This content is for general information and does not constitute medical advice. Consult your GP for personal health concerns.
Pure bicarb is always aluminium-free.
The “aluminium-free” label on bicarbonate of soda is redundant marketing — simple chemistry (NaHCO₃) makes aluminium impossible. The real confusion stems from baking powder, a different product. Most UK brands are now aluminium-free. Shop standard bicarb with confidence and skip the premium price.
If you’ve seen “aluminium-free” claims on bicarbonate of soda and felt a flicker of concern, you’re not alone. This query is a classic case of online wellness advice — much of it originating from the US — creating confusion where none needs to exist. The good news is straightforward: pure bicarbonate of soda is a simple, stable chemical compound that cannot contain aluminium. The worry is misplaced. Where legitimate caution is needed is with baking powder, a different raising agent altogether. This article will cut through the noise. We’ll look at the science, explain the baking powder connection, list safe UK brands, and assess the actual health risks, so you can shop and bake with complete peace of mind.
Pure bicarbonate of soda is always aluminium-free
Sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO₃) — chemistry doesn’t lie
The chemical formula NaHCO₃ means one sodium atom, one hydrogen atom, one carbon atom, and three oxygen atoms. Aluminium (Al) doesn’t appear in that equation, making it a chemical impossibility in pure bicarbonate of soda, regardless of its source or brand.
- NaHCO₃ = sodium + hydrogen + carbon + oxygen
- No aluminium atom in the molecule
- “Aluminium-free” label = redundant marketing
Let’s be perfectly clear: if you’re buying pure bicarbonate of soda, it is aluminium-free. Always. This isn’t a quality issue or a brand promise; it’s a fundamental fact of chemistry. The chemical formula for bicarbonate of soda is NaHCO₃. That stands for one sodium atom (Na), one hydrogen atom (H), one carbon atom (C), and three oxygen atoms (O₃). Aluminium (Al) doesn’t appear in that formula, so it cannot be part of the compound. Whether the bicarbonate is mined from mineral deposits or produced industrially, the final product is the same pure NaHCO₃.
So, when you see a pack boasting an “aluminium-free” label, it’s like selling water labelled “wet.” It’s stating the obvious, often to justify a higher price.
Where the confusion comes from — baking powder
The entire “aluminium in baking” scare is rooted in a different product: baking powder. Here’s the crucial difference. Bicarbonate of soda (bicarb) is a single ingredient: pure sodium bicarbonate. Baking powder, however, is a mixture. To work, it needs bicarbonate of soda plus an acid to react with it, and usually a starch to keep them separate until use. The type of acid used is the source of the aluminium concern.
Some baking powders, particularly older formulations common in the US, use acids like sodium aluminium phosphate or sodium aluminium sulfate. When US wellness bloggers warn about “aluminium in baking soda,” they are almost always mistakenly referring to aluminium-containing baking powder. This content travels across the Atlantic and causes UK shoppers to eye their tub of pure bicarb with suspicion, unnecessarily. The key takeaway is that the products are distinct: the potential issue lives in the powder, not the soda.
UK aluminium-free baking powder brands
The reassuring news for UK bakers is that most mainstream baking powder sold in British supermarkets is already aluminium-free. Manufacturers have largely shifted to using acids like cream of tartar (potassium bitartrate) or monocalcium phosphate.
| Brand | Aluminium-free? ✓ | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Dr Oetker | ✓ | Standard supermarket brand, clearly labelled. |
| Tesco own-brand | ✓ | Cheapest reliable option. |
| Sainsbury’s own-brand | ✓ | Fine for everyday baking. |
| Morrisons own-brand | ✓ | Fine, no aluminium compounds. |
| Steenbergs Organic | ✓ | Organic + vegan option. |
| Bob’s Red Mill | ✓ | US import, premium price, found in health stores. |
The actual aluminium intake concern
So, should you be worried about aluminium from baking at all? Let’s look at the evidence. The World Health Organization (WHO) has established a provisional tolerable weekly intake (PTWI) for aluminium of 2 mg per kilogram of body weight. For a 70kg adult, that’s about 140mg per week, or roughly 20mg per day.
The vast majority of dietary aluminium comes from other sources: cookware (using aluminium foil or pots with acidic foods), processed foods (certain colourings like E173, emulsifiers in processed cheese like E541), some antacids containing aluminium hydroxide, and even tea plants that naturally absorb aluminium from soil. Modern, aluminium-free baking powder contributes negligible amounts.
What the science says about dietary aluminium
5 Key Facts on Aluminium & Health
- Less than 1% of dietary aluminium is absorbed via the gut.
- WHO daily allowable intake = 0.6mg/kg body weight/week (~42mg for a 70kg adult).
- The 1980s Alzheimer’s-aluminium link has been weakened by later research.
- People with kidney disease should be cautious — different rules apply (see GP).
- Real dietary aluminium sources: foil + acidic foods, processed cheese, antacids — not modern baking powder.
When you do ingest aluminium, your body is quite efficient at handling it. The human gut absorbs less than 1% of the aluminium consumed. The kidneys filter out the vast majority, which is then excreted. For healthy adults, aluminium is not considered a significant dietary risk, and the NHS does not list it as a primary nutritional concern.
The historical link between aluminium and Alzheimer’s disease, which sparked initial fears in the 1980s, has not been substantiated by subsequent, more robust research. The current scientific consensus is that aluminium is not a primary cause. The exception is for individuals with severe kidney impairment, as their ability to excrete aluminium is compromised.
Should you switch brands?
✓ Don’t worry
- Bicarbonate of soda (always aluminium-free)
- Most UK baking powder brands
- NHS doesn’t flag aluminium dietary risk for healthy adults
- The tiny amounts used in baking
⚠ Check label
- Older imported US baking powders
- Antacids with aluminium hydroxide
- Some processed cheese (contains E541)
- If you have kidney disease, consult your GP
Let’s give a direct, practical answer. No, you do not need to switch your bicarbonate of soda brand. Whether it’s from Tesco, Dr. Oetker, or a box from the hardware store, pure bicarb is NaHCO₃ and is aluminium-free. Paying extra for a brand that highlights this on the label is paying for marketing, not superior chemistry. Maybe, if you use a baking powder you’re unsure about. If it’s an older US import or an unfamiliar brand, it’s worth a 10-second label check. However, given the small quantities used in baking and your body’s low absorption, the risk from occasional use is extremely low.
Quick label-reading guide
Becoming an aluminium detective is easy. Here’s what to look for on the ingredients list of baking powder (remember, pure bicarb needs no check):
| Ingredient | Contains aluminium? ✓ |
|---|---|
| Sodium aluminium phosphate | ✗ contains |
| Sodium aluminium sulfate | ✗ contains |
| E541 | ✗ contains — codename |
| Cream of tartar / tartaric acid | ✓ aluminium-free |
| Calcium phosphate | ✓ aluminium-free |
| E450 / sodium pyrophosphate | ✓ aluminium-free |
| Cornflour / cornstarch | ✓ aluminium-free filler |
What Readers Are Telling Us
“Was paying £4 for ‘aluminium-free’ bicarb at the health-food shop. Tesco own-brand is the same chemistry for 85p.”
★★★★★
“Helpful clarification — I was confusing bicarb with baking powder. UK brands all checked out fine.”
★★★★★
“The label-reading table is going on the fridge. Saved me Googling at the supermarket.”
★★★★★
“Glad someone finally explained this without scaremongering.”
★★★★☆
Frequently Asked Questions
Is bicarbonate of soda aluminium-free?
Yes, always. Pure bicarbonate of soda is sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO₃). Its chemical structure contains only sodium, hydrogen, carbon, and oxygen. Aluminium cannot be part of this compound, so it is inherently aluminium-free by definition.
Which UK baking powder brands are aluminium-free?
Most major UK brands are aluminium-free. Confirmed safe options include Dr. Oetker, Tesco, Sainsbury’s, and Morrisons own-brand baking powders. Always check the label, but these brands do not use aluminium-based acids.
Is there aluminium in Tesco bicarbonate of soda?
No. Tesco’s bicarbonate of soda, like all pure bicarbonate of soda, is 100% aluminium-free. It is the chemical compound sodium bicarbonate, which cannot contain aluminium.
Is aluminium in baking powder dangerous?
For the vast majority of people, no. The amount used is tiny, and the human body absorbs very little of it. The WHO’s safety limits have a large margin, and aluminium from baking powder is a minor dietary source compared to cookware and processed foods.
How can I tell if my baking powder contains aluminium?
Read the ingredients list. If it contains sodium aluminium phosphate or sodium aluminium sulfate (or E541), it has aluminium. If the listed acids are cream of tartar or monocalcium phosphate, it is aluminium-free.
Should I avoid foil-wrapped foods because of aluminium?
There’s no need for blanket avoidance. Using aluminium foil for cooking or storing food, especially with acidic ingredients, can lead to small amounts leaching. However, for most people with healthy kidneys, this is well within safe limits. It’s about balance, not fear.
Verdict: Bicarb is fine. Baking powder is fine in the UK. Don’t pay the premium.
Let’s put this myth to bed. Your bicarbonate of soda is, and always has been, aluminium-free — it’s basic chemistry. The fear has been incorrectly transferred from the occasional use of aluminium in baking powder, a product where UK formulations are now overwhelmingly safe.
While it’s wise to be an informed consumer, the evidence shows aluminium from baking poses a negligible risk to health for most people. Focus your energy on reading labels for baking powder if you wish, but save your money when it comes to bicarb — there’s no need to pay extra for a promise the product already keeps.
Related reading:
Bicarbonate of Soda Guide
Low-Calorie Drinks UK Guide
Last reviewed and updated: 26 April 2026. Content sourced from NHS guidance, UK Food Standards Agency labelling regulations, and WHO dietary aluminium assessments. This article is for general information and should not replace professional medical advice.
