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Yellow Dye 5 vs High-Fructose Corn Syrup: which is worse?

Quick answer: Yellow Dye 5 carries the heavier risk profile. Yellow Dye 5 is in the EU and in the US; High-Fructose Corn Syrup is in the EU and in the US.

PropertyYellow Dye 5High-Fructose Corn Syrup
EU status
US status
Risk level
Banned inNorway (historical), Finland (historical), Austria (historical)
Restricted inEuropean Union (mandatory warning label: 'may have an adverse effect on activity and attention in children'), United KingdomEuropean Union (historically limited by isoglucose quota system making it economically noncompetitive; quotas removed 2017 but EU sugar industry remains dominant)
Categoryadditiveadditive
Where it hides

What is Yellow Dye 5?

Yellow Dye 5 (tartrazine) is a synthetic lemon-yellow azo dye derived from petroleum. It produces a bright, stable yellow color in acidic conditions and is one of the most widely used yellow dyes globally. Its chemical formula is C16H9N4Na3O9S2.

What is High-Fructose Corn Syrup?

High-fructose corn syrup (HFCS) is a liquid sweetener produced by enzymatically converting a portion of corn syrup's glucose to fructose. The most common forms are HFCS-55 (55% fructose, 45% glucose, used primarily in beverages) and HFCS-42 (42% fructose, used in processed foods). It became dominant in the US food supply in the 1970s-1980s.

Documented risks

Yellow Dye 5: Yellow Dye 5 was one of six dyes studied in the landmark 2007 McCann et al. study in The Lancet. The study found statistically significant increases in hyperactivity in children ages 3 and 8–9 given a mixture containing tartrazine and sodium benzoate. EFSA reviewed the evidence and confirmed the effect was real, mandating the EU warning label from 2010. A 2012 review in Neurotherapeutics (Arnold et al.) confirmed that artificial food colors including tartrazine have a small but statistically significant adverse effect on children's behavior that is not confined to those with diagnosed ADHD. Tartrazine is one of the most documented causes of food dye hypersensitivity. Cross-reactivity with aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid, ASA) is well established in allergy literature: individuals with aspirin hypersensitivity have elevated risk of reacting to tartrazine. Symptoms include urticaria, angioedema, rhinitis, and in rare cases anaphylaxis. Prevalence of tartrazine sensitivity is estimated at 0.1% of the population but higher in aspirin-sensitive individuals. Because of this known hypersensitivity risk, the FDA specifically requires Yellow No. 5 to be declared by name on US food labels — an exceptional requirement not applied to most other additives, reflecting the FDA's acknowledgment of this real clinical concern. EFSA's 2009 re-evaluation found no evidence of genotoxicity in standard test systems at food use levels, setting an ADI of 7.5 mg/kg body weight, but noted in vitro evidence at higher doses. In April 2025, the FDA announced plans to phase out Yellow 5 along with other petroleum-based dyes.

High-Fructose Corn Syrup: HFCS has been at the center of one of nutrition science's most contentious debates for 30+ years. The core concern is that fructose is metabolized differently than glucose: fructose is processed primarily in the liver where it can be converted to fat (de novo lipogenesis), contributing to non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and elevated triglycerides. A landmark 2004 paper by Bray, Nielsen, and Popkin in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition proposed that the increase in HFCS consumption from the 1970s tracked with rising obesity rates. This hypothesis was widely publicized but contested; subsequent controlled research found that HFCS and sucrose produce similar metabolic effects calorie-for-calorie. However, the broader research on fructose metabolism supports metabolic concerns. A 2012 PLOS ONE study (Basu et al.) found higher sugar-sweetened beverage consumption associated with increased rates of metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes. A 2012 Nature commentary by Lustig, Schmidt, and Brindis ('The Toxic Truth About Sugar') argued fructose's hepatic metabolism makes it uniquely harmful — prompting significant scientific debate. Key established effects of high fructose intake include: increased visceral fat, elevated blood triglycerides, increased uric acid (gout risk), worsened insulin resistance, and accelerated NAFLD progression. These effects occur with high fructose intake from any source (HFCS or sucrose), making HFCS no inherently worse than sucrose at equivalent doses — but its ubiquity in US processed foods contributes to chronically elevated fructose exposure at a population level. Mercury contamination: in 2009, independent testing by the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy (IATP) and a study in Environmental Health found mercury traces in some HFCS samples from certain manufacturers using mercury-grade caustic soda. The industry has largely transitioned to mercury-free processing since these findings.

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