Prop 65 Compliance for Curry Powder (Lead Chromate + Turmeric Adulteration + Import Alert 54-15)
Access the Full Project Brief:
Download the Curry Powder Prop 65 Compliance Project Brief (PDF)
Download the Curry Powder Prop 65 Compliance Project Brief (PDF)
Curry Powder Sits in an Active Enforcement Zone
California Prop 65 applies to all spices — and curry powder’s lead risk is driven by adulteration, not soil uptake. Turmeric, the dominant ingredient in most blends, is the single most documented heavy-metal adulteration target in the global spice trade.
Three enforcement drivers:
- 5,000+ NOVs in 2025: Food remains the largest enforcement category
- Lead MADL: 0.5 µg/day
- FDA Import Alert 54-15: Active detention targeting certain turmeric exporters
Why Curry Powder Is at Risk
- Origin concentration: Bangladesh, India, and Vietnam dominate turmeric supply.
- Lead chromate adulteration: Added to enhance yellow color and increase weight.
- Blending effect: 8–12 spices compound cumulative heavy-metal exposure.
- Daily serving math: 1g at 10 ppm lead = 10 µg — 20× the MADL in a single serving.
The “naturally occurring” defense does NOT apply to lead chromate — it is chemically introduced.
Chemicals of Concern in Curry Powder
- Lead — primary litigation driver (MADL 0.5 µg/day)
- Cadmium — co-occurring heavy metal in spices
- Arsenic — present in certain root and seed ingredients
- Chromium — indicator of lead chromate adulteration
Business Impact of a 60-Day Notice
- Immediate enforcement clock upon Attorney General filing
- $20K–$100K+ per SKU settlement exposure
- FDA detention risk under Import Alert 54-15
- Retail removal and recall costs
Most companies settle due to weak documentation—not because exposure is unmanageable.
The Five-Pillar Compliance Program for Curry Powder
- Pillar 1 — Hazard Identification: turmeric-origin risk mapping & adulteration screening
- Pillar 2 — Exposure Assessment: serving-size modeling vs MADL thresholds
- Pillar 3 — ISO 17025 Testing Oversight: ICP-MS heavy-metal validation & spike detection
- Pillar 4 — Warning Determination: documented warn vs no-warn justification
- Pillar 5 — Monitoring & Records: batch tracking, supplier corrective actions, trend analysis
Supply-Chain Compliance Control
- Supplier Attestation: mandatory declarations for all raw-material vendors
- Risk Mapping: ingredient-level heavy-metal exposure classification
- COA Verification: certificate validation against threshold limits
- SCAR System: supplier corrective action reports before release
Verification Testing — What & How Often
- Lead (ICP-MS): per lot
- Cadmium & Arsenic: risk-based or per lot
- Chromium speciation: adulteration indicator testing
- Trend analysis: monthly compliance review
90-Day Implementation Plan
Days 1–30 — Discover
- Ingredient-level risk inventory
- Supplier origin validation
- Historical heavy-metal data review
Days 31–60 — Build
- Exposure calculation framework
- Testing program documentation
- Supplier compliance structure
Days 61–90 — Validate
- Mock NOV response simulation
- Internal audit and corrective actions
- QI sign-off and document finalization
Build a Defensible Multi-Framework Compliance System for Your Face Powder Portfolio
Consultare Inc. Group designs Prop 65 compliance systems for spice manufacturers, integrating heavy-metal testing oversight, adulteration detection controls, and defensible documentation aligned with California enforcement expectations.
Schedule a Compliance Consultation
Prop 65 · Lead (MADL 0.5 µg/day) · Lead Chromate Adulteration · Import Alert 54-15 · ISO 17025 Testing · Batch-Level Review · QI Sign-Off

