Safe Cookware Matters

Cookware can directly affect what ends up in your food. Some materials can leach chemicals or heavy metals when overheated, scratched, or used over time. Choosing safer cookware helps reduce exposure to unwanted substances while often offering better durability and performance.

Safe cookware is typically made without:

PFAS / PFOA / PTFE (often found in traditional non-stick coatings)  

PFAS, PFOA, and PTFE Explained:

PFAS

Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances

A large group of man-made chemicals

Used to make cookware non-stick, water-repellent, and stain-resistant

Often called “forever chemicals” because they don’t break down easily

PFAS is the umbrella term that includes many chemicals, PFOA and PTFE are part of this family.

PFOA

Perfluorooctanoic Acid

A specific PFAS chemical

Formerly used in the manufacturing of non-stick coatings

Phased out in the U.S. due to health and environmental concerns

Still often listed so shoppers know it is NOT present

PFOA-free means it wasn’t used in making the coating.

PTFE

Polytetrafluoroethylene

The actual non-stick coating on many pans (commonly known by the brand name Teflon)

Modern PTFE cookware is usually PFOA-free

However, PTFE is still considered a PFAS-based coating

This is why some brands say PFOA-free but not PFAS-free.

Look for cookware labeled:

PFAS-free
PFOA-free
Lead-free

Cookware Materials Considered Safe

Stainless Steel

Cast Iron (Seasoned)

Enameled Cast Iron

Ceramic (True Ceramic, Not Just Coated)

Carbon Steel

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12/14/2025 04:16 pm GMT

What to Be Cautious About

Very cheap non-stick pans with unclear labeling

“Ceramic-coated” cookware without safety disclosures

Older imported cookware with unknown glazing standards

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