Here’s the latest I can share on FDA infant formula safety results.
Direct answer
- The FDA has released results from its largest-ever testing of infant formula in the U.S., finding that the overwhelming majority of samples had undetectable or very low levels of contaminants and that the U.S. infant formula supply is safe.[1][3][4]
What the findings cover
- The testing analyzed more than 300 infant formula samples across products sold at retail, testing for lead, mercury, cadmium, arsenic, pesticides (including glyphosate and glufosinate), PFAS, and phthalates, among other contaminants. Overall contaminant levels were low, with many samples showing undetectable levels.[2][3][1]
What this means for parents and caregivers
- The FDA states it will continue monitoring and conducting follow-up testing, including for additional contaminants, and will work with manufacturers to reduce contaminant levels further. The agency emphasized that the current results support the safety of the U.S. infant formula supply, though some experts and consumer groups note ongoing concerns about certain chemicals and pulling tainted products quickly from shelves.[3][1][2]
Important nuances
- While the overall results are reassuring, observers caution that “forever chemicals” (PFAS) and certain other contaminants may still be present at trace levels, and they call for ongoing vigilance and testing. The FDA’s position remains that most products meet high safety standards, but continued action and monitoring are planned to minimize any risk further.[7][2]
Context and sources
- The FDA press release announcing the results was issued in late April 2026 and describes the “largest and most rigorous” testing effort to date, with actions including further testing and potential regulatory steps as needed. Additional coverage from trade and media outlets echoed the FDA’s conclusions and noted independent experts’ nuanced views.[4][5][6][1][3]
If you’d like, I can pull a short, parent-friendly summary with direct quotes from the FDA release and prepare a quick checklist for safe formula use based on these findings. I can also monitor for any follow-up action levels or recalls that the FDA announces. Would you like that?
Citations:
- FDA results overview and conclusions[1]
- FDA testing details and contaminants tested[2]
- FDA confirms safety of U.S. infant formula supply[3]
- Additional media coverage on the FDA analysis and its implications[4]
Sources
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced that an examination into chemical contaminants in infant formula found “an overwhelming majority of samples had undetectable or very low levels of contaminants, affirming that the U.S. infant formula supply is safe.”
news.uthsc.eduThe Food and Drug Administration April 29 announced results from its testing of more than 300 infant formulas, finding that the majority of samples had undetectable or very low levels of contaminants, deeming the U.S. supply to be safe.
www.aha.orgFDA announces results from the largest and most rigorous examination ever conducted focused on chemical contaminants in infant formula available on the U.S. market.
www.fda.govAfter what it calls “the largest and most rigorous examination ever conducted” on infant formula, the agency said the vast majority of the U.S. supply is safe.
www.foodprocessing.comThe FDA analyzed more than 300 retail products, generating over 120,000 data points across a wide range of potential chemical contaminants. Testing included baby for
natlawreview.comFederal health officials said a new analysis of U.S. infant formula found reassuringly low levels of heavy metals, pesticides and other potential contaminants
www.goodmorningamerica.comThe FDA released the first testing results from Operation Stork Speed, finding "overwhelming majority" of baby formulas meet high national safety standards.
www.fox13now.comFederal health officials said a new analysis of U.S. infant formula found reassuringly low levels of heavy metals, pesticides and other potential contaminants. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration tested more than 300 samples of commercial infant formula between 2023 and 2025 for heavy metals, including lead, arsenic, cadmium and mercury. The agency also tested for pesticides, chemicals found in plastics known as phthalates and PFAS, or per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances sometimes called...
www.ajc.comAccording to FDA infant formula safety testing released this week, the overwhelming majority of U.S. infant formula samples contained undetectable or very low
roalog.comInfant Formula
www.fda.gov