Protein powder has slipped into everyday life with little friction. It sits in kitchen cabinets, gym bags, and office drawers, treated less like a supplement and more like a pantry staple. For many, it represents discipline and care: a small, practical step toward feeling stronger or eating better. That familiarity is exactly why recent findings about what may be hiding in some protein products feel unsettling.
Testing of widely sold protein powders and ready-to-drink shakes has found detectable levels of heavy metals, including lead, across a large share of products. In several cases, a single serving contained amounts that exceed what some health experts consider a safe daily intake. A smaller group tested far above that line. The issue is not isolated to obscure brands. These are products many people use every day.
Plant-based protein powders showed notably higher lead levels on average than dairy-based ones. This difference is not accidental. Plants draw nutrients from soil and water, and when those environments contain trace contamination, it can carry through to the final product. Even careful processing cannot fully remove what begins at the source
“What reads as “clean” on a label does not always reflect the conditions behind the ingredient.”
Interpreting these findings is complicated by how exposure limits are defined. Regulatory thresholds vary, with some designed to minimise long-term accumulation and others focused on short-term intake. A product can fall within one guideline while crossing another, resulting in confusion rather than clarity for consumers trying to assess real-world risk.