Skip to main content

Butylated Hydroxyanisole vs Potassium Sorbate: which is worse?

Quick answer: Butylated Hydroxyanisole carries the heavier risk profile. Butylated Hydroxyanisole is in the EU and in the US; Potassium Sorbate is in the EU and in the US.

PropertyButylated HydroxyanisolePotassium Sorbate
EU status
US status
Risk level
Banned inJapan (banned for foods containing fats and oils)
Restricted inEuropean Union (restricted; banned in baby food), United KingdomEuropean Union (ADI 3 mg/kg body weight; maximum permitted levels vary by food category), Australia
Categoryadditiveadditive
Where it hides

What is Butylated Hydroxyanisole?

Butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA) is a synthetic phenolic antioxidant preservative derived from petroleum (see also bha entry). It is a mixture of 2-BHA and 3-BHA isomers, used to prevent oxidative rancidity in fats, oils, and fat-containing foods. Chemical formula C11H16O2.

What is Potassium Sorbate?

Potassium sorbate is the potassium salt of sorbic acid, a naturally occurring short-chain fatty acid originally derived from the mountain ash berry (Sorbus aucuparia). Commercial potassium sorbate is synthetically produced by reacting sorbic acid with potassium hydroxide. It is the most widely used food preservative globally.

Documented risks

Butylated Hydroxyanisole: IARC classifies BHA as Group 2B (possible human carcinogen) based on forestomach tumor studies in rodents at high doses. The NTP lists it as 'reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen.' EFSA's 2012 review found endocrine-disrupting potential. Japan banned it for food use. The FDA permits it at 0.02% of fat content. Concerns about estrogen-receptor interaction have been documented in animal studies. Contact dermatitis from cosmetic use is reported.

Potassium Sorbate: Potassium sorbate has a generally good safety profile compared to other synthetic preservatives. EFSA's 2015 re-evaluation maintained the ADI at 3 mg/kg body weight, finding no significant carcinogenicity or genotoxicity. However, some human and in vitro studies have documented concerns. A 2010 study in Toxicology in Vitro found potassium sorbate was genotoxic (caused DNA strand breaks) in human blood cells at concentrations achievable in food. The study found it damaged peripheral blood lymphocytes. A 2014 study in Food and Chemical Toxicology found potassium sorbate caused DNA damage in human lymphocytes at food use concentrations. Contact dermatitis and allergic reactions from topical use are documented. At very high doses in animal studies, liver and kidney effects have been observed. The general regulatory consensus is that potassium sorbate is one of the safer food preservatives, but the in vitro genotoxicity findings deserve attention.

Got either one in your pantry?

Scan a barcode and we'll flag both Butylated Hydroxyanisole and Potassium Sorbate (plus 200+ other ingredients banned overseas).

Scan free →
Sign up free — 5 scans every day →