# California Proposition 65 (Prop 65)

> California's Safe Drinking Water and Toxic Enforcement Act of 1986 requires businesses to warn consumers before exposing them to any of 900+ chemicals known to cause cancer, birth defects, or reproductive harm. Prop 65 does not ban products or set safe limits - it grants consumers the right to know. Because the warning thresholds are set far below actual harm levels, warnings appear on everything from parking garages to air fryers, which has led to widespread warning fatigue and made individual warnings nearly impossible to interpret without additional context.

**Type:** standards
**Categories:** air-fryer, cookware-set, frying-pan, water-filter
**Status:** active
**Jurisdiction:** California, USA
**Source:** https://www.r3recs.com/learn/standards/prop-65

## Reality Check

**Claim:** A Prop 65 warning means the product is dangerous
**Reality:** A Prop 65 warning means the product may expose you to a chemical that California has listed as a potential carcinogen or reproductive toxicant. It does not tell you whether the actual exposure level from normal use approaches any threshold of real risk. Because the warning thresholds are set far below harm levels and private lawsuits incentivize over-warning, the same label appears on products with negligible trace exposures and products with meaningful chemical concerns. The warning is a right-to-know trigger, not a safety verdict. What matters is identifying which chemical is named and whether it is present in a food-contact surface at a level supported by your actual use pattern.

## Overview

If you have ever unboxed an air fryer, walked into a California hotel, or bought a garden hose, you have seen the warning: "This product can expose you to chemicals including [X], which is known to the State of California to cause cancer." That is a Proposition 65 warning - and it is on so many things that most people have learned to ignore it entirely.

That instinct is partly understandable and partly dangerous. The warning is not meaningless. But it is also not a straightforward signal of danger. Understanding what Prop 65 actually measures - and what it does not - is one of the more useful things you can learn as a family trying to navigate product safety.

## What Prop 65 Is

California voters approved Proposition 65 in November 1986, officially called the Safe Drinking Water and Toxic Enforcement Act of 1986. The law has two core requirements.

First, the Governor of California must publish a list of chemicals known to cause cancer, birth defects, or other reproductive harm. That list - maintained by the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA) - must be updated at least once a year. It now contains more than 900 chemicals, including [PFAS](/learn/ingredients/pfas), lead, cadmium, [acrylamide](/learn/ingredients/acrylamide), benzene, and formaldehyde.

Second, any business that knowingly and intentionally exposes a person to a listed chemical above specified threshold levels must provide a "clear and reasonable" warning before that exposure occurs. The law does not ban the chemicals. It does not set maximum safe exposure limits in the traditional regulatory sense. It grants the right to know.

Prop 65 applies to businesses with 10 or more employees. It covers workplaces, product exposures, and discharges into drinking water sources. If a product sold in California might expose someone to a listed chemical above the threshold, a warning is required - or the manufacturer accepts legal liability.

## The Warning Threshold System

Prop 65 establishes two types of safe harbor thresholds that exempt businesses from the warning requirement.

For cancer-causing chemicals, the threshold is the **No Significant Risk Level (NSRL)** - defined as the exposure level that would cause no more than one additional cancer case per 100,000 people over a 70-year lifetime. That is a 1-in-100,000 risk benchmark.

For chemicals causing reproductive harm, the threshold is the **Maximum Allowable Dose Level (MADL)** - set at 1/1,000th of the dose that causes no observable effect in animal studies. The 1,000-fold safety margin is deliberately large.

Because these thresholds are set so conservatively - far below levels associated with actual health harm in humans - businesses often cannot prove their product exposure falls beneath them without expensive testing. The result: most companies display warnings as a precaution even when actual consumer exposure is negligibly small. This is the foundational driver of warning ubiquity.

Only about one-third of the 900+ listed chemicals have published safe harbor levels. For chemicals without a published NSRL or MADL, there is no established threshold - which makes compliance effectively impossible to confirm, so warnings appear by default.

## Why Warnings Are on Everything

The short answer is a combination of low thresholds, private enforcement incentives, and legal asymmetry.

**Private enforcement ("bounty hunter" lawsuits):** Prop 65 allows any private citizen acting in the public interest to file an enforcement lawsuit against a non-compliant business. The citizen must provide 60-day advance notice to the alleged violator and the California Attorney General. If the lawsuit succeeds, the business pays civil penalties up to $2,500 per violation per day - and 25% of that penalty goes directly to the private plaintiff.

This provision was designed to supplement government enforcement resources. In practice, it has created an industry of Prop 65 litigation. In 2024, approximately 40 private enforcers filed 5,398 notices - a record high, up from 4,142 in 2023. More than 1,300 settlements were reached that year, compared to roughly 890 in 2022. Many businesses settle quickly because the cost of fighting a lawsuit exceeds the cost of settling and updating a warning label.

**Burden of proof flips to the defendant.** In most product liability cases, the plaintiff must prove harm. Under Prop 65, once a private plaintiff demonstrates exposure to a listed chemical at any level, the burden shifts to the business to prove that exposure falls below the NSRL or MADL. Proving a negative is expensive. Warning labels avoid that burden entirely.

**Consequence: defensive over-warning.** A business that cannot afford chemical testing - or cannot afford litigation risk - adds a Prop 65 warning to everything regardless of actual exposure levels. The warning becomes a legal shield rather than a consumer information tool.

## The 2018 Warning Reforms

California recognized that vague, uniform warnings had degraded to near-meaninglessness. OEHHA revised the "clear and reasonable" warning regulations in 2016, with a two-year grace period that ended on August 30, 2018.

The 2018 reforms required:
- A specific yellow triangle warning symbol (black exclamation point inside a bold black-outlined equilateral triangle)
- The word "WARNING" in bold capital letters
- Tailored language identifying at least one specific chemical triggering the warning
- Cancer warnings and reproductive harm warnings use different prescribed language
- Primary responsibility for warning placement shifted to upstream manufacturers and importers rather than retailers

In November 2024, OEHHA approved additional short-form warning reforms: short-form warnings now must also include at least one chemical name. Previously, a short-form warning could say only "WARNING: Cancer" with no chemical identified. The new rule has a 3-year phase-in period - products manufactured before January 1, 2028 can still use the old short-form language.

These reforms are meaningful steps toward informative warnings. But the structural problem remains: the threshold system still generates warnings on products with trace exposures far below actual harm levels.

## The Acrylamide Ruling: A Landmark Shift

In May 2025, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of California issued a ruling with major implications for Prop 65 and for [air fryer](/category/air-fryer) buyers specifically.

In *California Chamber of Commerce v. Bonta*, U.S. District Judge Daniel Calabretta permanently enjoined California from enforcing Prop 65 warning requirements for dietary [acrylamide](/learn/ingredients/acrylamide) in food. The court found that compelling food manufacturers to warn about dietary acrylamide violates the First Amendment.

The reasoning: while acrylamide causes cancer in laboratory animals at high doses, dozens of epidemiological studies of acrylamide in human diets have not clearly shown increased cancer risk in humans. Compelling manufacturers to state that their product "can expose you to acrylamide, which is known to the State of California to cause cancer" forces them to communicate a controversial scientific claim they disagree with - a First Amendment violation under the compelled speech doctrine. The California Attorney General filed an appeal on June 2, 2025.

[Acrylamide](/learn/ingredients/acrylamide) matters directly to [air fryer](/category/air-fryer) and [cookware](/category/cookware-set) users because it forms naturally in starchy foods cooked at high temperatures - fries, chips, toast, and roasted vegetables. Air frying produces significantly less acrylamide than deep frying (approximately 90% less according to published studies). But the Prop 65 acrylamide warning on air fryer packaging was never really about the appliance itself - it referenced the possibility that the appliance might be used to cook acrylamide-forming foods.

As of the May 2025 ruling, mandatory dietary acrylamide warnings are suspended pending appeal. This represents the most significant constitutional challenge to Prop 65's scope in the law's 40-year history and may open the door to challenges for other listed chemicals where human epidemiological evidence is disputed.

## What Prop 65 Warnings Tell You About Cookware and Air Fryers

For families evaluating [air fryers](/category/air-fryer), [cookware](/category/cookware-set), and [frying pans](/category/frying-pan), Prop 65 warnings appear for several distinct reasons that are worth separating.

**PFAS and PTFE:** [PFAS](/learn/ingredients/pfas) compounds - including PFOA, which was classified as a Group 1 human carcinogen by the WHO in 2023 - are on the Prop 65 list. Many air fryers with nonstick baskets use PTFE (polytetrafluoroethylene), which is itself a PFAS polymer. A Prop 65 warning for PFAS on an air fryer is a meaningful signal: it indicates the presence of fluorinated compounds in the cooking surface. Under [California AB 1200](/learn/standards/california-ab-1200) (the Safer Cookware Act), manufacturers are also required to disclose intentionally added chemicals on their websites and product labels - a disclosure law that works alongside Prop 65 to increase transparency.

**Lead and cadmium:** These heavy metals appear in pigments used in cookware handles, decorative coatings, and ceramic glazes. A Prop 65 warning for lead or cadmium on cookware typically relates to non-food-contact surfaces rather than the cooking surface itself - but the presence of these metals in any product component is worth noting, particularly if the product will be used by children.

**Acrylamide:** As discussed above, acrylamide warnings on cooking appliances reference the chemical formed in food during high-temperature cooking, not chemicals in the appliance materials. The May 2025 court ruling has suspended enforcement of these warnings.

**What the warning does not tell you:** A Prop 65 warning does not indicate which chemical is present (unless the 2018 reforms require naming it), at what concentration, or whether exposure from normal product use actually approaches the NSRL or MADL threshold. Two products with the same warning - one with trace lead in a painted exterior handle and one with PFOA leaching from a worn nonstick basket - look identical to a consumer reading the label.

## Warning Fatigue: The Core Problem

Researchers, advocates, and California regulators have all acknowledged what consumers already know intuitively: when every parking garage, apartment building, furniture store, and kitchen appliance carries the same warning, the warnings stop communicating anything useful.

A 2024 study in *Environmental Health Perspectives* found that Prop 65 had driven meaningful chemical reformulations across multiple product categories - particularly toys, jewelry, and food packaging - where enforcement risk was high and reformulation was technically feasible. The law's deterrence effect is real. But the same research noted that over-warning had significantly eroded the signal value of warnings for consumers.

The FARK headline that circulated in late 2024 captured the problem well: California was considering a "high-exposure warning" tier that would visually distinguish warnings for chemicals with serious documented human risk from routine precautionary warnings. As of early 2026, that two-tier proposal had not been enacted - but it reflects growing recognition that the current system has effectively rendered individual Prop 65 warnings uninformative for lay consumers.

## How R3 Uses Prop 65 in Product Evaluation

When our research team evaluates [air fryers](/category/air-fryer), [cookware](/category/cookware-set), and [water filters](/category/water-filter), a Prop 65 warning is a starting point for inquiry, not a pass/fail criterion.

Here is our actual decision framework:

**Step 1 - Identify the chemical.** Which specific chemical triggered the warning? A warning for PFAS in a nonstick basket is fundamentally different from a warning for lead in a painted handle. Post-2018 labels must name at least one chemical; we verify.

**Step 2 - Cross-reference with [California AB 1200](/learn/standards/california-ab-1200) disclosures.** For cookware and air fryers, the manufacturer's AB 1200 website disclosure provides more actionable detail than the Prop 65 label alone. The disclosure identifies exactly which chemicals are intentionally present in food-contact surfaces.

**Step 3 - Assess exposure pathway.** Is the chemical in the food-contact surface, or in a non-contact component like a handle or housing? PFAS in a nonstick basket represents a direct food exposure pathway. Lead in an exterior painted component represents a surface contact and dust ingestion pathway - lower for adults, non-trivial for toddlers.

**Step 4 - Check third-party certifications.** NSF/ANSI 51 certification for food equipment and NSF 537 PFAS-free certification (launched March 2025) provide independent verification that goes beyond the Prop 65 warning system.

**Step 5 - Weight the pattern.** A product with no Prop 65 warning, an AB 1200 disclosure showing no designated chemicals, and NSF 51 certification has passed multiple independent checks. A product with a Prop 65 warning for PFAS, no AB 1200 disclosure, and no independent certification earns a lower material safety score in our methodology.

A Prop 65 warning alone does not disqualify a product in our system. But it does open an investigation - and the results of that investigation determine how the product scores on chemical safety.

## Also Known As

- Safe Drinking Water and Toxic Enforcement Act of 1986
- California Prop 65
- P65
- Prop. 65 warning
- California chemical warning label

## Where Found

- Product packaging for air fryers, cookware, and small kitchen appliances sold in California
- Physical retail stores, parking structures, hotels, and apartment buildings throughout California
- Online product listings for any item sold into California with a listed chemical above threshold levels
- Garden hoses, outdoor furniture, and electronics containing phthalates, lead, or cadmium
- Food products and restaurants where acrylamide or alcohol are present (warning currently suspended for dietary acrylamide pending appeal)
- Water filter packaging where certain chemicals may be present in filter media or housing materials

## Health Concerns

Prop 65 itself is a disclosure law, not a chemical - it has no direct health effects. The warnings it generates are tied to 900+ individual chemicals with varying levels of documented human risk.

**Chemicals with strong human evidence:** [PFAS](/learn/ingredients/pfas) compounds (particularly [PFOA](/learn/ingredients/pfas) and PFOS) are confirmed human carcinogens or reproductive toxicants. Lead and cadmium have extensive human toxicology data confirming cancer and developmental harm. These Prop 65 warnings correspond to real, well-established risks.

**Chemicals with primarily animal evidence:** [Acrylamide](/learn/ingredients/acrylamide) causes cancer in animals at high doses but has not been shown to increase human cancer risk in dozens of epidemiological studies - which is precisely why the May 2025 court ruling found mandatory dietary acrylamide warnings unconstitutional.

**The dose problem:** Prop 65's NSRL is set at 1-in-100,000 lifetime cancer risk - a 70-year exposure benchmark. Most consumer product exposures are orders of magnitude below this threshold even when a warning is present. A warning does not mean the exposure level is anywhere near the risk benchmark.

**Who faces the most meaningful risk:** Families with frequent, long-term exposure to PFAS from worn nonstick cookware, or who consume water with PFAS above EPA limits, face the most documented risk associated with Prop 65-listed chemicals in kitchen products. For lead and cadmium, young children face higher risk than adults due to higher absorption rates and more hand-to-mouth behavior.

## Regulatory Status

**California Proposition 65 (enacted November 1986):**
- Maintained by OEHHA (Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment)
- Current list: 900+ chemicals, updated at least annually
- 2018 clear-and-reasonable warning reforms: effective August 30, 2018 - requires named chemical, specific warning symbol, tailored cancer vs. reproductive harm language
- 2024 short-form warning reform: effective November 2024, requires chemical name in short-form warnings; 3-year phase-in, products manufactured before January 1, 2028 may use old language
- Enforcement: California Attorney General plus private citizen enforcement; $2,500 per violation per day; 25% of penalties to private enforcer
- 2024 enforcement: 5,398 notices filed (record high); 1,300+ settlements

**May 2025 acrylamide ruling:** U.S. District Court (E.D. Cal.) permanently enjoined enforcement of Prop 65 acrylamide dietary warnings as unconstitutional under the First Amendment (*California Chamber of Commerce v. Bonta*). California AG filed appeal June 2, 2025. Ruling pending.

**Federal context:** Prop 65 operates independently of FDA and EPA federal standards. Federal standards are generally less precautionary. A product can comply with all federal safety regulations and still require a Prop 65 warning.

**California AB 1200 (effective 2023-2024):** Companion California law requiring cookware manufacturers to disclose intentionally added chemicals - provides more actionable detail than Prop 65 warnings for cookware and air fryers.

## Label Guide

**Look for:**
- No Prop 65 warning combined with a published AB 1200 disclosure showing no PFAS - the strongest available signal for clean cookware
- Prop 65 warning with specific chemical named (post-2018 labels) - allows you to research that specific chemical rather than facing a generic alarm
- NSF/ANSI 51 certification alongside any Prop 65 warning - independent food safety equipment standard provides verification the label cannot
- NSF 537 PFAS-free certification (launched March 2025) - total organic fluorine testing on the finished product
- Short-form warnings after January 2028 that name the specific chemical - the 2024 reform will make short-form warnings more informative once fully phased in

**Avoid / misleading:**
- Prop 65 warning for PFAS on food-contact surfaces without an explanation of which specific compound - warrants direct investigation via AB 1200 disclosure pages
- Generic 'WARNING: Cancer and Reproductive Harm' with no chemical named on post-2018 products - non-compliant with current clear-and-reasonable warning standards
- No warning at all on imported cookware sold outside California - this does not mean the product is chemical-free; it may simply not be in the Prop 65 enforcement zone

## Look For Instead

- NSF/ANSI 51 certification for food equipment safety
- NSF 537 PFAS-free certification for verified zero fluorine in food-contact surfaces
- AB 1200 disclosure pages naming specific chemicals in food-contact components
- Independent third-party lab testing results published by the manufacturer

## Who Is At Risk

- Consumers who interpret any Prop 65 warning as equivalent danger - the warning system does not distinguish trace exposures from meaningful exposures
- Families using PTFE-coated air fryers and cookware daily - PFAS warnings on these products correspond to documented chemical exposure pathways, not just precautionary labeling
- Young children in households with lead-containing products - CPSC and Prop 65 lead warnings matter more for children than adults due to higher absorption and hand-to-mouth behavior
- Consumers experiencing warning fatigue who ignore all Prop 65 labels equally - the warnings that correspond to real documented risk (PFAS, lead in food-contact surfaces) get dismissed alongside precautionary warnings
- Buyers of imported cookware and air fryers without AB 1200 disclosures or Prop 65 warnings - absence of a warning does not guarantee absence of a chemical if the product is not sold primarily in California

## Common Triggers In Products

- PTFE and PFAS compounds in nonstick coatings on air fryer baskets and cookware
- Lead in pigments used in decorative handle and exterior coatings
- Cadmium in colorants on cookware and small appliance components
- Phthalates in plastic handle components and grip materials
- Acrylamide formed in starchy foods cooked at high temperatures (currently suspended pending appeal)

## Product Categories To Avoid

- Nonstick cookware and air fryer baskets with PTFE coatings that have active Prop 65 PFAS warnings and no AB 1200 disclosure page
- Imported cookware with decorative exterior coatings carrying Prop 65 lead warnings and no third-party heavy metal testing data

## What Helps

Treat Prop 65 warnings as a starting point, not a verdict. When you see a warning on a cooking product, identify the specific chemical named, then look up that chemical in R3's ingredient library to understand actual documented risk. For [air fryers](/category/air-fryer) and [cookware](/category/cookware-set), pair the Prop 65 label with the brand's AB 1200 disclosure page - together they give you a more complete picture than either alone. If you want to avoid the guesswork entirely, products with ceramic or stainless steel cooking surfaces generate no Prop 65 PFAS warnings and require no AB 1200 disclosure because there is nothing to disclose.

## How To Verify

Search 'p65warnings.ca.gov' to access the official California Prop 65 warnings website, which includes fact sheets for individual chemicals. For cookware chemical disclosure, search '[brand name] AB 1200' to find the manufacturer's California disclosure page. To check whether a specific listed chemical has a published NSRL or MADL safe harbor level, search OEHHA's database at oehha.ca.gov/proposition-65. For product-specific chemical verification beyond self-disclosure, look for NSF/ANSI 51 or NSF 537 certification in the NSF certified products database at nsf.org.

**Effective Date:** 1988-01-01

## Timeline

- **November 1986:** Proposition 65 Passed — California voters approve the Safe Drinking Water and Toxic Enforcement Act of 1986 with 63% of the vote. The law takes effect January 1, 1988, with the initial chemical list published in February 1987.
- **1988-2000:** Early List Expansion and Litigation — OEHHA expands the chemical list from the original 28 carcinogens and 13 reproductive toxicants to hundreds of substances. Early private enforcement lawsuits target tobacco, alcohol, and food manufacturers.
- **2001-2016:** Warning Fatigue Recognized — Prop 65 warnings proliferate across California's commercial environment. Academic researchers and regulators begin documenting warning fatigue effects - consumers tune out uniform, chemically non-specific warnings. The number of private enforcement notices grows from hundreds annually to thousands.
- **August 2016:** OEHHA Issues New Warning Regulations — OEHHA finalizes revised 'clear and reasonable' warning regulations requiring specific warning symbols, tailored chemical-specific language, and allocation of warning responsibility to upstream manufacturers. A two-year grace period is granted.
- **August 30, 2018:** 2018 Warning Reforms Take Effect — New Prop 65 warnings must use the yellow triangle symbol, bold WARNING text, and name at least one specific chemical. Products manufactured after this date must comply. The reforms represent the most significant overhaul of Prop 65 warning requirements in the law's history.
- **December 2023:** BPS Added to Reproductive Toxicant List — Bisphenol S (BPS), a common BPA replacement used in 'BPA-free' plastics, is added to the Prop 65 list as a reproductive toxicant effective December 29, 2023.
- **November 2024:** Short-Form Warning Reform Approved — OEHHA's revised short-form warning rules approved, requiring short-form warnings to name at least one specific chemical. Three-year phase-in allows products manufactured before January 1, 2028 to use old language. Record 5,398 enforcement notices filed in 2024.
- **May 2025:** Acrylamide Warning Ruled Unconstitutional — U.S. District Judge Daniel Calabretta permanently enjoins California from enforcing Prop 65 dietary acrylamide warnings, finding they violate the First Amendment by compelling speech on a scientifically contested claim. California AG appeals. Ruling has broad implications for Prop 65 chemicals lacking clear human carcinogenicity evidence.

## Prop 65 Warnings on Air Fryers: What R3 Actually Looks At

Most [air fryers](/category/air-fryer) sold in California carry a Prop 65 warning. That warning may be for PFAS in the nonstick basket, lead in an exterior painted component, or historically for acrylamide in food cooked at high temperatures (currently suspended pending appeal). The warning alone does not tell you which applies or how meaningful the exposure is. Our team always cross-references the Prop 65 label with the brand's AB 1200 disclosure page to determine whether listed chemicals are in the food-contact surface. A Prop 65 warning for PFAS on a basket is a real signal; a warning for lead in a non-contact handle component is a different risk profile entirely. We score both - but we weight them differently.

## What This Does Not Cover

Prop 65 does not ban any chemical or product - it only requires warnings above threshold levels. It does not apply to businesses with fewer than 10 employees. It does not govern products sold exclusively outside California, though many manufacturers add warnings nationally to avoid California-specific SKUs. It does not require manufacturers to disclose exposure concentrations - only that exposure may occur. It does not set federal standards; a product fully compliant with FDA and EPA rules can still require a Prop 65 warning. And it does not apply to natural occurring background levels of chemicals that are unavoidably present in food (a separate exemption for 'naturally occurring' exposures).

## R3 Bottom Line

- A Prop 65 warning is a right-to-know trigger, not a danger verdict - the same label appears on products with negligible trace exposures and products with real chemical concerns, so your first job is identifying which chemical is named.
- For air fryers and cookware, a Prop 65 PFAS warning is more meaningful than most - cross-reference it with the brand's AB 1200 disclosure page to confirm whether PFAS are in the food-contact basket or only in non-contact components.
- The May 2025 ruling that dietary acrylamide warnings are unconstitutional signals a new era of legal challenges to Prop 65 for chemicals where human evidence is weaker than animal evidence - watch for continued litigation on this front.
- If you want to avoid warning-related guesswork entirely, cookware and air fryers with ceramic or stainless steel cooking surfaces carry no Prop 65 PFAS warnings because there are no PFAS to warn about.
- R3 treats a Prop 65 warning as an investigation trigger in our product scoring - we identify the specific chemical, assess its exposure pathway, and weight it against independent certifications like NSF/ANSI 51 and NSF 537 before assigning a material safety score.

## FAQ

### Should I be worried if a product has a Prop 65 warning?

Not automatically - but you should pay attention to which chemical is named. A Prop 65 warning means the product may expose you to a listed chemical above California's precautionary threshold, which is set far below levels associated with actual harm. Because the thresholds are so conservative and because private lawsuits create strong incentives to over-warn, the label appears on an enormous range of products - many with negligible real-world exposures. For cooking products specifically, a warning naming [PFAS](/learn/ingredients/pfas) or lead warrants further investigation. A warning for acrylamide from cooking starchy foods at high temperatures is in a different category - and as of a May 2025 court ruling, mandatory dietary acrylamide warnings are currently suspended.

### Why does my air fryer have a Prop 65 warning?

Air fryers commonly trigger Prop 65 warnings for one or more of these reasons: PFAS (including PTFE, the polymer in nonstick coatings) in the basket or cooking surface; lead or cadmium in exterior painted or decorative components; or historically acrylamide that can form in food cooked at high temperatures (currently suspended pending appeal after a May 2025 court ruling). The warning alone does not tell you which applies. Check the brand's AB 1200 disclosure page - searchable as '[brand name] AB 1200' - to see which chemicals are intentionally present in food-contact surfaces.

### Why are Prop 65 warnings on almost everything?

Three factors work together: First, the warning thresholds are set far below levels associated with real human harm, so many products trigger the requirement even with trace chemical levels. Second, Prop 65 allows private citizens to file enforcement lawsuits and collect 25% of penalties - creating a financial incentive to find and prosecute violations. Third, businesses face the burden of proving their product's exposure falls below threshold levels, which requires expensive testing. Many companies find it cheaper to add a warning label than to test and litigate. The result: warnings appear everywhere, which has diluted their ability to communicate actual risk.

### What is the difference between the Prop 65 NSRL and MADL thresholds?

The NSRL (No Significant Risk Level) applies to cancer-causing chemicals and is set at the exposure level that would cause no more than one additional cancer case per 100,000 people over a 70-year lifetime. The MADL (Maximum Allowable Dose Level) applies to chemicals that cause reproductive harm and is set at 1/1,000th of the lowest dose that shows no observable effect in animal studies. Both thresholds are intentionally conservative - they include large safety margins. When a product's exposure falls below the relevant NSRL or MADL, no warning is required. Only about one-third of Prop 65 chemicals have published safe harbor levels, so many warnings appear simply because no threshold has been established.

### What was the May 2025 acrylamide ruling and what does it mean for food products?

In May 2025, a federal judge permanently blocked California from requiring Prop 65 warnings about dietary acrylamide - the chemical that forms naturally when starchy foods like potatoes and bread are cooked at high temperatures. The court found that compelling manufacturers to label their products with acrylamide cancer warnings violated the First Amendment because scientific consensus on acrylamide's carcinogenicity in humans is genuinely disputed. Dozens of human epidemiological studies have not shown increased cancer risk from dietary acrylamide exposure. California appealed in June 2025. As of early 2026, the injunction remains in place, meaning food manufacturers and cooking appliance sellers are not required to include acrylamide warnings.

### How are Prop 65 and California AB 1200 different for cookware buyers?

Prop 65 requires a warning when a product may expose you to a listed chemical above a threshold level - it tells you something might be there but often does not say what or how much. [California AB 1200](/learn/standards/california-ab-1200) (the Safer Cookware Act) requires manufacturers to specifically disclose which intentionally added designated chemicals are present in their cookware, both on their website (since January 2023) and on product labels (since January 2024). For [air fryers](/category/air-fryer) and [cookware](/category/cookware-set), the AB 1200 disclosure is more actionable: it tells you exactly which PFAS or heavy metals are intentionally in the food-contact surface, by name, without requiring you to guess from a general warning label.

### Does Prop 65 apply outside California?

Prop 65 is California state law and technically applies only to businesses exposing California residents to listed chemicals. However, because most manufacturers cannot economically produce California-specific product variants, Prop 65 warnings end up on products sold nationally. A product sold throughout the US may carry a Prop 65 warning even if the buyer is in Texas or Ohio. Conversely, a product sold exclusively outside California may lack a Prop 65 warning even if it contains listed chemicals. The warning's presence (or absence) reflects California market exposure decisions, not a universal safety verdict.

## Sources

- [Proposition 65 - The Official Prop 65 Warnings Website](https://www.p65warnings.ca.gov/) — *California OEHHA* (2024)
- [Proposition 65 List - OEHHA](https://oehha.ca.gov/proposition-65/proposition-65-list) — *California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment* (2025)
- [Proposition 65 No Significant Risk Levels (NSRLs) and Maximum Allowable Dose Levels (MADLs)](https://oehha.ca.gov/proposition-65/general-info/proposition-65-no-significant-risk-levels-nsrls-and-maximum-allowable-dose-levels-madls) — *California OEHHA* (2024)
- [California Federal Court Finds Prop 65 Warnings for Dietary Acrylamide Violate First Amendment](https://www.sidley.com/en/insights/newsupdates/2025/05/california-federal-court-finds-prop-65-warnings-for-dietary-acrylamide-violate-first-amendment) — *Sidley Austin LLP* (2025)
- [Federal Court Rules CA Prop 65 Dietary Acrylamide Warning Requirement is Unconstitutional](https://www.packaginglaw.com/news/federal-court-rules-ca-prop-65-dietary-acrylamide-warning-requirement-unconstitutional) — *PackagingLaw.com* (2025)
- [Prop 65 Year-End Highlights: 2024's Key Regulatory Changes, Legal Battles, and Enforcement Trends](https://www.realestatelanduseandenvironmentallaw.com/prop-65-year-end-highlights-2024s-key-regulatory-changes-legal-battles-and-enforcement-trends.html) — *Real Estate, Land Use & Environmental Law Blog* (2024)
- [Significant New Updates to the California Proposition 65 Warnings](https://www.intertek.com/blog/2025/02-05-updates-to-california-prop-65-warnings/) — *Intertek* (2025)
- [Prop 65 Clear and Reasonable Warning Regulations Coming in August 2018](https://www.steptoe.com/en/news-publications/prop-65-clear-and-reasonable-warning-regulations-coming-in-august-2018.html) — *Steptoe & Johnson LLP* (2018)
- [A Wide Reach: California's Prop 65 and Reduced Chemical Exposures Across the United States](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11651356/) — *Environmental Health Perspectives / PMC* (2024)
- [Household Appliances - Proposition 65 Warnings Fact Sheets](https://www.p65warnings.ca.gov/fact-sheets/household-appliances) — *California OEHHA* (2024)
- [Revised Proposition 65 Short-Form Warnings, Explained](https://www.assent.com/blog/revised-proposition-65-short-form-warnings-explained/) — *Assent Compliance* (2024)
- [Annual Reports of Settlements - California Department of Justice](https://oag.ca.gov/prop65/annual-settlement-reports) — *California Office of the Attorney General* (2024)

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Source: https://www.r3recs.com/learn/standards/prop-65
Methodology: https://www.r3recs.com/methodology/how-we-score-products