Formaldehyde (free) vs Blue Dye 1: which is worse?
Quick answer: Formaldehyde (free) carries the heavier risk profile. Formaldehyde (free) is banned in the EU and allowed in the US; Blue Dye 1 is — in the EU and — in the US.
| Property | Formaldehyde (free) | Blue Dye 1 |
|---|---|---|
| EU status | Banned | — |
| US status | Allowed | — |
| Risk level | high | — |
| Banned in | European Union | Belgium (historical), France (historical), Germany (historical), Switzerland (historical), Sweden (historical), Austria (historical) |
| Restricted in | — | European Union (permitted as E133 but with less use than in US) |
| Category | cmr | additive |
| Where it hides | nail hardener, keratin treatment, eyelash glue | — |
What is Formaldehyde (free)?
Formaldehyde (free) is free formaldehyde used directly as a preservative and in salon hair treatments.
What is Blue Dye 1?
Blue Dye 1 (Brilliant Blue FCF) is a synthetic blue triarylmethane dye derived from petroleum. It produces a brilliant sky-blue color and is highly water-soluble. Unlike the azo dyes (Red 40, Yellow 5/6), Blue 1 belongs to the triarylmethane chemical class.
Documented risks
Formaldehyde (free): A known human carcinogen (IARC Group 1). Banned from direct use in EU cosmetics; allowed in US products with limited oversight.
Blue Dye 1: Blue Dye 1 was historically banned in several European countries before EU harmonization permitted it (as E133). EFSA's 2010 comprehensive safety re-evaluation found no evidence of carcinogenicity in standard animal tests. The ADI was set at 6 mg/kg body weight. The most significant documented safety concern for Blue 1 involves intravenous/enteral administration rather than dietary intake. In 2003, the FDA issued a Public Health Advisory warning against using Blue 1 (used as a food coloring agent in enteral nutrition formulas to detect aspiration in critically ill patients) after multiple case reports — including deaths — documented that Blue 1 can be absorbed through damaged intestinal mucosa and cause cardiovascular instability, metabolic acidosis, and death. The FDA advisory specifically warned against this clinical use in intensive care patients. This is a medical use concern, not a dietary intake concern. For healthy consumers eating normally, EFSA found no significant safety concerns at food use levels. Blue 1 was not included in the 2007 Lancet hyperactivity study. However, it falls under the FDA's April 2025 announcement to phase out all petroleum-based synthetic food dyes, reflecting updated policy on the class as a whole rather than specific Blue 1 data. Historically, Blue 1 was banned in multiple European countries due to safety concerns, though EU harmonization later permitted it with E-number labeling requirements. This history suggests precautionary concern even when formal regulatory action was not sustained.
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