# Cadmium

> A toxic heavy metal classified as a Group 1 carcinogen by IARC. Found in cheap pigments on exterior coatings of budget air fryers, some ceramic glazes, batteries, and cigarette smoke. Cadmium accumulates in the kidneys with a biological half-life of 10-30 years and is listed under both Prop 65 and RoHS.

**Type:** ingredients
**Categories:** air-fryer, cookware-set
**Risk Level:** avoid
**Evidence Strength:** strong
**Source:** https://www.r3recs.com/learn/ingredients/cadmium

## Reality Check


## Overview

Cadmium is a soft, silvery-white heavy metal that has been used in industrial applications since the early 1900s. It is classified as a Group 1 carcinogen by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) - the highest classification, meaning there is sufficient evidence that it causes cancer in humans. Unlike many chemicals we cover where the evidence is emerging or mixed, the case against cadmium is settled science. It is unambiguously toxic.

The reason cadmium appears in a kitchen safety discussion is that it has historically been used in pigments - particularly bright reds, oranges, and yellows - and in some ceramic glazes. Budget [air fryers](/category/air-fryer) and [cookware](/category/cookware-set) with colorful exterior coatings, especially those imported without rigorous quality testing, have tested positive for cadmium in exterior paints. Some ceramic cookware - particularly artisanal or imported pieces with decorative glazes - can contain cadmium in the glaze itself.

For most families, cadmium exposure from kitchen appliances is a low-probability but high-severity concern. The probability is low because cadmium is not typically found in food-contact surfaces of reputable brands. The severity is high because cadmium accumulates in the body for decades and causes irreversible kidney damage and cancer. This is a case where sourcing matters enormously - buying from brands that test their products and comply with international heavy metal standards is your primary defense.

## Why Cadmium Is Dangerous

Cadmium's toxicity profile is unusually clear-cut compared to chemicals with debated evidence. The mechanisms are well-understood and the health effects are documented across multiple large-scale human studies.

### Kidney Damage

The kidneys are cadmium's primary target organ. Cadmium accumulates in the renal cortex over a lifetime, with a biological half-life of 10 to 30 years. This means that once cadmium enters your body, your kidneys will store approximately half of it for one to three decades before eliminating it. Over years of accumulation, cadmium damages the proximal tubular cells of the kidney, leading to tubular proteinuria (protein leakage into urine), kidney dysfunction, and eventually kidney failure in cases of chronic high-dose exposure.

The insidious nature of cadmium kidney damage is that it is irreversible and cumulative. There is no treatment to remove cadmium from the kidneys. Each exposure adds to the lifetime burden. This is why even small, repeated exposures matter more than they would for a chemical that the body clears quickly.

### Cancer

IARC classified cadmium and cadmium compounds as Group 1 carcinogens in 1993, based primarily on evidence from occupational studies of cadmium smelter workers showing elevated lung cancer rates. Subsequent research has also linked cadmium exposure to kidney cancer, prostate cancer, breast cancer (in women), and pancreatic cancer. The carcinogenic mechanism involves cadmium's interference with DNA repair processes and its ability to generate oxidative stress in cells.

### Bone Effects

Cadmium interferes with calcium metabolism, leading to bone demineralization and increased fracture risk. The most dramatic historical example is Itai-Itai disease in Japan (1960s), where cadmium contamination from mining caused severe osteoporosis and kidney failure in a downstream population. While this level of exposure is not a modern consumer risk, lower-level cadmium exposure is associated with reduced bone density in population studies.

### Cardiovascular Effects

Emerging evidence links cadmium exposure to cardiovascular disease, including hypertension and atherosclerosis. A meta-analysis of prospective studies found that higher cadmium exposure was associated with increased cardiovascular mortality.

## Where Cadmium Appears in Kitchen Products

### Exterior Coatings and Paints

Cadmium pigments produce vibrant, heat-stable colors - particularly cadmium red, cadmium yellow, and cadmium orange. These pigments have been used in exterior coatings of kitchen appliances, including air fryers, toasters, and stand mixers. The concern is primarily with budget imported products that may not undergo heavy metal testing. Reputable brands in the US, EU, and Japan test their exterior coatings for heavy metal content and comply with [RoHS](/learn/standards/rohs-compliant) restrictions.

Exterior coatings are not in direct food contact, which reduces but does not eliminate the risk. Chipping, peeling, or flaking exterior paint can contaminate kitchen surfaces, hands, and indirectly food. Young children who touch appliance surfaces and then put hands in their mouths face the highest risk from exterior coating contamination.

### Ceramic Glazes

Some ceramic [cookware](/category/cookware-set), mugs, plates, and bowls - particularly handcrafted, artisanal, or imported pieces - may contain cadmium in their decorative glazes. The FDA regulates cadmium leaching from ceramicware under CPG Section 545.450, setting limits on extractable cadmium from flatware (0.5 mcg/mL), small hollowware (0.5 mcg/mL), and large hollowware (0.25 mcg/mL). Well-made commercial ceramics from compliant manufacturers are within safe limits. The risk concentrates in unregulated imports, souvenir ceramics, and handmade pottery where glaze composition is not tested.

### Inexpensive Imported Products

The pattern we see repeatedly in product safety testing: budget products from unverified supply chains carry higher heavy metal risk. This applies to air fryers, cookware, utensils, and serving ware. The economic logic is that cadmium-based pigments are cheaper than alternatives, and quality testing adds cost that budget manufacturers skip. This does not mean all imported products are unsafe - it means that buying from brands with documented testing programs and compliance with international standards provides meaningful protection.

## How to Protect Your Family

**Buy from brands that test for heavy metals.** This is the most impactful action. Brands that comply with [RoHS](/learn/standards/rohs-compliant), [REACH](/learn/standards/reach-compliant), and [Prop 65](/learn/standards/prop-65) test their products for cadmium content. Major US and European appliance brands (Breville, KitchenAid, Cuisinart, Ninja, Philips) maintain quality testing programs that screen for heavy metals in both food-contact and non-food-contact surfaces.

**Be cautious with brightly colored budget imports.** Vibrant red, orange, and yellow exterior coatings on very inexpensive kitchen appliances from unknown brands carry higher cadmium risk. This is not about fear of color - it is about the economics of cheap pigments in unregulated supply chains.

**Inspect exterior coatings regularly.** If the exterior paint on any kitchen appliance is chipping, peeling, or flaking, clean the area thoroughly and consider replacement. Do not allow young children to touch or mouth appliance surfaces with deteriorating paint.

**Test ceramic cookware if uncertain.** Home lead and cadmium test kits (available for $10-30) can screen ceramic items for surface-level heavy metal contamination. This is especially worthwhile for imported, antique, or handmade ceramic pieces that you use for food service.

**Choose stainless steel or glass for food contact when possible.** These materials have no cadmium concerns by chemistry.

**Check for [Prop 65](/learn/standards/prop-65) warnings.** California's Proposition 65 requires warnings on products containing cadmium above safe harbor levels. A Prop 65 warning does not mean the product is dangerous - the thresholds are very conservative - but the absence of a warning on a product sold in California provides some assurance that it was tested.

## Regulatory Status

**IARC:** Group 1 carcinogen (sufficient evidence in humans). Classified since 1993.

**California [Prop 65](/learn/standards/prop-65):** Listed as both a carcinogen and a reproductive toxicant. Products exceeding safe harbor levels must carry warnings. Cadmium's Prop 65 MADL (maximum allowable dose level) for reproductive toxicity is 4.1 mcg/day.

**EU RoHS:** Cadmium is restricted to 0.01% (100 ppm) by weight in electronic and electrical equipment - the strictest RoHS limit for any substance.

**EU REACH:** Cadmium is a Substance of Very High Concern (SVHC) and is restricted in multiple product categories including jewelry, brazing materials, and plastic articles.

**FDA:** Regulates cadmium leaching from ceramicware (CPG 545.450). Sets extractable cadmium limits for flatware, hollowware, and cups/mugs. Does not set cadmium limits for exterior coatings on kitchen appliances.

**CPSC:** No specific cadmium standard for kitchen appliances. The CPSIA total lead content rule (100 ppm) applies to children's products but does not cover cadmium and does not cover kitchen appliances.

**WHO:** Provisional tolerable monthly intake (PTMI) of 25 mcg/kg body weight. Average dietary cadmium intake for most populations falls within or slightly below this threshold.

## Also Known As

- Cd (chemical symbol)
- Cadmium compounds
- Cadmium pigment (CdS, CdSe)
- Cadmium sulfide (yellow pigment)
- Cadmium selenide (red pigment)

## Where Found

- Exterior coatings and paints on budget air fryers and kitchen appliances (cadmium-based pigments)
- Ceramic glazes on imported, artisanal, or decorative cookware and tableware
- Nickel-cadmium (NiCd) rechargeable batteries
- Cigarette smoke (significant non-dietary cadmium source)
- Shellfish, organ meats, and leafy vegetables grown in contaminated soil
- Chocolate (cocoa plants accumulate cadmium from soil)
- Industrial emissions near smelting and mining operations
- Some inexpensive jewelry and fashion accessories

## Health Concerns

**Cancer (Group 1 carcinogen):** IARC classified cadmium as having sufficient evidence of carcinogenicity in humans. Established links to lung, kidney, and prostate cancer. Emerging evidence for breast and pancreatic cancer. Mechanism involves DNA repair interference and oxidative stress.

**Kidney damage:** Primary target organ. Cadmium accumulates in renal cortex with a half-life of 10-30 years. Causes irreversible tubular damage, proteinuria, and progressive kidney dysfunction. No treatment exists to remove accumulated cadmium.

**Bone demineralization:** Interferes with calcium metabolism. Associated with reduced bone density and increased fracture risk. Historical Itai-Itai disease in Japan demonstrated severe skeletal effects from chronic cadmium exposure.

**Cardiovascular effects:** Emerging evidence links cadmium to hypertension, atherosclerosis, and increased cardiovascular mortality.

**Reproductive effects:** Prop 65 listed as a reproductive toxicant. Animal studies show effects on sperm quality and embryonic development at elevated exposure levels.

## Regulatory Status

**IARC:** Group 1 carcinogen since 1993 (sufficient evidence in humans).

**California Prop 65:** Listed as carcinogen and reproductive toxicant. MADL for reproductive toxicity: 4.1 mcg/day.

**EU RoHS:** Restricted to 0.01% (100 ppm) in electronics - strictest RoHS limit. **EU REACH:** Substance of Very High Concern (SVHC).

**FDA:** Regulates cadmium leaching from ceramicware (CPG 545.450). No standards for exterior coatings on appliances.

**WHO:** Provisional tolerable monthly intake of 25 mcg/kg body weight.

## Label Guide

**Look for:**
- RoHS compliant - tested for cadmium content below 100 ppm
- REACH compliant - meets EU restrictions on Substances of Very High Concern
- Prop 65 compliant (no warning required) - tested below California safe harbor levels
- FDA-compliant ceramicware - meets extractable cadmium limits
- Stainless steel or glass food-contact surfaces - no cadmium concern by material
- Products from established brands with documented quality testing programs

**Avoid / misleading:**
- Very inexpensive imported air fryers or cookware from unknown brands without safety certifications
- Brightly colored exterior coatings (red, orange, yellow) on unbranded budget products
- Imported or handmade ceramic cookware without FDA compliance documentation
- Products with visible chipping or peeling exterior paint
- Items sold without Prop 65 assessment in California markets

## Who Is At Risk

- Young children - hand-to-mouth behavior increases risk from contaminated surfaces; developing kidneys are more vulnerable to cadmium accumulation
- Smokers and people exposed to secondhand smoke - cigarettes are a significant non-dietary cadmium source that adds to any product-based exposure
- People with kidney disease - impaired cadmium excretion accelerates accumulation and kidney damage
- Families using unregulated imported ceramicware for daily food service
- Communities near mining or smelting operations - elevated environmental cadmium from industrial activity

## How To Verify

Request heavy metal testing documentation from the manufacturer. For ceramicware, ask for FDA-compliant cadmium leaching test results. Home test kits ($10-30) can screen ceramic and painted surfaces for cadmium presence. For air fryers and appliances, RoHS compliance certificates are available from reputable manufacturers on request. Products sold in California without Prop 65 warnings have been assessed against cadmium safe harbor levels.

## Budget Air Fryers: When the Price Is Too Good

We have seen cadmium concerns arise most frequently with very inexpensive air fryers from unverified brands sold through third-party marketplace listings. These products may use cadmium-based pigments in bright exterior coatings to reduce manufacturing costs. The food-contact interior is the primary safety concern for most chemicals, but exterior cadmium paint that chips or flakes can contaminate kitchen surfaces and hands. Buying from brands with documented safety testing - and being skeptical of heavily discounted, unbranded appliances - is your best protection.

## What This Does Not Cover

Cadmium in exterior coatings is a separate concern from nonstick coating safety (PTFE, PFAS) - a product can be PFAS-free but still have cadmium in exterior paint,Cadmium-safe cookware does not address lead, another heavy metal that may co-occur in the same products,Dietary cadmium from food (shellfish, chocolate, leafy greens) is a separate exposure pathway not addressed by product choices,Cadmium in batteries and electronics is regulated under RoHS but is not a food-contact concern

## R3 Bottom Line

- Buy air fryers and cookware from brands that test for heavy metals and comply with RoHS, REACH, or Prop 65 - this is your primary defense against cadmium in kitchen products
- Be cautious with very inexpensive, brightly colored imports from unknown brands - cheap pigments in unregulated supply chains carry higher cadmium risk
- Test imported or handmade ceramic cookware with a home heavy metal test kit ($10-30) before using it for daily food service
- Inspect exterior coatings on all kitchen appliances - if paint is chipping or peeling, clean thoroughly and consider replacement

## FAQ

### Should I be worried about cadmium in my air fryer?

If you bought your air fryer from a reputable brand (Ninja, Cosori, Breville, Philips, Instant Pot, etc.), cadmium is very unlikely to be a concern. These brands test their products for heavy metal compliance. The risk concentrates in very inexpensive, unbranded imports from unknown manufacturers without safety certifications. If your air fryer's exterior paint is chipping or peeling, clean the area and consider replacement regardless of the brand.

### Is cadmium only in exterior coatings, or can it be in the cooking surface?

Cadmium pigments are primarily an exterior coating concern. Food-contact nonstick surfaces (PTFE, ceramic) are formulated separately and do not typically contain cadmium. However, some imported ceramic cookware with decorative interior glazes can contain cadmium - the FDA regulates this under CPG 545.450. Stainless steel and glass food-contact surfaces have no cadmium concern.

### Can I test my cookware for cadmium at home?

Yes. Home heavy metal test kits are available for $10-30 and can screen ceramic and painted surfaces for cadmium presence. These swab tests provide a positive/negative result for surface-level contamination. They are especially useful for testing imported or handmade ceramic pieces. For more precise quantitative testing, you would need a professional lab analysis.

### How does cadmium get into the body from kitchen products?

The primary pathway is ingestion - cadmium from food-contact ceramicware leaches into food, especially acidic food. From exterior coatings, the pathway is indirect: paint chips or flakes contaminate hands or kitchen surfaces, which then transfer to food or are ingested through hand-to-mouth contact (particularly relevant for young children). Cadmium is not absorbed through intact skin at meaningful levels.

### Is there a safe level of cadmium exposure?

The WHO sets a provisional tolerable monthly intake of 25 mcg per kilogram of body weight. Most dietary cadmium intake falls near or slightly below this level for the average adult. Because cadmium accumulates irreversibly in the kidneys, the goal is to minimize exposure over a lifetime rather than identifying a single safe dose. For practical purposes, buying from tested brands and avoiding unregulated imports is sufficient protection for most families.

## Sources

- [IARC Monographs on the Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risks: Cadmium and Cadmium Compounds](https://monographs.iarc.who.int/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/mono100C-8.pdf) — *International Agency for Research on Cancer (WHO)* (2012)
- [Cadmium Toxicity and Treatment: An Update](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2908954/) — *Interdisciplinary Toxicology* (2010)
- [FDA CPG Sec. 545.450: Pottery (Ceramics); Import and Domestic - Lead and Cadmium Contamination](https://www.fda.gov/regulatory-information/search-fda-guidance-documents/cpg-sec-545450-pottery-ceramics-import-and-domestic-lead-contamination) — *U.S. Food and Drug Administration* (2023)
- [Proposition 65: Cadmium Listing](https://oehha.ca.gov/proposition-65/chemicals/cadmium-and-cadmium-compounds) — *California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment* (2023)
- [RoHS Directive 2011/65/EU: Restriction of Hazardous Substances](https://environment.ec.europa.eu/topics/waste-and-recycling/rohs-directive_en) — *European Commission* (2011)
- [Cadmium and Cardiovascular Disease: A Meta-Analysis of Prospective Studies](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6893582/) — *Environmental Health Perspectives* (2018)
- [WHO Food Safety: Cadmium](https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/cadmium) — *World Health Organization* (2023)
- [Cadmium in Cocoa and Chocolate Products: EFSA Scientific Opinion](https://www.efsa.europa.eu/en/efsajournal/pub/1975) — *European Food Safety Authority* (2012)

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Source: https://www.r3recs.com/learn/ingredients/cadmium
Methodology: https://www.r3recs.com/methodology/how-we-score-products