Skip to main content

Yellow Dye 6 vs Dimethylpolysiloxane: which is worse?

Quick answer: Yellow Dye 6 carries the heavier risk profile. Yellow Dye 6 is in the EU and in the US; Dimethylpolysiloxane is in the EU and in the US.

PropertyYellow Dye 6Dimethylpolysiloxane
EU status
US status
Risk level
Banned inNorway (historical), Finland (historical)
Restricted inEuropean Union (mandatory warning label: 'may have an adverse effect on activity and attention in children'), United KingdomEuropean Union (E900 permitted; ADI not specified based on current data)
Categoryadditiveadditive
Where it hides

What is Yellow Dye 6?

Yellow Dye 6 (Sunset Yellow FCF) is a synthetic orange-yellow azo dye derived from petroleum. It produces a bright orange-yellow color and is structurally similar to Yellow 5 but produces a more orange shade. Its chemical formula is C16H10N2Na2O7S2.

What is Dimethylpolysiloxane?

Dimethylpolysiloxane (PDMS, polydimethylsiloxane) is a silicone-based polymer used as an antifoaming agent in food and beverages. It prevents the formation of foam during food manufacturing and cooking. It is the same base material used in silicone cookware, medical devices, and contact lenses.

Documented risks

Yellow Dye 6: Yellow Dye 6 was included in the 2007 Lancet study (McCann et al.), which found that a mixture of six dyes including Yellow 6 and sodium benzoate significantly increased hyperactivity in children. EFSA confirmed the effect warranted mandatory warning labels in the EU. EFSA's 2009 re-evaluation examined animal carcinogenicity data and found some studies showing adrenal tumors in male mice at high doses. EFSA set an ADI of 2.5 mg/kg body weight — lower than Yellow 5's ADI of 7.5 mg/kg, reflecting greater concern. The review noted limitations in the available data. Impurity concerns: commercial batches of Yellow 6 have been found to contain aromatic amine impurities including benzidine and 4-aminobiphenyl — both IARC Group 1 human carcinogens. A 1992 CSPI analysis documented these impurities, citing them as reason for concern. A 2007 study in Toxicological Sciences found Yellow 6 altered zinc and iron biomarker levels in rat blood at high doses, raising mineral metabolism concerns. Human relevance at typical exposure is unclear. Hypersensitivity reactions including urticaria, rhinitis, and contact dermatitis are documented. Cross-reactivity with aspirin is reported similarly to Yellow 5. In April 2025, the FDA announced plans to phase out Yellow 6 with other petroleum-based dyes.

Dimethylpolysiloxane: Dimethylpolysiloxane is generally considered non-toxic. It is not absorbed by the gut and passes through the digestive system unchanged. The FDA permits it at up to 10 ppm in cooking oils. EFSA's evaluation found no evidence of toxicity at permitted food use levels. There are no established cancer or reproductive toxicity concerns with PDMS at food use concentrations. The compound is the same base polymer used in many safe medical applications including contact lenses and breast implants (though the medical grade is different purity). The main environmental concern is PDMS persistence in the environment, as it is not readily biodegradable. Primary consumer concern is psychological rather than toxicological: the fact that it is used in both McDonald's frying oil and Silly Putty (which also contains PDMS) generates public attention, but the chemistries are actually different grades of the same polymer family.

Got either one in your pantry?

Scan a barcode and we'll flag both Yellow Dye 6 and Dimethylpolysiloxane (plus 200+ other ingredients banned overseas).

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