A mind blowing fact (Did you know?):
Did you know brown rice typically contains ~50–80% more inorganic arsenic than white rice because arsenic concentrates in the outer bran layer that gets removed during polishing? This is why the same rice variety can have meaningfully different arsenic levels depending on whether it’s white or brown.

White Rice (Long-Grain)

Researched by:

  • Dr. Umar Aitsaam ID
    Dr. Umar Aitsaam

    User avatarClinical Pharmacist and Master’s student in Clinical Pharmacy with research interests in pharmacovigilance, behavioral interventions in mental health, and AI applications in clinical decision support. Experience includes digital health research with Bloomsbury Health (London) and pharmacovigilance practice in patient support programs. Published work covers drug awareness among healthcare providers, postpartum depression management, and patient safety reporting.

    Read More

January 26, 2026

White long-grain rice can contain trace heavy metals from soil and irrigation water. Inorganic arsenic is the most consistently measured metal in rice, while cadmium and lead may also occur at low levels. Levels vary by origin, rice type, and cooking method, and regulations limit key contaminants.

Researched by:

  • Dr. Umar Aitsaam ID
    Dr. Umar Aitsaam

    User avatarClinical Pharmacist and Master’s student in Clinical Pharmacy with research interests in pharmacovigilance, behavioral interventions in mental health, and AI applications in clinical decision support. Experience includes digital health research with Bloomsbury Health (London) and pharmacovigilance practice in patient support programs. Published work covers drug awareness among healthcare providers, postpartum depression management, and patient safety reporting.

    Read More

Last Updated: 2026-01-22

Our team of researchers are constantly monitoring and summarizing the latest research,
and we continue to update our pages to ensure you have the most accurate information.

Note on the last update: One new meta analysis added

Dr. Umar Aitsaam

Clinical Pharmacist and Master’s student in Clinical Pharmacy with research interests in pharmacovigilance, behavioral interventions in mental health, and AI applications in clinical decision support. Experience includes digital health research with Bloomsbury Health (London) and pharmacovigilance practice in patient support programs. Published work covers drug awareness among healthcare providers, postpartum depression management, and patient safety reporting.

Overview

Long-grain white rice is a staple cereal grain that can contain trace amounts of several heavy metals due to natural uptake from soil and water in flooded paddies.[1][2] The most notable is inorganic arsenic, since rice plants readily absorb arsenic from waterlogged soil. Cadmium and lead may also be present at low levels from environmental sources.[3] Other metals like mercury, nickel, tin, aluminum, and chromium are generally minimal in white rice, with higher levels mainly in unusual conditions or specific product forms. Regulatory standards (in the U.S., EU, and Codex) set maximum limits for arsenic, lead, cadmium, and now nickel in rice to protect consumers.[4]

Why metals may be present in white rice

White rice is typically grown in flooded fields, a practice that can increase the bioavailability of certain heavy metals in soil.[5] Arsenic is naturally present in some groundwater and soil minerals; under flooded (anaerobic) conditions, rice roots absorb arsenic (especially inorganic arsenic) more readily.[6] Historic use of arsenic-based pesticides or irrigation with arsenic-rich water can further elevate rice arsenic levels in some regions.[7] Cadmium and lead can enter rice from contaminated soils (e.g. near mining or industrial areas) or atmospheric deposition. Rice has a known ability to accumulate cadmium if soil levels are high,[x][x] although typical cadmium levels in market rice are low (on the order of 0.01–0.1 mg/kg) and usually below regulatory limits.[x][x] Lead uptake by rice is generally limited, but traces may come from soil or dust.

Mercury is not efficiently accumulated by rice under normal conditions, so levels are usually negligible; however, in areas with heavy mercury pollution (e.g. from mining), rice can accumulate methylmercury and become a significant exposure source.[10] Nickel is a natural component of soils, so rice and other grains contain nickel at small levels; highly nickel-rich soils (such as serpentine soils) can result in elevated nickel in rice grain. Tin is not naturally taken up by rice in notable amounts; any tin in rice would typically come from contact with tin-plated cans or containers (which is rare for dried rice). Aluminum is ubiquitous in soils and thus present at low levels in many plant foods; most unprocessed foods have <5 mg kg aluminum, and cereal products (including rice) often average around 5–10 kg,[11] partly from natural soil content. Chromium in food is almost entirely the nutritionally essential trivalent form (Cr(III)), coming from natural soil uptake or stainless steel processing equipment; toxic hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)) is not expected in rice.[12]

Variability: Metal content in rice varies by geography, farming practices, and rice type. For example, rice from regions with arsenic-rich groundwater (such as parts of South Asia or U.S. areas with past cotton farming) tends to have higher inorganic arsenic.[13] Brown rice (whole grain) contains more arsenic (and possibly cadmium) than white rice because metals concentrate in the outer bran layer that is polished off to produce white rice.[14] Within white rice, long-grain varieties like basmati or jasmine grown in low-arsenic areas often have lower arsenic than rice from high-arsenic areas.[15] Preparation and processing can also influence levels: rinsing rice removes little arsenic, but cooking rice in excess water can significantly reduce arsenic content (at the cost of water-soluble nutrients).[16] In summary, metals in white rice are generally low and influenced by environmental conditions, but inorganic arsenic stands out as a contaminant with consistent, though regulated, presence across rice from many regions.[17]

Metals Overview in White Rice

Metal (Symbol)Why it can appear in white riceRelevant form(s) in foodEvidence strength Notes on product formsRegulations & Monitoring (US/EU/Codex)
Arsenic (As)Flooded paddies mobilize As in soil/water; legacy As pesticides in some fields.[18][19]Inorganic As(III)/As(V) (key toxic forms); organic As is a smaller fraction.High: Rice is a primary dietary source of inorganic As[20]; surveys consistently find measurable iAs in rice (often 0.05–0.2 mg/kg)[3].[21]Brown rice ~50–80% higher iAs vs white (bran)[22]; parboiled often between brown and white; rice products can concentrate As.EU: iAs 0.15 mg/kg in polished white; higher for brown (0.25) and rice cakes (0.30)[5]. US: FDA iAs action level 0.10 mg/kg for infant rice cereal;[23] no general rice limit. Codex: iAs 0.2 mg/kg guideline in polished rice[5].
Lead (Pb)Soil/dust contamination; atmospheric legacy Pb deposition[3]. Rare historical processing/polishing agent contamination.Inorganic Pb (ionic Pb); all Pb in food is toxic.Moderate: Trace Pb detected globally in rice[3], typically <0.1 mg/kg; generally below limits.[24]White vs brown similar low Pb; packaging matters mainly for uncommon legacy lead-sealed containers.EU: 0.20 mg/kg in cereal grains; 0.10 mg/kg infant foods.[25]US: No rice-specific limit; broader FDA lead guidance + monitoring. Codex: 0.2 mg/kg in cereals[24].
Cadmium (Cd)Soil Cd (natural + fertilizer impurities); elevated near mining/smelting; uptake influenced by soil chemistry (e.g., low Zn).[26]Inorganic Cd (Cd2+) bound in grain; bioaccumulative.High: Strong rice occurrence evidence; most market rice low (~0.03–0.1 mg/kg),[27] but higher in polluted areas (can exceed limits)[28]; cereals contribute meaningfully to dietary Cd.[29]Brown rice may be slightly higher than white (bran)[30]; bran/protein powders can concentrate; cooking doesn’t meaningfully remove Cd.EU: 0.20 mg/kg in polished rice; lower in some infant cereals (e.g., 0.04–0.05 mg/kg). US: No specific Cd ML in rice; risk-based oversight. Codex: Proposed 0.2 mg/kg (debate vs 0.4)[29].
Mercury (Hg)Usually negligible; relevant mainly in heavily polluted soils/waters (mining/coal) where methylation can occur.[31]Methylmercury (MeHg) documented in rice from Hg hotspots;[32] total Hg otherwise mainly inorganic/very low.Limited: Typically below detection in rice[33]; evidence mainly from specific hotspot settings where rice MeHg mattered.[34]White/brown differences minimal; only notable in contaminated locales; cooking doesn’t reduce Hg.EU: No cereal ML for Hg (focus on fish/salt).[35]US/Codex: No rice-specific limits; Hg controls focus on fish.
Nickel (Ni)Natural soil/water Ni; higher in Ni-rich/acidic soils[12]; minor contributions possible from processing equipment.Inorganic Ni2+ (no special “organic” Ni form in rice).Moderate: Risk assessments show grains contribute to Ni intake[36]; EU monitoring supports concern for children and drove new MLs.[37]Limited evidence of white vs brown differences; bran may carry slightly more if soil particles adhere; cooking doesn’t remove Ni; infant cereals could concentrate.EU (2025/2026): MLs 1.5 mg/kg polished rice; 2 mg/kg husked/brown,[38] effective by 2026.[39]US/Codex: No specific Ni limits; EFSA TDI 13 µg/kg bw/week.[40]
Tin (Sn)Not intrinsic; mainly from tin-plated cans/containers (rare for dry rice) where inorganic tin can leach[40].Inorganic tin (Sn2+) from packaging; organic tin not relevant.Limited: Rice usually tin-free; evidence largely theoretical/isolated canned rice-type products.Dry bagged rice essentially tin-free; any concern is canned/ready-to-eat rice meals; can lacquers reduce leaching.EU/Codex: Generic tin ML 200 mg/kg in canned foods (50–100 mg/kg infant canned foods).[41]US: ~250 mg/kg guidance for canned foods; none for dry rice.
Aluminum (Al)Natural soil Al uptake[42]; sometimes higher in processed cereals via Al-containing additives; residual soil/clay dust possible.Insoluble Al complexes/aluminosilicates; not metallic Al.Moderate: Broad surveys show cereals often ~5–10 mg/kg Al;[43] contributes to dietary Al intake.[44]Brown may be slightly higher (bran + soil particles) but data limited; processed rice foods can be higher with additives[45]; some cookware leaching possible.EU: No food ML; TWI 1 mg/kg bw/week[46]; additives regulated; EFSA notes cereals can be notable sources partly via additives.[47]US: No direct ML; oversight via additives/food-contact + total diet studies.
Chromium (Cr)Trace soil uptake + possible stainless-steel contact during milling/cooking; industrial Cr(VI) contamination is atypical for paddies.Cr(III) (typical in foods; essential)[48]; Cr(VI) toxic but not expected in normal food crops[48].Limited: Food data don’t flag rice for Cr; Cr is ubiquitous but not concentrated in particular foods.[49]White/brown differences not established; Cr(VI) would imply unusual industrial contamination; stainless steel may add trivial trace Cr.No food MLs; regulation focuses on water/workplace for Cr(VI); dietary Cr largely Cr(III) at low levels.[50]

Evidence strength key:High = multiple studies or regulatory data show consistent presence and risk; Moderate = some data available, contaminant known in this food at low levels; Limited = scarce data or generally not an issue in this food.

Practical considerations for consumers

Diversify your diet: Eating a variety of grains (not just rice) can reduce reliance on any single food that may contain a trace contaminant.[51] For example, alternate white rice with other grains like quinoa, barley, or oats in your meals. A varied diet dilutes potential exposure to any one metal and provides a broader nutrient profile.[52]

Choose rice sources wisely: If concerned about arsenic, consider the type and origin of your rice. Aromatic long-grain rice like basmati and jasmine from low-arsenic regions (e.g. parts of India, Pakistan, or California) tend to have less inorganic arsenic than rice from higher-arsenic regions (such as some areas of the southern United States.[53] White rice generally contains significantly less arsenic than brown rice of the same origin.[54] While brown rice has nutritional benefits, you may balance its higher arsenic level by mixing with other grains or using white rice and getting fiber/micronutrients from other foods.[55]

Preparation methods: Cooking rice in excess water and draining it (like pasta) can reduce inorganic arsenic by ~40–60%.[56] For example, use a 6:1 water-to-rice ratio, boil, then drain the extra water. This technique is effective especially for arsenic, which is water-soluble.[57] Note that rinsing rice before cooking has minimal impact on arsenic levels[58] (and rinsing can wash away some added nutrients if the rice is enriched). Additionally, cooking in excess water may remove some B vitamins (added to enriched white rice),[59] so ensure you get those nutrients from other sources or consider using this method primarily when arsenic reduction is a priority (such as when cooking for infants).

Limit rice-based infant foods: For parents, it’s advisable to vary an infant’s grains and not rely solely on rice cereal.[60] Pediatric experts recommend offering oats, barley, or multigrain infant cereals in addition to rice cereal.[61] This diversification helps minimize arsenic exposure during infancy, a period of greater vulnerability.[62] If you do use infant rice cereal, you can prepare it with excess water and drain it (if feasible) to lower arsenic, or serve smaller portions alongside other cereals.

Storage and cookware: Store rice in dry, airtight conditions – heavy metals won’t multiply or diminish in storage, but keeping rice dry prevents mold (mycotoxins can be another concern unrelated to metals). Use clean, food-grade containers (glass or BPA-free plastic); avoid old ceramic jars with unknown glazes (some antique glazes had lead). When cooking, most modern cookware (stainless steel, enameled, etc.) is safe. Uncoated aluminum pots can leach aluminum into food, especially if holding acidic ingredients; however, plain rice is not acidic, so leaching is minimal. If you frequently cook acidic dishes with rice (like tomato-based recipes) in aluminum, consider using anodized or stainless cookware to be cautious.[63]

Stay informed: Check for consumer advisories if you eat a lot of rice. Regulators like FDA, EFSA, and WHO periodically update guidance on heavy metals in food. For instance, the FDA’s Closer to Zero program is working on lowering heavy metal exposures in baby foods (including rice products). Buying rice from reputable brands that test their products (some brands publish testing for arsenic) can offer extra assurance. Organic rice has no advantage regarding heavy metals, since metals come from soil and water (organic certification doesn’t limit soil metals).[64] So, focus more on origin and preparation than on organic vs conventional when it comes to metal content.

FAQs

How does white rice compare to brown rice in terms of heavy metal content?

Brown rice (whole grain) tends to have higher concentrations of certain metals, especially inorganic arsenic, compared to white rice. This is because arsenic accumulates in the rice bran and germ, which are removed to produce white rice.[65] On average, brown rice has been found to have about 50–80% more inorganic arsenic than white rice of the same variety.[66] Brown rice may also have slightly more cadmium and lead since those can reside in the outer layers, but the arsenic difference is the most pronounced. On the other hand, brown rice contains more nutrients (fiber, vitamins, minerals) than white rice. For most adults, the nutritional benefits of brown rice can outweigh the small increase in heavy metals, especially if your overall diet isn’t over-reliant on rice. If you eat a lot of brown rice, it’s wise to prepare it in ways that reduce arsenic (cook in extra water and drain)[67] and to balance your intake with other grains. White rice, being lower in arsenic, is a good choice when feeding infants or children, but remember that enriched white rice has added nutrients that can be partially lost if you rinse or cook it in excess water.[68]

Are there regulations that protect consumers from heavy metals in rice?

Yes. Both at the national and international level, there are standards in place. In the European Union, specific maximum levels are set for arsenic, lead, cadmium, and (soon) nickel in rice and rice products.[69] For example, the EU cap for inorganic arsenic in polished white rice is 0.15 mg/kg[5], for lead in cereals (including rice) is 0.20 mg/kg,[70] and for cadmium in rice is 0.20 mg/kg. The Codex Alimentarius (international food standards body) has similar guideline levels, such as 0.2 mg/kg for arsenic and lead in rice[24]. The U.S. FDA has issued an action level of 0.1 mg/kg for inorganic arsenic specifically in infant rice cereals[71] and is working on lead limits for baby foods, though there isn’t a set arsenic limit for rice in general retail. These regulations and guidelines are based on risk assessments to ensure that typical consumption of rice stays within safe intake levels for these metals[61].[72] Additionally, agencies conduct surveillance: for instance, FDA has tested hundreds of rice samples for arsenic and other metals,[73] and the results inform consumer guidance. All these efforts mean that the rice you buy is highly likely to comply with safety standards, and products exceeding limits should be pulled from the market.

Can I reduce heavy metal content by washing or cooking rice differently?

Partially, yes for certain metals (not all). Rinsing rice thoroughly with water before cooking has minimal effect on arsenic – studies and FDA research found it doesn’t significantly lower arsenic in the cooked rice.[74] Rinsing does remove surface dust and reduces starch (making rice less sticky), but it also washes away some of the iron, folate, and vitamins added to enriched white rice.[75] The more effective method is to cook rice in a large volume of water and then drain it. This “parboiling” or pasta-like method can cut inorganic arsenic by almost half on average.[76] For example, after bringing rice to a boil in excess water, discard the water and add fresh water to finish cooking – one study (at University of Sheffield) showed this can remove significant arsenic while keeping most nutrients.[77] However, note that cooking in excess water doesn’t do much for metals like cadmium or lead, as these are less water-soluble than arsenic – they remain in the grain. It’s mainly recommended for arsenic reduction. Other tips: avoid using rice cooker water (which is absorbed) if arsenic is a concern – instead, you can boil on the stovetop with extra water. In summary, yes for arsenic (use more water), but no meaningful change for cadmium, lead, etc. through washing or cooking.

Does organic rice have less heavy metal content than conventional rice?

Not necessarily. Heavy metals like arsenic, cadmium, and lead come from natural soil elements or environmental pollution, and plants absorb them irrespective of organic or conventional farming methods. Organic rice fields can still have arsenic in the soil (especially if the land has arsenic naturally or from historic use of pesticides, since some arsenic-based chemicals were used decades ago).[78] In fact, arsenic was used in some old cotton fields, and even if those fields are now organic rice farms, the arsenic in soil remains. Studies have not found a consistent difference in arsenic levels between organic and non-organic rice. Similarly, cadmium and lead uptake depend on soil conditions, not on organic fertilizer vs synthetic fertilizer (with one caveat: some phosphate fertilizers in conventional farming contain cadmium as an impurity, but organic farming can also introduce metals through natural mineral fertilizers or manure). Therefore, choosing organic rice is more about reducing pesticide residues, not heavy metals. To lower heavy metal intake, focus on rice source (region), type of rice, and cooking method rather than organic labeling. Always rinse grains for quality, but remember rinsing doesn’t significantly remove metals. If available, you might look for brands that test for arsenic and publish results, whether organic or not.

I’ve heard about “baby food heavy metals” – should I be worried about rice cereal for my baby?

It’s true that recent reports have found detectable heavy metals (arsenic, lead, cadmium) in many baby foods, including rice cereal, prompting efforts like the FDA’s Closer to Zero initiative. Infant rice cereal can contain inorganic arsenic because it’s often made from rice flour (and rice, as discussed, has arsenic). Infants are more vulnerable due to their small body weight and developing systems.[79] The good news is that the FDA has set a guideline of 100 ppb (0.1 mg/kg) for arsenic in infant rice cereal,[80] and most manufacturers have adjusted processes or sourcing to meet it. If you feed your baby rice cereal, you can take steps to minimize exposure: rotate cereals (e.g. oat, barley, multigrain cereal on some days instead of rice every day),[81] and prepare rice cereal with excess water then drain (if the preparation allows) to cut down arsenic. Also, watch total intake – infants don’t need large quantities of rice cereal; it’s usually for practice eating and iron fortification. You can also incorporate other iron-fortified foods. Remember that breastmilk or formula remains the main nutrition in the first year, with cereals and purees as supplements. By diversifying grains and following serving size guidance, you can greatly reduce any potential risk while still getting the benefits of rice cereal (like iron). Always stay updated with pediatric and FDA advice; the awareness around heavy metals in baby foods is leading to stricter standards and safer products[61].[82]

Is there a way to remove heavy metals from rice at home (e.g., special filters or treatments)?

Apart from the cooking method mentioned for arsenic, there’s no practical home method to “filter out” metals from the rice grain itself. Heavy metals are mostly inside the grain or bound to it at a microscopic level; you can’t simply wash them away with gadgets or filters. Some experimental studies have tried tactics like polishing brown rice further or milling techniques to remove more surface bran (which holds arsenic), but those aren’t feasible at home and essentially turn brown rice into white rice. There are no food-safe chemical treatments to bind metals that one could apply at home. The best “treatment” is pre-cooking: rinsing (for cleanliness, though it doesn’t remove metals much) and cooking with excess water for arsenic. Do be wary of any products or supplements that claim to “chelate” or remove heavy metals from foods – these are not proven and could be unsafe. It’s more effective to source rice wisely and use good cooking practices. If you are extremely concerned and want to go further, you could reduce consumption of the rice’s cooking water (for example, if making rice pudding, don’t use the water from the first boil). But for the most part, trust that if you follow the earlier advice, you are already substantially minimizing heavy metal exposure. Major public health agencies have not recommended any additional home interventions beyond what we’ve discussed.

What are producers or regulators doing to reduce heavy metals in rice?

Quite a lot is happening behind the scenes. On the agricultural side, researchers are developing rice varieties that take up less arsenic and cadmium from soil.[83] Good agricultural practices, such as using cleaner water for irrigation and optimizing soil nutrients (like adding zinc, which can reduce cadmium uptake), are being promoted in rice-farming regions.[84] Some regions with high soil arsenic are exploring alternate wetting and drying irrigation (instead of continuous flooding) to limit arsenic mobilization in paddies. At the regulatory level, many countries have set stringent maximum levels as discussed, and they periodically test rice on the market. The EU recently tightened arsenic limits for certain rice products (like rice crackers and baby foods) in 2023. The FDA in the US has an ongoing monitoring program and has issued guidance to industry to source rice from lower-arsenic fields for infant products.[85] International bodies like Codex are working on harmonizing standards for heavy metals in foods so that global trade pushes everyone toward safer levels. In summary, producers are increasingly testing their products and may blend rice from different sources to stay within safety limits. Regulators are pushing for “as low as reasonably achievable” levels, especially for foods infants eat. Over time, these efforts should further lower the already-low heavy metal content in rice. As a consumer, you can have some confidence that there is a system in place watching over these contaminants – and you also have the power to minimize risk through the choices and habits we’ve discussed.

Research Feed

Food Safety: Federal Efforts to Manage the Risk of Arsenic in Rice

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Levels of heavy metal cadmium in rice (Oryza sativa L.) produced in Taiwan and probabilistic risk assessment for the Taiwanese population

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The concentration of total arsenic, cadmium, and lead in imported rice (Oryza sativa): Probabilistic health risk assessment of Iranian population

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Dietary exposure and risk characterisation of multiple chemical contaminants in rye-wheat bread marketed in Poland

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Arsenic in brown rice: do the benefits outweigh the risks

This review of arsenic-in-brown-rice concludes brown rice typically contains more inorganic arsenic than white rice, and health messaging should reflect dose-dependent risk, vulnerable populations, and measured contaminant levels. It supports certification programs emphasizing inorganic arsenic testing, thresholds, and transparent labeling.

What was reviewed? This mini-review examined arsenic-in-brown-rice as a practical risk–benefit question for consumers and public health, asking whether common messaging that promotes brown rice over white rice is scientifically justified. The authors synthesized evidence showing that inorganic arsenic concentrates in rice’s outer layers (bran and germ), which are retained in brown rice but removed during milling to make white rice, leading to systematically higher inorganic arsenic in brown rice. They also summarized how arsenic enters the food system (soil, irrigation water, historical pesticide residues), why rice is a globally relevant exposure pathway, and why translating toxicology into nutrition guidance requires explicit “dose matters” framing rather than simplistic “whole grain is always better” claims. Who was reviewed? Because this is a review, the “who” is drawn from the populations represented in the cited evidence base rather than a single enrolled cohort. The paper highlights: general rice consumers (including those increasing rice intake due to gluten-free/plant-based patterns), U.S. subpopulations whose rice-derived inorganic arsenic exposure may approach drinking-water exposure, and vulnerable life stages including pregnant people, fetuses, infants, and children who may face higher risk from arsenic-containing rice and rice-based foods. The review also references evidence from more homogeneous adult cohorts (e.g., health professionals of primarily European descent) used in benefit claims for brown rice, emphasizing that limited diversity weakens confidence in broad public guidance. Most important findings Across the evidence summarized, the central HMTC-relevant conclusion is that inorganic arsenic is consistently higher in brown rice than white rice, and risk increases with consumption amount and product type; therefore, certification and messaging should focus on measured inorganic arsenic, exposure frequency, and high-risk groups rather than assuming “brown is better.” Critical pointDetails Brown rice concentrates inorganic arsenicInorganic arsenic is enriched in bran/germ; removing these layers reduces inorganic arsenic in white rice, making brown rice higher by design of the grain anatomy and milling process.Measured level differences are substantialThe review cites consumer and FDA analyses indicating brown rice averages meaningfully higher inorganic arsenic than comparable white rice; FDA figures summarized include ~92 ppb (white) vs ~154 ppb (brown), and infant rice cereals also contain notable inorganic arsenic. Regulatory asymmetry matters for certificationU.S. drinking water has a 10 ppb total arsenic limit, but there is no equivalent universal limit for foods; rice can therefore exceed drinking-water benchmarks, making third-party certification thresholds and transparent reporting especially important. Risk is dose- and population-dependentRisk rises with intake and is especially concerning for infants/children and pregnancy-related exposures; the review links arsenic exposure to cancer outcomes emphasized in risk assessments and to broader cardiometabolic endpoints (hypertension, diabetes, obesity) discussed mechanistically and epidemiologically.“Benefit” evidence is weaker than marketing impliesClaimed cardiometabolic benefits often come from animal or extract-based studies rather than whole-grain human intake, and one highlighted diabetes risk-reduction comparison relied on a relatively homogeneous population, limiting generalizability for public guidance. Key implications For arsenic-in-brown-rice, primary regulatory impacts include treating inorganic arsenic in rice as a managed dietary exposure where “dose determines toxicity,” not a binary safe/unsafe label; HMTC-style certification requirements should specify inorganic arsenic testing, rice type labeling, and tighter criteria for infant/child products. Industry applications include sourcing strategies (origin and cultivation context), product design that avoids defaulting to brown rice in high-consumption items, and consumer-facing guidance that moderates serving frequency. Research gaps include human risk–benefit assessments that directly compare brown versus white rice patterns across diverse populations. Practical recommendations include routine batch testing, product-category thresholds, and clear disclosures for high-frequency consumers. Citation Su LJ, Chiang T-C, O’Connor SN. Arsenic in brown rice: do the benefits outweigh the risks? Frontiers in Nutrition. 2023;10:1209574. doi:10.3389/fnut.2023.1209574
Rice Is a Significant Source of Methylmercury: Research in China Assesses Exposures

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Geogenic nickel exposure from food consumption and soil ingestion: A bioavailability based assessment

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Chromium: Fact Sheet for Health Professionals

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Heavy Metal Effects on Plants and Humans: Key Findings for Safety

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Arsenic in Rice and Rice Products Risk Assessment

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Investigation of heavy metal levels in canned tomato paste, olives, and pickled

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Codex Limits For Lead and Arsenic: HTMC Benefits

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New EU Maximum Levels for Nickel Now Apply to Dozens of Foods

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Aluminium content of selected foods and food products

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EFSA Advises on the Safety of Aluminium in Food

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VKM. Assessment of dietary intake of chromium (III) in relation to tolerable upper intake level. Opinion of the Panel on Nutrition, Dietetic Products, Novel Food and Allergy of the Norwegian Scientific Committee for Food and Environment

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New way of cooking rice removes arsenic and retains mineral nutrients, study shows

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Baki bean heavy metal safety for HMTC approval

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Inorganic Arsenic Risk Assessment: HTMC Essentials

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Heavy Metals

Heavy metals are high-density elements that accumulate in the body and environment, disrupting biological processes. Lead, cadmium, arsenic, mercury, nickel, tin, aluminum, and chromium are of greatest concern due to persistence, bioaccumulation, and health risks, making them central to the HMTC program’s safety standards.

Arsenic (As)

Arsenic is a naturally occurring metalloid that ranks first on the ATSDR toxic substances list. Inorganic arsenic contaminates water, rice and consumer products, and exposure is linked to cardiovascular disease, cognitive deficits, low birth weight and cancer. HMTC’s stringent certification applies ALARA principles to protect vulnerable populations.

References

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U.S. Government Accountability Office.

Food Safety: Federal Efforts to Manage the Risk of Arsenic in Rice

GAO-18-199. Washington, DC: GAO; March 16, 2018.

Read Review

Memar M, Ahmadi M, Darvishi Divanmorad AR, Esfandiari Z, Rahmanian O, Soleimani F, Fakhri Y.

The concentration of total arsenic, cadmium, and lead in imported rice (Oryza sativa): Probabilistic health risk assessment of Iranian population

Journal of Food Protection. 2026

Read Review

U.S. Government Accountability Office.

Food Safety: Federal Efforts to Manage the Risk of Arsenic in Rice

GAO-18-199. Washington, DC: GAO; March 16, 2018.

Read Review

U.S. Government Accountability Office.

Food Safety: Federal Efforts to Manage the Risk of Arsenic in Rice

GAO-18-199. Washington, DC: GAO; March 16, 2018.

Read Review

Su LJ, Chiang T-C, O’Connor SN.

Arsenic in brown rice: do the benefits outweigh the risks

Frontiers in Nutrition. 2023

Read Review

Li H-B, Wang J-Y, Chen X-Q, Li Y-P, Fan J, Ren J-H, Luo X-S, Juhasz AL, Ma LQ.

Geogenic nickel exposure from food consumption and soil ingestion: A bioavailability based assessment

Environmental Pollution. 2020

Read Review

National Institutes of Health,

Chromium: Fact Sheet for Health Professionals

Office of Dietary Supplements. Updated June 2, 2022

Read Review

Su LJ, Chiang T-C, O’Connor SN.

Arsenic in brown rice: do the benefits outweigh the risks

Frontiers in Nutrition. 2023

Read Review

Su LJ, Chiang T-C, O’Connor SN.

Arsenic in brown rice: do the benefits outweigh the risks

Frontiers in Nutrition. 2023

Read Review

Su LJ, Chiang T-C, O’Connor SN.

Arsenic in brown rice: do the benefits outweigh the risks

Frontiers in Nutrition. 2023

Read Review

Menon M, Dong W, Chen X, Hufton J, Rhodes EJ.

Improved rice cooking approach to maximise arsenic removal while preserving nutrient elements.

Science of The Total Environment. 2021

Read Review

Memar M, Ahmadi M, Darvishi Divanmorad AR, Esfandiari Z, Rahmanian O, Soleimani F, Fakhri Y.

The concentration of total arsenic, cadmium, and lead in imported rice (Oryza sativa): Probabilistic health risk assessment of Iranian population

Journal of Food Protection. 2026

Read Review

U.S. Government Accountability Office.

Food Safety: Federal Efforts to Manage the Risk of Arsenic in Rice

GAO-18-199. Washington, DC: GAO; March 16, 2018.

Read Review

Su LJ, Chiang T-C, O’Connor SN.

Arsenic in brown rice: do the benefits outweigh the risks

Frontiers in Nutrition. 2023

Read Review

U.S. Government Accountability Office.

Food Safety: Federal Efforts to Manage the Risk of Arsenic in Rice

GAO-18-199. Washington, DC: GAO; March 16, 2018.

Read Review

Su LJ, Chiang T-C, O’Connor SN.

Arsenic in brown rice: do the benefits outweigh the risks

Frontiers in Nutrition. 2023

Read Review

Su LJ, Chiang T-C, O’Connor SN.

Arsenic in brown rice: do the benefits outweigh the risks

Frontiers in Nutrition. 2023

Read Review

U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Arsenic in Rice and Rice Products Risk Assessment.

Risk and Safety Assessments (Food). Report dated March 2016; page content current as of August 5, 2020.

Read Review

Memar M, Ahmadi M, Darvishi Divanmorad AR, Esfandiari Z, Rahmanian O, Soleimani F, Fakhri Y.

The concentration of total arsenic, cadmium, and lead in imported rice (Oryza sativa): Probabilistic health risk assessment of Iranian population

Journal of Food Protection. 2026

Read Review

Memar M, Ahmadi M, Darvishi Divanmorad AR, Esfandiari Z, Rahmanian O, Soleimani F, Fakhri Y.

The concentration of total arsenic, cadmium, and lead in imported rice (Oryza sativa): Probabilistic health risk assessment of Iranian population

Journal of Food Protection. 2026

Read Review

Shavali-gilani P, Abedini A, Irshad N, Maleknezhad S, Yazdanfar N, Sadighara P.

Investigation of heavy metal levels in canned tomato paste, olives, and pickled

Scientific Reports. 2025

Read Review

Shavali-gilani P, Abedini A, Irshad N, Maleknezhad S, Yazdanfar N, Sadighara P.

Investigation of heavy metal levels in canned tomato paste, olives, and pickled

Scientific Reports. 2025

Read Review

Li H-B, Wang J-Y, Chen X-Q, Li Y-P, Fan J, Ren J-H, Luo X-S, Juhasz AL, Ma LQ.

Geogenic nickel exposure from food consumption and soil ingestion: A bioavailability based assessment

Environmental Pollution. 2020

Read Review

Li H-B, Wang J-Y, Chen X-Q, Li Y-P, Fan J, Ren J-H, Luo X-S, Juhasz AL, Ma LQ.

Geogenic nickel exposure from food consumption and soil ingestion: A bioavailability based assessment

Environmental Pollution. 2020

Read Review

Li H-B, Wang J-Y, Chen X-Q, Li Y-P, Fan J, Ren J-H, Luo X-S, Juhasz AL, Ma LQ.

Geogenic nickel exposure from food consumption and soil ingestion: A bioavailability based assessment

Environmental Pollution. 2020

Read Review

European Food Safety Authority (EFSA). ).

EFSA Advises on the Safety of Aluminium in Food

European Food Safety Authority, (2008, July 15)

Read Review

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EFSA Advises on the Safety of Aluminium in Food

European Food Safety Authority, (2008, July 15)

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Li H-B, Wang J-Y, Chen X-Q, Li Y-P, Fan J, Ren J-H, Luo X-S, Juhasz AL, Ma LQ.

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National Institutes of Health,

Chromium: Fact Sheet for Health Professionals

Office of Dietary Supplements. Updated June 2, 2022

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Chromium: Fact Sheet for Health Professionals

Office of Dietary Supplements. Updated June 2, 2022

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Menon M, Dong W, Chen X, Hufton J, Rhodes EJ.

Improved rice cooking approach to maximise arsenic removal while preserving nutrient elements.

Science of The Total Environment. 2021

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Menon M, Dong W, Chen X, Hufton J, Rhodes EJ.

Improved rice cooking approach to maximise arsenic removal while preserving nutrient elements.

Science of The Total Environment. 2021

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Su LJ, Chiang T-C, O’Connor SN.

Arsenic in brown rice: do the benefits outweigh the risks

Frontiers in Nutrition. 2023

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Su LJ, Chiang T-C, O’Connor SN.

Arsenic in brown rice: do the benefits outweigh the risks

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Su LJ, Chiang T-C, O’Connor SN.

Arsenic in brown rice: do the benefits outweigh the risks

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Menon M, Dong W, Chen X, Hufton J, Rhodes EJ.

Improved rice cooking approach to maximise arsenic removal while preserving nutrient elements.

Science of The Total Environment. 2021

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Menon M, Dong W, Chen X, Hufton J, Rhodes EJ.

Improved rice cooking approach to maximise arsenic removal while preserving nutrient elements.

Science of The Total Environment. 2021

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Menon M, Dong W, Chen X, Hufton J, Rhodes EJ.

Improved rice cooking approach to maximise arsenic removal while preserving nutrient elements.

Science of The Total Environment. 2021

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Menon M, Dong W, Chen X, Hufton J, Rhodes EJ.

Improved rice cooking approach to maximise arsenic removal while preserving nutrient elements.

Science of The Total Environment. 2021

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Menon M, Dong W, Chen X, Hufton J, Rhodes EJ.

Improved rice cooking approach to maximise arsenic removal while preserving nutrient elements.

Science of The Total Environment. 2021

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Menon M, Dong W, Chen X, Hufton J, Rhodes EJ.

Improved rice cooking approach to maximise arsenic removal while preserving nutrient elements.

Science of The Total Environment. 2021

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U.S. Government Accountability Office.

Food Safety: Federal Efforts to Manage the Risk of Arsenic in Rice

GAO-18-199. Washington, DC: GAO; March 16, 2018.

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Li H-B, Wang J-Y, Chen X-Q, Li Y-P, Fan J, Ren J-H, Luo X-S, Juhasz AL, Ma LQ.

Geogenic nickel exposure from food consumption and soil ingestion: A bioavailability based assessment

Environmental Pollution. 2020

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Su LJ, Chiang T-C, O’Connor SN.

Arsenic in brown rice: do the benefits outweigh the risks

Frontiers in Nutrition. 2023

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Su LJ, Chiang T-C, O’Connor SN.

Arsenic in brown rice: do the benefits outweigh the risks

Frontiers in Nutrition. 2023

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Su LJ, Chiang T-C, O’Connor SN.

Arsenic in brown rice: do the benefits outweigh the risks

Frontiers in Nutrition. 2023

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Menon M, Dong W, Chen X, Hufton J, Rhodes EJ.

Improved rice cooking approach to maximise arsenic removal while preserving nutrient elements.

Science of The Total Environment. 2021

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Menon M, Dong W, Chen X, Hufton J, Rhodes EJ.

Improved rice cooking approach to maximise arsenic removal while preserving nutrient elements.

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Memar M, Ahmadi M, Darvishi Divanmorad AR, Esfandiari Z, Rahmanian O, Soleimani F, Fakhri Y.

The concentration of total arsenic, cadmium, and lead in imported rice (Oryza sativa): Probabilistic health risk assessment of Iranian population

Journal of Food Protection. 2026

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U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Arsenic in Rice and Rice Products Risk Assessment.

Risk and Safety Assessments (Food). Report dated March 2016; page content current as of August 5, 2020.

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U.S. Government Accountability Office.

Food Safety: Federal Efforts to Manage the Risk of Arsenic in Rice

GAO-18-199. Washington, DC: GAO; March 16, 2018.

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Su LJ, Chiang T-C, O’Connor SN.

Arsenic in brown rice: do the benefits outweigh the risks

Frontiers in Nutrition. 2023

Read Review

Menon M, Dong W, Chen X, Hufton J, Rhodes EJ.

Improved rice cooking approach to maximise arsenic removal while preserving nutrient elements.

Science of The Total Environment. 2021

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Menon M, Dong W, Chen X, Hufton J, Rhodes EJ.

Improved rice cooking approach to maximise arsenic removal while preserving nutrient elements.

Science of The Total Environment. 2021

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Menon M, Dong W, Chen X, Hufton J, Rhodes EJ.

Improved rice cooking approach to maximise arsenic removal while preserving nutrient elements.

Science of The Total Environment. 2021

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Menon M, Dong W, Chen X, Hufton J, Rhodes EJ.

Improved rice cooking approach to maximise arsenic removal while preserving nutrient elements.

Science of The Total Environment. 2021

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Su LJ, Chiang T-C, O’Connor SN.

Arsenic in brown rice: do the benefits outweigh the risks

Frontiers in Nutrition. 2023

Read Review

U.S. Government Accountability Office.

Food Safety: Federal Efforts to Manage the Risk of Arsenic in Rice

GAO-18-199. Washington, DC: GAO; March 16, 2018.

Read Review

U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Arsenic in Rice and Rice Products Risk Assessment.

Risk and Safety Assessments (Food). Report dated March 2016; page content current as of August 5, 2020.

Read Review

Menon M, Dong W, Chen X, Hufton J, Rhodes EJ.

Improved rice cooking approach to maximise arsenic removal while preserving nutrient elements.

Science of The Total Environment. 2021

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Menon M, Dong W, Chen X, Hufton J, Rhodes EJ.

Improved rice cooking approach to maximise arsenic removal while preserving nutrient elements.

Science of The Total Environment. 2021

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U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Arsenic in Rice and Rice Products Risk Assessment.

Risk and Safety Assessments (Food). Report dated March 2016; page content current as of August 5, 2020.

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