Fritos Corn Chips · lead test breakdown

Is Fritos Corn Chips lead-safe?

Lead Safe Mama tested one batch in 2024-12 and the result came back nondetect. Here is what that means in context.

Quick answer

One Lead Safe Mama ICP-MS test on a single batch of Fritos Corn Chips was published in 2024-12. It came back nondetect across the panel. The single result is real for that batch. It does not tell you whether the next bag from the same shelf is similar. Brand consistency on heavy metals is a marketing claim, not a chemistry one.

Single retail units of this product are available individually at standard retail. A current single-unit price is around $4.99. The "minimum order / sold by case" framing on Lead Safe Mama's budget page does not apply to this product.

The single test on record.

From Lead Safe Mama's published lab report. One batch, one ICP-MS panel, one moment in time. The number is real for that bag. It is not a brand verdict.

Tested by Lead Safe Mama (sent to SimpleLab for ICP-MS)
Date published 2024-12
Reported values Not surfaced in post text. Lab report image embedded; specific ppb values would need to be read from the PDF or transcribed from the image.
Sample size (n) 1 batch (single bag from a single retail purchase)
Source Lead Safe Mama post →

Product facts.

Product Fritos Corn Chips (Frito-Lay)
Net weight per unit 262 g (9.25 oz)
Serving size used in dose math 28 g
Country of origin USA
Single-unit retail availability Yes. Mass-market American snack. ppb only in image. Note: post URL is October 2025 but actual test was December 2024 (significant publication lag).
Current retail price ~$4.99 — where to buy

About the "minimum order" framing.

Lead Safe Mama's budget page justifies a $495 per-product community sponsorship rate in part by citing product-acquisition costs as high as $450, with a "minimum quantity of several units must be purchased (purchasing a single box or package online is not an option)" clause. For Fritos Corn Chips, that does not apply. Single retail units are available individually at the price shown above. Her older May 2024 post pegged the high end at $150 — a 3× escalation in 12 months on the same site, both pages live.

What we'd recommend.

1. Don't make a brand decision off one batch. The 2024-12 Lead Safe Mama result describes one bag at one moment. Cereal grain absorbs metals unevenly across fields. Spices vary by source country. Same brand, different lot, can disagree by an order of magnitude.

2. If you want a sealed-sample retest, the Lead Lottery model is $100 per panel. Same lab Lead Safe Mama uses (since March 2025, Purity Labs in Lake Oswego, Oregon). Sealed retail unit shipped direct to the lab, factory seal opened only at the lab. 4 to 5× cheaper than her per-product Community Sponsorship rate.

3. Read the broader audit. Our food-testing audit of Lead Safe Mama catalogs 451 of her published tests, identifies which lab signed each report, and walks the math. /pages/contested-foods walks the cases where two samples of the same product produced very different numbers.

Nominate Fritos Corn Chips for a sealed-sample retest.

If you chip in $100 to the Lead Lottery for this product, we buy a sealed retail unit, ship it sealed to Purity Labs, and publish the result side by side with the Lead Safe Mama number on record. Same lab. Real chain of custody. No anonymization.

The Lead Lottery → Contested test results →

Common questions.

Is Fritos Corn Chips safe from lead?

Lead Safe Mama published a single ICP-MS result in 2024-12 reporting no heavy metals above detection limits. The result is real for that bag. It does not tell you what the next bag from the same shelf will read. Single-batch testing on packaged food is one snapshot, not a brand verdict. The dose math (ppb × serving size) is the only way to translate a ppb number into actual exposure.

Where can I buy Fritos Corn Chips?

Single retail units are available individually. Most common SKU is around $4.99 at retail. Single-unit purchases are the standard option.

What is the FDA daily reference level for lead in food?

2.2 µg per day for children, 8.8 µg per day for adults (FDA Interim Reference Level). The IRL is an action threshold for ongoing federal monitoring, not a 'safe level' (no safe level of lead exposure exists for children per CDC). Dose math: lead in µg = (ppb × serving size in grams) ÷ 1000.

Why does the same product produce different test results on different days?

Two reasons. First, batch-to-batch variability is real in any food product. Same brand sources from different farms, different harvests, different countries, different factory runs. Cereal grain absorbs lead and cadmium unevenly across fields. Spices vary by source country. The same brand can change its ppb signature between lots, sometimes by an order of magnitude. Second, chain-of-custody differences matter. A sample opened and re-packaged in a home kitchen before it reaches the lab is not the same sample as one shipped sealed direct to the lab. Both are valid lab data, but they describe different things. Read the contested-foods cases.

The work is finite.

Most lead in your home can be identified in one afternoon.

Test the dishes you use daily. Run the cold tap thirty seconds in the morning. Lay down a fresh dust mat at the door. Replace pre-1996 spices with brands tested clean. If you have a pre-1978 home, run the soil within ten feet of the foundation. The list is short. Start there.

Lifetime lead exposure timeline FETAL CHILD ADULT PARENT SENIOR

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"Lead is bad" — the primary sources.

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