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Xylitol vs Erythorbic Acid: which is worse?

Quick answer: Both score equally on our risk model. Xylitol is allowed in the EU and allowed in the US; Erythorbic Acid is allowed in the EU and allowed in the US.

PropertyXylitolErythorbic Acid
EU statusAllowedAllowed
US statusAllowedAllowed
Risk levellowlow
Banned in
Restricted in
Categoryadditivepreservative
Where it hidesTrident Sugar-Free Gum, Epic Dental Gum, Spry GumOscar Mayer Hot Dogs, Hillshire Farm Sausage, Boar's Head Ham

What is Xylitol?

Xylitol is a five-carbon sugar alcohol (pentitol) naturally found in birch wood, corn cobs, fruits, and vegetables. It has the same sweetness as sucrose but provides 40% fewer calories and does not raise blood glucose or insulin levels. Most commercial xylitol is produced from xylose derived from corn cob or hardwood hemicellulose hydrolysis.

What is Erythorbic Acid?

Erythorbic acid is a stereoisomer of ascorbic acid (vitamin C) produced by fermentation of sucrose. While it has similar antioxidant properties to vitamin C, it has very little vitamin C activity (approximately 5%). It is primarily used in meat curing to accelerate the conversion of nitrite to nitric oxide, thereby speeding up the development of the characteristic pink color in cured meats.

Documented risks

Xylitol: Xylitol is safe for humans at normal consumption levels. Like other sugar alcohols, it can cause osmotic diarrhea and gastrointestinal upset at doses above 40–70 g/day. Critically, xylitol is highly toxic to dogs — even small amounts (0.1 g/kg body weight) can cause severe hypoglycemia and hepatic failure in canines, as documented in multiple veterinary case reports. The FDA and ASPCA have both issued warnings about xylitol pet toxicity. For humans, it is well-tolerated and has dental benefits.

Erythorbic Acid: Erythorbic acid is generally recognized as safe. It is not carcinogenic, mutagenic, or teratogenic. At very high doses in animal studies, no toxicity was observed. It is metabolized similarly to ascorbic acid. When used alongside nitrites in cured meats, it serves the beneficial function of reducing nitrosamine formation, potentially making cured meats somewhat safer. No significant adverse effects have been documented at food use levels.

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