# Teflon-Free Label Claim

> A marketing label stating a product does not use DuPont/Chemours' branded Teflon coating. Technically accurate - Teflon is a registered trademark, and brands without a Chemours license cannot use the name. The problem: Teflon is simply a brand name for PTFE, and a product can be 100% Teflon-free while still being coated in the exact same chemical. 'Teflon-free' does not mean PTFE-free, and it certainly does not mean PFAS-free. It is one of the most effective pieces of misdirection in the cookware marketing playbook.

**Type:** concepts
**Categories:** cookware-set, frying-pan, air-fryer
**Source:** https://www.r3recs.com/learn/concepts/teflon-free-claim

## Reality Check

**Claim:** This cookware is Teflon-free, so it doesn't have the harmful nonstick chemical.
**Reality:** Teflon is a registered trademark owned by The Chemours Company - it is the brand name for PTFE (polytetrafluoroethylene), the fluoropolymer at the core of nearly all nonstick coatings. A product that does not pay for a Chemours trademark license is technically 'Teflon-free,' even if its basket or pan surface is coated with the identical compound. The Ecology Center's 'What's Cooking' research found that most nonstick pans making chemical-free claims - including some labeled 'PFOA-free' - were nevertheless coated with PTFE without disclosing it. Teflon-free tells you nothing about PTFE, nothing about PFAS, and nothing about the actual chemistry touching your food.

## Overview

Pick up almost any air fryer box or nonstick pan marketed as a healthier alternative and you will find the phrase "Teflon-free" somewhere on the packaging or in the product listing. It reads like a safety statement - like the brand has made a deliberate choice to keep a known toxin out of your kitchen. That interpretation is what the label is designed to produce. It is not what the label actually means.

Here is the mechanical truth: Teflon is a registered trademark. It is owned by The Chemours Company - a spin-off from DuPont formed in July 2015, when DuPont shed its performance chemicals division and transferred the Teflon brand along with it. To use the Teflon name on a product, a manufacturer must apply for and receive a trademark license from Chemours, pay the associated fees, and submit to Chemours quality-control inspection of how the brand is used. Manufacturers who decline - or who do not want the cost and oversight - cannot call their coating Teflon. They can, however, still use the exact same molecule.

PTFE (polytetrafluoroethylene) is the chemical compound. Teflon is just one brand of it. Dozens of other trade names exist for the same polymer - Fluon, Algoflon, Polyflon, Hostaflon - along with countless private-label and no-name generic PTFE coatings sold to appliance manufacturers worldwide. All of these coatings share the same carbon-fluorine backbone, the same temperature degradation profile, and the same classification as a PFAS under EPA and OECD structural definitions. None of them can be called Teflon without a Chemours license. All of them enable a "Teflon-free" claim.

This is the gap that the Teflon-free label exploits. And the cookware industry has exploited it aggressively.

## The Trademark Mechanics: How a Safety Claim Gets Built from a License Fee

DuPont scientists accidentally discovered PTFE in 1938, when chemist Roy J. Plunkett noticed that a canister of refrigerant gas had solidified into a remarkably slippery white powder. DuPont patented the material, registered the Teflon trademark in 1945, and launched commercial sales in 1946. The first Teflon-coated cookware appeared in France in 1954, reached American kitchens in 1961 as "The Happy Pan," and never stopped growing.

For decades, being Teflon-branded was a mark of quality in the nonstick category. Chemours ran certification programs requiring licensed coaters to meet application standards and pass quality-control audits. The Teflon brand implied not just PTFE, but PTFE applied correctly. Consumer trust in the brand was strong.

Then the PFOA crisis unfolded. PFOA (perfluorooctanoic acid) was a processing aid used in PTFE manufacturing. DuPont had known for decades that PFOA contaminated communities near its plants in West Virginia and Ohio, causing cancers and developmental harms. The resulting litigation - dramatized in the film Dark Waters - and EPA pressure led to a voluntary industry phase-out of PFOA completed by 2015. As PFOA became toxic to hold in public relations terms, Teflon became toxic too.

Brands that had been proudly displaying the Teflon logo quietly dropped it. Some replaced it with proprietary nonstick coating names. Others switched to language emphasizing what was absent: "PFOA-free," then later "Teflon-free," "chemical-free," and eventually "PFAS-free." The coating underneath, in many cases, did not change at all. What changed was the marketing language that described it.

A signed Chemours trademark license gives a manufacturer the right to use "Teflon" - but no manufacturer is required to have one. The absence of the Teflon label on a product does not indicate the absence of PTFE. It indicates only that the company did not pay for the trademark. Consumers reading "Teflon-free" are receiving information about a licensing agreement, not about chemical composition.

## What Teflon-Free Tells You - and What It Does Not

The Teflon-free claim answers one and only one question: does this product carry the Chemours trademark? It does not address:

**Whether the product contains PTFE.** Generic PTFE is chemically identical to Teflon-brand PTFE. A pan coated with unlicensed generic PTFE releases the same degradation fumes above 500 degrees F, presents the same risks to pet birds, and qualifies as a PFAS compound under the same regulatory definitions. The Ecology Center's research across 2020 and 2021 found that pans claiming to be "PFOA-free" - a closely related misleading claim - were frequently coated with PTFE without any disclosure of it. Scanpan and Zwilling were specifically identified as brands whose pans tested positive for PTFE despite PFOA-free claims. Both brands are sold in the US as premium, health-conscious options.

**Whether the product is PFAS-free.** [PTFE](/learn/ingredients/ptfe-teflon) is classified as a PFAS under the EPA's structural definition of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances. A product that is Teflon-free but contains generic PTFE is a PFAS-containing product. A brand using the Teflon-free claim while selling PTFE-coated [cookware](/category/cookware-set) is, under most plain-language readings, misleading its customers.

**Whether any other PFAS compounds are present.** Even if a product genuinely contains no PTFE, other PFAS compounds can be present in manufacturing aids, processing chemicals, or the application method used to bond a non-PTFE coating to the substrate. The Teflon-free claim says nothing about this.

**Whether the product is safer than conventional nonstick.** A product that replaced licensed Teflon with generic PTFE has made no safety improvement - only a trademark cost reduction.

## How the Claim Gets Deployed in Practice

The Teflon-free claim is most commonly deployed in three patterns, each with different implications for actual safety:

**Pattern 1: Genuine brand name removal, same chemistry underneath.** A manufacturer previously licensed the Teflon trademark, dropped the license to avoid PFOA-era reputational damage, and now markets the product as "Teflon-free" while using an identical or closely related PTFE coating. The consumer experiences no chemical change. This is the most common pattern and the most directly misleading.

**Pattern 2: Teflon-free plus a proprietary coating name.** A manufacturer creates a branded name for their nonstick technology - names like "Hydrolon," "DuPont-free Cerami," "diamond-infused nonstick," or similar - and uses "Teflon-free" alongside it to imply innovation. In many cases, the proprietary coating is mineral-filled PTFE, which is still PTFE. Terms like "diamond nonstick," "granite nonstick," "titanium nonstick," and "marble nonstick" almost universally describe PTFE bases with mineral particles embedded - the minerals improve durability, but the fluoropolymer base is unchanged. These products are Teflon-free in the trademark sense and PTFE-containing in the chemical sense.

**Pattern 3: Teflon-free as part of a genuinely PTFE-free claim.** Some brands - particularly those using certified ceramic coatings - use "Teflon-free" as one element of a legitimate transition to non-fluoropolymer surfaces. In this pattern, "Teflon-free" accompanies "PTFE-free" and "PFAS-free" together, and the brand provides supporting third-party testing. This is the pattern consumers should require before treating any claim as meaningful. Teflon-free alone is not sufficient.

## Air Fryers: Why This Matters More Than It Does for Pans

The Teflon-free label problem is particularly significant for [air fryers](/category/air-fryer). Open cookware allows fumes from an overheated nonstick coating to disperse into the broader kitchen environment. An air fryer's enclosed cooking cavity and high-speed fan circulation concentrate any degradation products and distribute them throughout the cooking chamber before they reach the food.

Most mainstream [air fryers](/category/air-fryer) use PTFE-coated baskets as their standard configuration - including many models from Cosori, Instant Pot, Philips, and most standard Ninja lines. Consumer and independent testing has found that air fryers can spike above their set temperatures during preheating cycles, and that the 400-450 degree F range typical of air fryer operation places basket surfaces close to PTFE's initial degradation threshold of approximately 500 degrees F.

The Mamavation PFAS testing program found that multiple air fryers marketed as safe alternatives to conventional nonstick tested positive for fluorine signatures consistent with PTFE or other PFAS coatings. The California AB 1200 compliance analysis found that most air fryer companies were not providing the required chemical disclosures, making independent verification difficult for consumers.

For families using [air fryers](/category/air-fryer) regularly - and especially for families with pet birds, who can experience fatal lung damage from PTFE fume exposure - the Teflon-free claim provides no meaningful safety assurance. What matters is whether the air fryer basket is genuinely PTFE-free and PFAS-free, verified by the manufacturer's published chemistry and confirmed by third-party testing.

## The Regulatory Landscape: What Laws Actually Address This

The Teflon-free claim operates in a regulatory environment that has historically been permissive of this type of misdirection, though state-level law is beginning to close the gap.

**California AB 1200**, effective January 1, 2024, targets the specific misleading pattern at the heart of Teflon-free claims. The law prohibits cookware manufacturers from claiming a product is free of a specific chemical - like Teflon or PFOA - if the product contains another chemical belonging to the same hazardous chemical class on California's designated list. Since PTFE is a PFAS, a brand cannot imply PFAS freedom through Teflon-free language while still using PTFE. The law also mandates disclosure of all intentionally added chemicals from the Candidate Chemical List, which includes PTFE. California's Attorney General has issued enforcement guidance confirming this interpretation.

**Minnesota Amara's Law**, effective January 1, 2025, went further by banning the sale of nonstick cookware with intentionally added PFAS coatings in the state entirely. The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency confirmed that [air fryers](/category/air-fryer) fall within the cookware definition when they include food-contact surfaces with PFAS coatings. In a Minnesota-compliant market, the Teflon-free claim becomes more meaningful by necessity - PTFE is banned whether or not it carries the Teflon brand.

**Vermont, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Colorado** have enacted or are advancing similar cookware PFAS restrictions with phased compliance timelines through 2026-2028.

**At the federal level**, no agency has defined "Teflon-free" or restricted its use in marketing. The FTC's Green Guides provide general standards against unsubstantiated environmental claims but have not been specifically applied to Teflon-free or PTFE-free claims in enforcement actions as of early 2026. The FDA approves PTFE for food contact under 21 CFR 177.1550 but does not regulate how manufacturers describe its presence or absence on packaging.

## The Chemours Licensing Program: What It Actually Guarantees

It is worth understanding what the Teflon trademark license does mean - not to rehabilitate the claim, but to understand the full picture.

Chemours requires licensed coaters to meet specific application quality standards and submit to periodic audits. A Teflon-branded product has been applied by a certified applicator meeting Chemours' coating specifications. This is a quality consistency guarantee, not a safety guarantee - it means the PTFE was applied correctly, not that PTFE is without risk.

For professional and industrial applications where PTFE coating durability and consistency matter - food processing equipment, medical devices, industrial components - the Chemours licensing program has genuine value. For cookware consumers evaluating nonstick safety, the presence or absence of the Teflon trademark is irrelevant to the actual health question.

## What to Look For Instead

The correct question to ask about any nonstick [cookware](/category/cookware-set), [frying pan](/category/frying-pan), or [air fryer](/category/air-fryer) is not whether it is Teflon-free. The correct question is whether it is PTFE-free and [PFAS](/learn/ingredients/pfas)-free together - verified by the brand's disclosed coating chemistry and supported by third-party testing.

**The claim structure that actually matters:** "PTFE-free AND PFAS-free" stated together, not as separate independent claims. A brand willing to state both has drawn a meaningful line. A brand that says only one - or only says Teflon-free - has not.

**Third-party testing and certification:**
- NSF 537 (launched March 2025): The first standardized certification for PFAS-free claims in food equipment materials, defining PFAS-free as no intentionally added PFAS and total organic fluorine below 50 ppm
- MADESAFE: Consumer product certification that screens explicitly for PFAS including PTFE
- Consumer Reports PFAS testing: Consumer Reports tested GreenPan ceramic pans and found no detectable PFAS among 96 compounds tested
- Caraway publishes third-party testing results for over 200 substances, including PFAS

**Material choices that are PTFE-free by chemistry:**
- **Stainless steel**: No nonstick coating of any kind; PFAS-free by material
- **Cast iron**: Seasoned with polymerized cooking oil; no fluoropolymers
- **Carbon steel**: Same category as cast iron; builds natural nonstick properties
- **Enameled cast iron**: Glass-like vitreous enamel coating; no PTFE, no PFAS
- **Verified ceramic nonstick**: Silica sol-gel coatings from brands that publish third-party PFAS testing

**For air fryers specifically:** Stainless steel basket models and glass-bowl air fryers (such as the Ninja Crispi Pro with glass bowl) eliminate the coating concern entirely. The Our Place Wonder Oven uses a ceramic-coated surface with published third-party verification. Breville Smart Oven configurations use stainless steel interiors without nonstick coatings.

The Teflon-free claim is a product of trademark law, not safety science. Using it as a purchasing criterion means making decisions based on which company declined to pay a licensing fee - which is genuinely irrelevant to what chemistry is in contact with your family's food.

## Also Known As

- Teflon-free nonstick
- No Teflon coating
- Free from Teflon
- Fluoropolymer-free (incorrectly used as equivalent)

## Where Found

- Air fryer basket and appliance marketing
- Nonstick cookware packaging and product listings
- Frying pan and saute pan e-commerce descriptions
- Bakeware product pages
- Kitchen appliance brand websites
- Amazon product listings for nonstick cooking products

## Health Concerns

The health concern behind the Teflon-free claim is legitimate - PTFE degrades above approximately 500 degrees F, releasing fumes that can cause polymer fume fever in humans and are acutely lethal to pet birds. [PTFE](/learn/ingredients/ptfe-teflon) is classified as a PFAS compound under EPA and OECD structural definitions. When heated, PTFE also releases carbonyl fluoride, hydrogen fluoride, and perfluoroisobutylene at extreme temperatures, which can cause serious respiratory harm.

The health concern with the Teflon-free label specifically is that it allows manufacturers to benefit from consumer awareness of these risks without actually addressing them. A consumer who chooses a 'Teflon-free' product in response to [PFAS](/learn/ingredients/pfas) concern, but receives a product coated in generic PTFE, has received no exposure reduction - only the reassurance of a technically accurate but meaningfully deceptive claim.

For families with pet birds, this distinction is especially important: PTFE fume toxicity to birds does not depend on whether the coating carries a Chemours license. The fumes are equally dangerous from branded Teflon and from generic PTFE.

## Regulatory Status

**Federal (US):** No federal agency has defined 'Teflon-free' or restricted its use in marketing as of early 2026. The FDA approves PTFE for food contact under 21 CFR 177.1550 but does not regulate how manufacturers describe its presence or absence in marketing. The FTC's Green Guides provide general deceptive advertising standards but have not been specifically applied to Teflon-free claims in enforcement actions.

**California AB 1200 (effective January 1, 2024):** Prohibits cookware manufacturers from claiming a product is free of a specific chemical if the product contains another chemical from the same hazardous class - directly addressing the Teflon-free loophole when PTFE is present. Also requires disclosure of all intentionally added chemicals from California's Candidate Chemical List.

**Minnesota Amara's Law (effective January 1, 2025):** Banned the sale of nonstick cookware with intentionally added PFAS in the state, including air fryers with PFAS-coated food contact surfaces. Mandatory PFAS disclosure reporting begins July 2026.

**Vermont, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Colorado:** PFAS cookware restrictions with phased compliance timelines extending to 2026-2028.

**EU:** Under REACH, the European Chemicals Agency is advancing a near-universal PFAS restriction covering fluoropolymers including PTFE, with Commission decisions expected 2027-2028. The distinction between Teflon-branded and generic PTFE is irrelevant under this regulatory framework.

## In Air Fryers and Nonstick Cookware

Air fryers are the product category where the Teflon-free claim does the most work and creates the most risk. Parents specifically shopping for a safer air fryer see 'Teflon-free' and feel reassured - but most mainstream air fryer baskets are coated in generic PTFE, which carries the same degradation risk as Teflon-branded coatings above 500 degrees F. The enclosed cooking cavity circulates any released particles through your food. For genuine PTFE-free air fryers, look at stainless steel basket models or glass-bowl options - and confirm the brand states both PTFE-free and PFAS-free with supporting chemistry disclosure, not just 'Teflon-free' on the box.

## What This Does Not Cover

Teflon-free says nothing about PTFE - the chemical that Teflon is a brand name for. It does not address whether any other PFAS compounds are present in the coating, manufacturing aids, or processing chemicals. It does not verify the product's coating chemistry through any testing. It has no regulatory definition at the federal level. It does not cover processing chemicals used to apply non-Teflon coatings, which may themselves contain PFAS. It cannot be used to compare safety between a Teflon-branded product and a generic PTFE product - they can be chemically identical.

## R3 Bottom Line

- Teflon-free is a trademark claim, not a safety claim. It tells you a manufacturer chose not to pay for a Chemours license - it says nothing about whether the product contains PTFE, the chemical compound that Teflon is a brand name for.
- A product can be simultaneously Teflon-free, PTFE-coated, and PFAS-containing. The Ecology Center's cookware research found this pattern - PFOA-free or implicitly safe-sounding pans - was common in independent testing, with Scanpan and Zwilling identified as specific examples of undisclosed PTFE.
- For air fryers, the Teflon-free claim is especially unreliable. The enclosed cooking environment concentrates any degradation products from overheated nonstick coatings, and most mainstream air fryer baskets use generic PTFE without the Teflon brand name.
- The claim structure that matters: PTFE-free AND PFAS-free stated together, backed by published third-party testing. Teflon-free alone, or PFOA-free alone, does not clear this bar.
- California AB 1200 (2024) directly addresses this loophole by prohibiting class-specific chemical-free claims when other chemicals from the same hazardous class are present. In states without this protection, the federal regulatory vacuum means Teflon-free remains a legally permissible misdirection.

## FAQ

### If my air fryer says Teflon-free, does that mean it's safe from PFAS?

No. Teflon is a registered trademark owned by Chemours. A product that does not carry the Teflon license is technically 'Teflon-free' regardless of whether its nonstick coating is made from the same chemical - PTFE - that Teflon is a brand name for. PTFE is classified as a PFAS under EPA and OECD structural definitions. To be genuinely safe from PFAS coating concerns, the product needs to state PTFE-free AND PFAS-free together, ideally supported by third-party testing.

### What is the difference between Teflon, PTFE, and PFAS?

PTFE (polytetrafluoroethylene) is a synthetic fluoropolymer - a specific chemical compound with a carbon backbone surrounded by fluorine atoms. Teflon is a registered trademark for PTFE, owned by The Chemours Company, a DuPont spin-off. PFAS is a family of over 10,000 compounds - per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances - defined by their carbon-fluorine bonds. PTFE qualifies as a PFAS by this structural definition. Teflon is one brand of PTFE, which is one member of the PFAS family. A product can be Teflon-free, PTFE-containing, and PFAS-containing all at the same time.

### What does 'Teflon-free' actually guarantee?

It guarantees that the product does not carry a trademark license from The Chemours Company to use the Teflon brand name on the product. That is the complete extent of the claim. It makes no statement about the chemical composition of the nonstick coating, whether any PFAS compounds are present, or whether the product is safer than one that does carry the Teflon label.

### Are 'diamond nonstick' and 'granite nonstick' coatings Teflon-free and PTFE-free?

Diamond nonstick, granite nonstick, titanium nonstick, and marble nonstick are almost universally mineral-filled PTFE. The minerals - particles of actual diamond, granite, titanium oxide, or marble - are embedded in a PTFE base polymer to improve scratch resistance and durability. These coatings are Teflon-free in the trademark sense because they do not use the Chemours brand name. They contain PTFE. Marketing these as 'diamond nonstick' without disclosing the PTFE base is a common form of the same misdirection.

### Which brands have actually removed PTFE, not just the Teflon trademark?

Caraway, Our Place (Always Pan and Wonder Oven), and GreenPan use ceramic sol-gel coatings that are PTFE-free by formulation and have undergone third-party testing. Caraway publishes results for over 200 substances. Consumer Reports found no detectable PFAS in GreenPan Thermolon ceramic products among 96 tested compounds. Stainless steel cookware brands - All-Clad, Demeyere, Made In stainless line - have no nonstick coating of any kind. Cast iron brands like Lodge and Smithey are PTFE-free by material. The key is that these brands explicitly state PTFE-free AND PFAS-free together, often with supporting evidence.

### Does California AB 1200 address the Teflon-free loophole?

Yes, directly. California AB 1200, effective January 2024, prohibits manufacturers from claiming a product is free of a specific chemical if the product contains another chemical from the same hazardous class. Since PTFE is classified as a PFAS, a brand cannot use Teflon-free or PFOA-free language to imply PFAS freedom if the product still contains PTFE. The law also requires disclosure of all intentionally added chemicals from California's Candidate Chemical List on product labels and manufacturer websites. Most air fryer companies were found not in compliance with this requirement shortly after its effective date.

### What is the safest approach for families shopping for air fryers or nonstick pans?

Treat Teflon-free as a null signal - it tells you nothing useful. Look instead for products that explicitly state PTFE-free AND PFAS-free together. For air fryers, stainless steel basket models and glass-bowl designs (like the Ninja Crispi Pro) eliminate coating concerns by material. For cookware, stainless steel, cast iron, carbon steel, and enameled cast iron are PTFE-free by chemistry. When ceramic nonstick is your preference, look for brands that publish third-party PFAS testing results - Caraway and Our Place do this. California AB 1200 compliance disclosure pages, where available, list intentionally added chemicals.

## Sources

- [Teflon Trademark and Licensing](https://www.teflon.com/en/sales-support/trademark-licensing) — *The Chemours Company / Teflon.com* (2024)
- [The History of Teflon Fluoropolymers](https://www.teflon.com/en/news-events/history) — *The Chemours Company* (2023)
- [Undisclosed PFAS Coatings Common on Cookware, Research Shows](https://www.ecocenter.org/our-work/healthy-stuff-lab/reports/whats-cooking/undisclosed-pfas-coatings-common) — *Ecology Center / Healthy Stuff Lab* (2021)
- [Still Cooking: An Update on Toxic PFAS in Cookware Products](https://www.ecocenter.org/our-work/healthy-stuff-lab/reports-landing-page/still-cooking-update-toxic-pfas-cookware-products) — *Ecology Center / Healthy Stuff Lab* (2021)
- [You Can't Always Trust Claims on Non-Toxic Cookware](https://www.consumerreports.org/toxic-chemicals-substances/you-cant-always-trust-claims-on-non-toxic-cookware-a4849321487/) — *Consumer Reports* (2024)
- [The Problem With Teflon-Free Pots and Pans](https://www.leafscore.com/eco-friendly-kitchen-products/the-problem-with-teflon-and-other-non-stick-pots-and-pans/) — *LeafScore* (2024)
- [California Safer Food Packaging and Cookware Act (AB 1200)](https://www.bcpp.org/resource/california-safer-food-packaging-and-cookware-act-ab-1200/) — *Breast Cancer Prevention Partners* (2024)
- [AB 1200 Enforcement Advisory - Hazardous Chemicals in Food Packaging and Cookware](https://oag.ca.gov/system/files/attachments/press-docs/AB1200%20Enforcement%20Advisory%20(1).pdf) — *California Office of the Attorney General* (2024)
- [Made In Cookware Lied About Use of Harmful Forever Chemicals in Non-Stick Cookware, Class Action Alleges](https://www.classaction.org/blog/made-in-cookware-lied-about-use-of-harmful-forever-chemicals-in-non-stick-cookware-class-action-alleges) — *ClassAction.org* (2022)
- [How Does Nonstick Cookware Work, and Should You Switch to Green Pans?](https://cen.acs.org/environment/persistent-pollutants/does-nonstick-cookware-work-should/103/web/2025/04) — *Chemical and Engineering News (American Chemical Society)* (2025)
- [Safest Air Fryers and Air Fryer Ovens Sans Toxic PFAS Coatings](https://mamavation.com/food/safest-air-fryers-sans-toxic-pfas-coatings.html) — *Mamavation* (2024)
- [The History of PFAS: From World War II to Your Teflon Pan](https://www.manufacturingdive.com/news/the-history-behind-forever-chemicals-pfas-3m-dupont-pfte-pfoa-pfos/698254/) — *Manufacturing Dive* (2023)

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Source: https://www.r3recs.com/learn/concepts/teflon-free-claim
Methodology: https://www.r3recs.com/methodology/how-we-score-products