, an expired status, or "no record found" is a red flag — don't consume it.
You can cross-check Coremax's manufacturer licence 10723999001935 and marketer licence 10725994000807 this way any time.
Coremax's licences and certifications
Coremax micronised creatine monohydrate is made and sold under valid FSSAI licences — printed on every jar and listed right here:
Manufacturer FSSAI Lic. No: 10723999001935 Marketer FSSAI Lic. No: 10725994000807
On top of FSSAI licensing, the facility and product are:
- HACCP certified — hazard analysis at every production step
- GMP certified — Good Manufacturing Practices
- ISO certified — audited quality management
- Third-party lab tested — every batch checked for purity and banned substances
What's inside every scoop
- 3g pure micronised creatine monohydrate per serving (200-mesh — mixes instantly, no grit)
- Zero sugar, zero calories, zero fillers
- 100% vegetarian, dairy-free, gluten-free
FSSAI-approved creatine — packs & prices in India (2026)
Starter packs (100g) typically retail around ₹500–₹600 and value packs (250g) around ₹950–₹1,200 — live sale prices are always shown on each product page. Free shipping across India on orders above ₹999.
Shop FSSAI-Approved CreatineVerify your jar in 10 seconds
Certification only matters if the jar in your hand is genuine. That's why every Coremax pack ships with a unique authentication code — enter it in the Verify section and you'll instantly see whether your jar is authentic, batch and all. No other proof needed.
FAQ
Is Coremax creatine FSSAI approved?
Yes. Coremax micronised creatine monohydrate is manufactured in India under FSSAI manufacturing licence number 10723999001935 and sold under FSSAI marketing licence number 10725994000807 — both numbers are printed on every jar, and you can confirm them yourself in the FoSCoS licence database at foscos.fssai.gov.in. The manufacturing facility in Gujarat is additionally HACCP, GMP and ISO certified, and every production batch is sent to an independent third-party laboratory to be tested for purity and banned substances before it is released for sale. In short: the product is legally registered as a food in India, made in an audited plant, and each jar can be traced back to a specific batch and a responsible manufacturer — JRN Wellness, Ahmedabad.
Why does FSSAI approval matter for creatine in India?
FSSAI (the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India) is the national regulator for everything sold as food or a nutraceutical in India. A valid FSSAI licence means three concrete things: the product is legally registered for sale in India, it is made or imported through an audited facility that can be inspected, and there is a named Indian licence-holder who is legally accountable for what is inside the jar. Creatine without an FSSAI licence — most commonly grey-market imports sold through unofficial channels — offers none of those protections, and carries a documented higher risk of adulteration, heavy-metal contamination, tampered seals and counterfeit labelling. If a creatine listing in India shows no FSSAI number, or shows one that fails verification at foscos.fssai.gov.in, that is the clearest possible signal to buy something else.
How can I verify my Coremax jar is genuine?
Every Coremax jar ships with its own unique authentication code printed on the pack. Go to the Verify section at coremax.in, type in the code, and the site instantly tells you whether the jar is genuine and which production batch it belongs to — no login, no app, about ten seconds. Because each code is tied to one physical jar, a copied or reused code shows up immediately as suspicious. You can also cross-check both FSSAI licence numbers printed on the label (10723999001935 for manufacturing, 10725994000807 for marketing) in the government's FoSCoS database at foscos.fssai.gov.in. Together, the two checks confirm both the product's legality and your specific jar's authenticity.
How much creatine does Coremax contain per serving?
Each serving delivers 3g of pure, 200-mesh micronised creatine monohydrate — the daily dose most commonly used in the research on strength and performance. There is zero added sugar, zero calories and no fillers or proprietary blends; the unflavored variant contains creatine monohydrate and nothing else. The powder is 100% vegetarian, dairy-free and gluten-free, with no banned substances — verified batch-by-batch through third-party laboratory testing. The 100g starter pack contains roughly 33 servings, while the 250g value pack contains 63–83 servings depending on the variant, making it the more economical choice for anyone taking creatine every day.