Prop 65 Compliance for French Fries & Fried Potato Products (Acrylamide + §25506)
Download the Fried Potato Prop 65 Compliance System (PDF)
The Most-Litigated Food Category in Prop 65 History
California Proposition 65 applies to acrylamide formed during high-temperature frying. Fried potato products — including French fries, chips, hash browns, puffs, and similar items — have generated more acrylamide notices than any other food category.
- Acrylamide NSRL: 0.2 µg/day
- 800+ Historical NOVs related to acrylamide
- §25506 Regulation: Effective April 1, 2023
- Updated Safe Harbor Warning: Effective January 1, 2025
Acrylamide is not a contaminant you receive — it is chemistry you create.
Why Fried Potato Products Are Structurally High Risk
- Variety & Reducing Sugars: High-sugar potato lots drive Maillard chemistry
- Cold Sweetening: Storage below ~46°F increases reducing sugars
- Blanching & Enzyme Controls: Surface sugar removal can reduce formation 50–90%
- Final Fry Color & Time: Acrylamide increases rapidly past golden color
One missed upstream control step can undo every downstream mitigation.
The §25506 Framework
- Adoption of Codex CAC/RCP 67-2009 Code of Practice
- Reduction to the lowest level currently feasible
- Food-specific safe-harbor concentrations under §25506(d)(4)
- Documented implementation across operations
Without a documented Codex-aligned program, exposure is presumed.
Landmark Litigation Built the Playbook
- Major QSR chains and national brands
- Frozen potato manufacturers
- Snack chip producers
- Private-label operators
Plaintiffs now use a templated approach against operators without feasibility records.
Primary Compliance Levers
1. Raw Potato Controls
- Approved variety list
- Reducing-sugar specifications at receiving
- Lot rejection or diversion protocols
2. Storage & Reconditioning
- Temperature monitoring above cold-sweetening range
- Reconditioning protocol before processing
- Storage deviation logs
3. Process Controls
- Validated blanch parameters
- Asparaginase application (where applicable)
- Oil temperature & fry time setpoints
- Finished color control standards
4. Finished Product Verification
- ISO 17025 acrylamide testing
- Comparison to §25506 thresholds
- Trend analysis by SKU and batch
5. Exposure vs NSRL Evaluation
- Serving-size calculations
- Daily-consumption scenarios
- 0.2 µg/day NSRL comparison
Supply Chain & Process Control Model
- Variety & Sugar Specification Controls
- Storage Monitoring & Logs
- Fry-Time/Temperature/Color Setpoints
- Verification Testing + CAPA Workflow
Defensible Documentation Package
- SKU-level risk assessments
- §25506 Codex feasibility file
- Acrylamide control program artifact
- Batch compliance review reports
- Monthly monitoring summaries
- Deviation & CAPA records
- Exposure calculation worksheets
- Audit-ready document set
Business Impact of Non-Compliance
- 60-Day Notice of Violation
- $20K to $1.5M+ Settlements
- Mandatory Reformulation or Warning
- Retail & QSR Procurement Attestation Requirements
- Reputational Risk (“Cancer Warning” Labels)
How the System Works
Phase 1 — Setup
- SKU scoping
- Variety & sugar mapping
- Process baseline review
- Documentation buildout
Phase 2 — Implementation
- Lab coordination
- Exposure calculations
- §25506 feasibility file development
- Warning determination
Phase 3 — Monitoring
- Batch review
- Trend analysis
- Deviation investigations
- Audit reporting
Bottom Line
Fried potato products are the most litigated acrylamide food category in California enforcement history. §25506 provides a defensible pathway — but only with documented, Codex-aligned controls.
Build a Defensible §25506 Acrylamide Compliance System
Implement raw potato controls, fry-line validation, acrylamide testing oversight, exposure modeling, and a Codex feasibility file before a 60-Day Notice arrives.
Schedule a Compliance Consultation
