Prop 65 Supplement Testing: Don't Wait for the Lawsuit Letter
Here's something most supplement brands don't realize until it's too late:
Prop 65 isn't the FDA knocking on your door. It's not a government agency sending you a warning letter. It's a private attorney filing a lawsuit against your company, and they found you because they bought your product off a shelf (or Amazon), tested it themselves, and found lead above 0.5 micrograms per daily serving.
You don't get a grace period. You don't get a "fix it first" notice (well, technically you get a 60-day notice of intent, but by then the attorney has already spent money on testing and legal prep). You get a lawsuit that costs $50K-$200K+ to settle, even if your product is perfectly safe by any rational standard.
And the worst part? You don't even need to be a California company. If your product is sold anywhere that ships to California — including Amazon, iHerb, or your own Shopify store — you're in the crosshairs.
So let's talk about how to test your way out of this mess before it starts.
The Four Heavy Metals That Matter Most
Prop 65 covers hundreds of chemicals, but for supplements, four heavy metals cause 95%+ of the lawsuits:
Lead — The 0.5 mcg/day problem
The MADL (Maximum Allowable Dose Level) for lead is 0.5 micrograms per day. That's tiny. A single serving of a greens powder, a protein blend, or a multi-mineral can blow past that if the raw ingredients aren't clean.
Lead shows up in soil-grown ingredients (greens, roots, herbs), in mineral supplements (calcium, magnesium can carry lead from mining sources), and in anything processed with older equipment.
Cadmium — The cocoa and greens killer
Cadmium's MADL is 4.1 mcg/day. Sounds generous compared to lead, but cocoa powder can contain 0.5-1.5 mcg of cadmium per gram. A 10g serving of cacao in your pre-workout? That's 5-15 mcg. You just tripped the wire.
Shellfish, greens (especially spinach), and rice-based ingredients also concentrate cadmium from soil. If your formula has a greens blend AND a cocoa component, you're almost guaranteed to need cadmium mitigation.
Arsenic — Rice protein's dirty secret
The NSRL (No Significant Risk Level) for inorganic arsenic is 10 mcg/day. Rice protein concentrates are notorious — rice pulls arsenic from soil and irrigation water like a sponge. A 30g serving of rice protein can easily deliver 15-30 mcg of inorganic arsenic.
Other culprits: apple juice concentrates, seaweed/kelp, and any ingredient grown in former cotton fields (where arsenic-based pesticides were used for decades).
Mercury — The fish oil warning
MADL for mercury is 0.3 mcg/day. Fish oil and marine-sourced omega-3s are the obvious risk, but mercury also shows up in spirulina, chlorella, and some herbal ingredients depending on sourcing region.
What Actually Triggers a Warning Label?
This is where I see brands get confused. You are NOT required to put a Prop 65 warning label on your product just because it contains a listed chemical. You're only required to warn if exposure exceeds the safe harbor level.
But here's the catch: safe harbor levels exist for only about 300 of the 900+ listed chemicals. For the rest, you have to make your own risk assessment, and plaintiffs' attorneys will absolutely challenge it.
For the four heavy metals above, safe harbor levels DO exist. Stay below them, and you don't need a warning. Exceed them, and you either need a warning label OR you're getting sued (and yes, even with a warning label, you can still get sued if the plaintiff claims the warning wasn't "clear and reasonable").
The practical move: just stay below the thresholds. Warning labels are not a compliance strategy — they're a marketing disaster that tells customers "this product might give you cancer."
The 60-Day Notice: What it actually means
When a private enforcer (read: attorney) finds your product above a Prop 65 threshold, they send a "60-Day Notice of Violation" before they can file suit. This notice goes to:
- You (the company)
- The California Attorney General
- The district attorney for every county where your product is sold
The AG has 60 days to decide if they want to prosecute. They almost never do (they handle maybe 10-20 cases a year). After 60 days, the private attorney files the lawsuit.
During those 60 days, you can negotiate. Most brands settle. The plaintiff's attorney gets their fees (that's the whole business model), and you agree to reformulate or label. Total cost: typically $30K-$150K depending on how many products and how stubborn you are.
How to Test So You Never Get the Letter
You need a proactive testing program. Not "we tested once in 2019." An ongoing program.
Step 1: Test every finished product batch for the Big Four.
I know, batch testing sounds expensive. It's not — not compared to a Prop 65 settlement. Heavy metals panels (lead, arsenic, cadmium, mercury) run $50-$150 per sample at contract labs. If you're making 24 batches a year, that's $1,200-$3,600 annually. A single Prop 65 settlement starts at $30,000.
Run the math. It's the cheapest insurance you'll ever buy.
Step 2: Use the right method.
Heavy metals testing should use ICP-MS (Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry). It detects down to parts-per-billion (ppb), which is what you need when your threshold is 0.5 mcg/day. ICP-OES is cheaper but may not have the sensitivity for lead and mercury at Prop 65 levels.
For arsenic specifically, you need speciation — total arsenic includes organic forms (like arsenobetaine from fish) that are essentially harmless. You need to know inorganic arsenic specifically, and that requires LC-ICP-MS or similar speciation methods.
Step 3: Calculate exposure per daily serving, not per gram.
A lab report showing lead at 0.2 ppm (same as 0.2 mcg/g) looks fine. But if your serving size is 5 grams, that's 1.0 mcg per serving — double the 0.5 mcg MADL. Always convert to exposure per daily serving.
Formula: <concentration in mcg/g> × <serving size in grams> = exposure per serving
Step 4: Account for stacking products.
If a customer takes three of your products daily, each with 0.3 mcg of lead, that's 0.9 mcg total exposure from your line alone. Plaintiffs' attorneys will absolutely aggregate across your product line. Testers won't — but savvy attorneys will pull multiple SKUs and argue cumulative exposure.
What Happens If You Get Noticed
Let's walk through it, because knowing the process takes the panic out of it.
-
You receive a 60-Day Notice of Violation. It names the specific product, the chemical, and the testing method used. It also names the law firm (you'll recognize the names — there are maybe a dozen firms that file 90% of Prop 65 cases).
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You call your attorney. If you don't have one who knows Prop 65, get one. This is a niche practice area and you want someone who handles these regularly, not your cousin who does wills.
-
Your attorney typically negotiates a settlement. The settlement includes: reformulation agreement (you fix the product), civil penalties ($2,500/day of violation is the statutory max, but settlements are usually much lower), and — here's the real cost — plaintiff's attorney fees.
-
You reformulate, you pay, you move on. And then you implement the testing program outlined above so it never happens again.
FAQ
Q: Can I just put a Prop 65 warning on my product and skip testing?
You can, and some brands do. But a warning label isn't a get-out-of-jail-free card — it only protects you if the label is "clear and reasonable" AND if the chemical is actually on the Prop 65 list. If your product tests over the limit and you don't have a warning label at all, that's a separate violation. And even with a label, you can still face lawsuits claiming the warning wasn't sufficient. Labels also hurt conversion rates. Test and stay below is the better play.
Q: Does Prop 65 apply if I don't sell in California?
If your product can be purchased online and shipped to California, yes. If it's on a shelf anywhere in the US and a Californian buys it, yes. There's no geo-blocking your way out of this.
Q: How often should I retest?
Every new batch. At minimum, every new lot of raw material. Heavy metal content varies by harvest, by region, by season. The batch that passed in January won't necessarily pass in July if your supplier changed their sourcing.
Q: What's the difference between NSF, USP, and Prop 65 testing?
NSF and USP are voluntary certification programs with their own heavy metal limits (often similar to Prop 65 thresholds but not identical). Being NSF certified doesn't automatically mean you're Prop 65 compliant — the limits are slightly different, and the legal framework is completely different. You need to test to Prop 65 thresholds specifically.
Q: What's the most common heavy metal violation?
Lead, by a mile. Roughly 70% of Prop 65 supplement notices involve lead. The 0.5 mcg/day threshold is incredibly low, and lead is everywhere — soil, water, processing equipment. If you're only going to test for one thing first, test for lead.
Don't wait for the letter. LabQuotes makes it dead simple to get your supplements tested for Prop 65 heavy metals. You tell us what you're testing, we pull quotes from ISO 17025 accredited labs that run the right methods (ICP-MS, arsenic speciation), and you get a compliance report you can actually use. No subscription, no contract — just pay per test.
Ready to get your products tested?
Build a basket of the tests you need and compare quotes from ISO 17025–accredited labs in one place. Free to start.
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