Skip to main content

Perfluorinated Compounds (PFAS) vs Sodium Aluminum Phosphate: which is worse?

Quick answer: Perfluorinated Compounds (PFAS) carries the heavier risk profile. Perfluorinated Compounds (PFAS) is in the EU and in the US; Sodium Aluminum Phosphate is in the EU and in the US.

PropertyPerfluorinated Compounds (PFAS)Sodium Aluminum Phosphate
EU status
US status
Risk level
Banned inEuropean Union (broadly restricting PFAS in food contact materials since 2020; EU-wide PFAS restriction proposal under REACH), Denmark (banned PFAS in all food packaging 2020)
Restricted inUnited States (EPA has set maximum contaminant levels for 6 PFAS in drinking water in 2024; FDA has been working with industry to phase out certain PFAS from food packaging)European Union (restricted in baby food and specific food categories), Australia (restricted levels)
Categoryadditiveadditive
Where it hides

What is Perfluorinated Compounds (PFAS)?

Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are a large family of synthetic chemicals characterized by extremely strong carbon-fluorine bonds. They are used in food packaging (grease-resistant coatings), non-stick cookware (PTFE/Teflon), food processing equipment, firefighting foam, and many industrial applications. The 'forever chemicals' moniker reflects their extreme environmental persistence.

What is Sodium Aluminum Phosphate?

Sodium aluminum phosphate (SALP) is a leavening acid and food additive used in baked goods, particularly self-rising flour and baking powder. It provides a slow, sustained leavening action during baking. SALP is also used as an emulsifying salt in processed cheese products.

Documented risks

Perfluorinated Compounds (PFAS): PFAS are among the most extensively studied and harmful groups of synthetic chemicals in the modern environment. Their unique carbon-fluorine bond stability means they do not break down in the environment or in human body tissues — contributing to bioaccumulation over a lifetime. Health effects documented in human epidemiological studies include: - Cancer: PFOA (perfluorooctanoic acid) and PFOS (perfluorooctanesulfonic acid) have been associated with kidney cancer, testicular cancer, thyroid cancer, bladder cancer, and non-Hodgkin lymphoma in occupationally exposed workers and community members with contaminated drinking water. IARC classified PFOA as Group 1 (human carcinogen) in 2023 and PFOS as Group 2B. - Endocrine disruption: PFAS disrupt thyroid hormone signaling and sex hormone balance. Multiple studies find associations between PFAS exposure and hypothyroidism, early puberty in girls, and reduced sperm quality. - Immune suppression: studies have found that PFAS exposure is associated with reduced vaccine response in children and adults, suggesting PFAS may impair immune function. - Developmental effects: prenatal PFAS exposure has been associated with lower birth weight, developmental delays, and reduced immune response in infants. - Cholesterol: PFAS exposure consistently raises LDL cholesterol levels, increasing cardiovascular disease risk. The 2023 EPA MCLG (maximum contaminant level goal) for PFOA and PFOS is zero — reflecting the agency's conclusion that there is no safe level. The EPA set enforceable MCLs in drinking water in 2024. The DuPont/3M PFOA/PFOS contamination of drinking water in communities near Teflon manufacturing facilities led to a $671 million settlement (DuPont/Chemours, 2017) and $10.3 billion 3M settlement (2023) — among the largest environmental contamination settlements in history.

Sodium Aluminum Phosphate: The primary health concern with SALP is aluminum exposure. Dietary aluminum intake has been studied in relation to neurotoxicity, and there is ongoing scientific debate about whether chronic dietary aluminum exposure contributes to Alzheimer's disease risk. EFSA's 2008 review of dietary aluminum exposure concluded that the tolerable weekly intake (TWI) was being exceeded by some European populations based on total dietary aluminum sources, raising concern. A 2011 EFSA risk assessment noted that certain high-aluminum sources (including baked goods from SALP-containing leavening agents) contributed meaningfully to total dietary aluminum. The WHO has set a PTWI (provisional tolerable weekly intake) of 2 mg/kg body weight/week for total aluminum. However, the causal link between dietary aluminum from food-grade SALP and Alzheimer's disease has not been definitively established in human studies.

Got either one in your pantry?

Scan a barcode and we'll flag both Perfluorinated Compounds (PFAS) and Sodium Aluminum Phosphate (plus 200+ other ingredients banned overseas).

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