Green Tea and Fluoride


Green tea is simply a miracle drink that offers a host of health benefits to those who drink it. However, some worry that green teas simply have too much fluoride and should be avoided. The difficulty in this argument is separating fact from fiction, true science from theories. There is lots of information available on green tea and fluoride, but most of it mangles the facts and mixes in theory or even personal opinion without clarifying the difference.

Fluoride and Your Health
First, it is important to understand that fluoride can be helpful in low doses. Throughout America fluoride is actually added to your drinking water in order to reduce cavities, especially in children. The Center for Disease Control (CDC) recommends daily intake of fluoride specifically for this reason and says the only danger of too much fluoride is fluorosis or a discoloration of your teeth. However, in 2005 Dr. Michael Whyte raised questions about instant iced tea and skeletal fluorosis based on his analysis of a patient. The patient drank 17 – 33 cups of low quality, instant iced tea a day and Dr. Whyte’s analysis attibuted her health problems to the high amount of Fluoride in that tea. Others have suggested that high amounts of fluoride could cause thyroid problems as well.

The daily recommended amount of flouride intake is 3 mg for women and 4 mg for men with a maximum of 10 mg/day for both. Now let’s look at tea and fluoride.

Tea and Fluoride: Just the Facts, please
The tea plant, Camellia sinensis, naturally absorbs fluoride from the environment more effectively than other plants. And as it ages, more fluoride is absorbed by the leaves, so the younger leaves have less fluoride than the older leaves. In practical terms, this means white tea (which is only very young leaves) has less fluoride than green, black or oolong teas, which include older leaves (Herbal teas do not contain any Camellia sinensis leaves and have almost no fluoride to speak of). In addition, the younger the leaves make a higher quality tea. Tea dust (in tea bags) and tea bricks (made from older leaves) have much higher levels of fluoride than high quality tea. This study explored the difference between high quality teas and low quality in terms of fluoride: high quality teas had significantly less fluoride (because of the leaves used).

This is part of the issue: in order to understand the amount of fluoride in teas, you need to divide out teas into bottled, bagged, and loose-leaf. Bottled teas have much, much higher amounts of fluoride than bagged, which is higher than loose-leaf. This is partially because of the age of the leaves (bottled are the lowest quality and bagged are the next lowest quality). But also bottled teas are made with fluoridated water that adds significant amounts of fluoride to the tea.

So here’s the reality: a cup of loose-leaf green tea generally contains 0.3 to 0.4 mg of fluoride. So it would require 10 cups to hit the recommended daily dose and up to 30 cups to hit the daily maximum. However, this assumes you are only getting fluoride from your green tea, which is not the case. Unless you are filtering your water (or drinking bottled water), not using toothpaste and not taking virtually any medicine, you are receiving fluoride from other sources. In other words, don’t max out on fluoride from tea because you are also getting it from other sources.

The reality is that most people drink a few cups a day of green tea at most.  And, as we recently noted, most studies recommend around 8-10 cups of tea a day, which should include some white and herbal teas (both have very little fluoride). This would be far below any level that could endanger your health, even if the CDC is wrong about the limited dangers of fluoride.

Still Concerned? Tips for Reducing Fluoride in Tea
If you are still concerned, there are a few things you can do to reduce the amount of fluoride in your tea. Here are our recommendations:

  • Drink high quality, loose leaf teas. Teavana only offers this type of tea because it tastes better and offers more health benefits in addition to being lower in fluoride. And avoid bottled green teas in particular, which seem to have numerous times the fluoride in loose-leaf green teas (and a lot less antioxidants).
  • Drink more white teas. White teas have more antioxidants than green tea, so many of the health benefits are still there, but they have a much lower amount of fluoride. Green tea also has the benefit of EGCG, so don’t cut out all of your green tea consumption.
  • Use filtered water to make your teas. This has the added benefit of making your tea taste better, but it also filters out the fluoride added to your drinking water, which reduces the amount of fluoride in your tea.
  • Drink more Japanese green teas. Because fluoride comes from the environment, soil matters. And for some reason, Japanese green teas (like Sencha, Gyokuro and Matcha) have less fluoride than Chinese green teas.

Final thoughts on Fluoride in Green Tea
The argument that green tea is bad because of fluoride seems to have gotten out of control. The reality is that some fluoride helps prevent cavities and strengthen bones. But too much can be harmful. Green tea, however, will not cause problems in this regard unless you are drinking a huge amount daily. In Dr. Whyte’s study, the patient was drinking gallons of very low quality tea daily.

It’s interesting to note that some of the  tea studies related to green tea show that it helps prevent the very diseases that fluoride threatens, such as Alzheimer’s. The threat from fluoride could be true, but green tea isn’t the culprit putting it into your system. And green tea offers a great deal of positive health benefits from EGCG, antioxidants, etc. that tap water (and its fluoride) don’t. It seems silly to throw the baby out with the bathwater in this case.

I hope this helps you to understand the issues involved.

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Type your comment here.Thank you so much for your explanation about fluoride. It is confusing but your information certainly clarified the issues. I’m happy to drink my 10 cups of high quality green and white tea daily. I use the Tersano water filtration system to eliminate the fluoride that my community insists on putting into the water system. It’s cheaper than always buyer bottled water and eliminates the threats of plastic contamination.

Thank you so much for that informative piece on fluoride in teas! I will share this with my staff and customers immediately!

It is wonderful that you attempt to address this complicated issue at all, and I salute you for a good effort.
Having studied this issue at length I would like to add to your effort.
It is wonderful that you direct people to the youngest tea leaves and/or white teas.
If people search the net for fluoride concentrations in tea they will find some very high concentrations (in parts per million) in the lower quality bulk and brick teas. Consumption of these lower quality teas is a quick path to skeletal fluorosis in many countries.
There is a basic rule of fluoride absorption, subject to lots of influences, that half of what is ingested stays in the bone and teeth. The early stages of skeletal fluorosis are much more widely studied in India and China, where malnutrition, higher water consumption, higher fl. in water concentrations, burning coal for cooking, and industrial pollution have created horrific suffering.
The earlier stages of skeletal fluorosis mimic the symptoms of arthritis.
The 1989 Physician’s Desk Reference stated that fluoride is a nutrient with a very narrow safety range (like selenium). At that time, 1.5 mg of fluoride was considered adequate, and 4mg was the amount that you wouldn’t want to exceed very often.
Perhaps this was based upon the US EPA in 1977 stating that an intake of 4-5 mg/day would lead to skeletal fluorosis in 40 years, with an accumulation of 10,000 ppm in bone.

In 1997 the IOM changed the figures to 3-4 mg as adequate and 10mg as the “upper tolerable limit” for eight year olds (!!)and above. These are the figures you use. In different NRC reviews, 10mg a day was the amount that would cause crippling skeletal fluorosis (1993)or the early stages of skeletal fluorosis (1999) in 10-12 years.
The Tea Council in anticipation of new information coming to light in the 2006 NAS/NRC Fluoride in Drinking Water Report had a media statement that showed, based up the data used in the analysis, that it would take approximately 10 cups or more of tea to exceed the Tolerable Upper Intake Level. From this figure we can determine that they are using a 4ppm fl. concentration. There are four cups in a liter/quart, and a concentration of 4ppm (4mg/liter) would yield 1mg/cup, hence ten cups would come up to the 10 mg/day TUIL. 1 cup of 4ppm tea equals the dose of fluoride in 1 liter/quart of fluoridated water. 2 cups of tea at this concentration equals the daily dose of the recommended 2 liters of water a day.
The common mistake by water fluoridation advocates is to think that it takes a higher concentration of fluoride to cause harm, not realizing that daily exposures of lesser amounts over longer times have the same effect. It is crucial for tea drinkers to understand that fluoride is bio-accumulative, the most bone-seeking element there is and long term use of tea can add a significant amount of fluoride to the daily intake unless care is taken to find the lower fluoride teas.
That is why this site is SUCH a service.
One can reduce their uptake of fluoride by taking extra calcium and magnesium as they will bind up some of the fluoride. Perhaps milk in the tea helps with that. As iodine and fluoride are antagonists, boosting one’s iodine (seaweed!)is crucial to maintain thyroid health. This is probably why the Japanese with their high iodine diet seem to get away with higher tea consumption.
I appreciate that you realize that we are getting fluoride from many sources and your recommendation not to max out on tea is commendable.

The site you mentioned for fluoride content of tea, also said that the polyphenol component was there in the low fluoride younger leaves as well.

Thanks for providing this forum.

So sorry, should read 10mg….10-20 years–not 10-12 years. Feel free to moderate/edit/change.

The IOM has an Upper Tolerable Limit for eight year olds of 2.2mg a day which jumps mysteriously to 10mg/day for 9 year olds and above. Pardon my previous mistake, but it highlights the dubious science involved in their new limits. 9 year olds do not metabolize fluoride differently than 8 year olds. The curiousity of the IOM’s new standards is highlighted on page 81 of the Fluoride in Drinking Water 2006 report where they are evaluating total exposures: “Table 2-18 summarizes various published perspectives on the significance of given concentrations of fluoride exposure. Historically, a daily intake of 4-5 mg by an adult (0.057-0.071 mg/kg for a 70-kg adult) was considered a “health hazard” (McClure et al. 1945, cited by Singer et al. 1985).
However, the Institute of Medicine (IOM 1997) now lists 10 mg/day as a “tolerable upper intake” for children > 8 years old and adults, although that intake has also been associated with the possibility of mild (IOM 1997) or even crippling (NRC 1993) skeletal fluorosis.”
http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=11571&page=81

I just found this article which says that you lose the artery relaxing heart benefits when you add milk to the tea.
“German researchers have found that the relaxing effect of a few cups of ordinary black tea on the arteries is completely wiped out by milk.

After water, tea is the most widely drunk beverage in the world, and is increasingly popular in countries such as the US after reports that people who drink more tea have less cardiovascular disease and cancer. But these effects have been seen most clearly in east Asia, not in tea-loving countries such as the UK.”
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn10913

Wonderful information on a delicate subject. Since most tea lovers don’t even know there is significant fluoride in lower grades of the tea plant. A cup of 4ppm tea is the equivalent fluoride dose as one liter/quart of fluoridated water.
You are doing such a service here!

The fluoride content in tea site you mentioned that there were more polyphenols in the newer leaves as well.
Thanks for the post and the tea offerings on your site.

Great article. I love tea (the good quality stuff). I had no idea the brick tea, like iced tea had so much fluoride. I will drink less of that.

Lets face it. It’s insane that we put fluoride into our water.

Very interesting article. Thanks. Very recently i have become interested in the bitter teas of the raw puers harvested from trees which are sometimes hundreds of years old. The leaves seem to be made up of a tip and a couple of larger leaves. Being wild trees they are not fertalised. Would these type of leaves (traditonally used for brick teas) likely be more concentrated with flourides?

Great article! Just a correction to note, it is actually VERY difficult to filter fluoride from you water, you need to get a specialized filter for this. Most water filtration units do not filter out fluoride, unless they are reverse-osmosis type (but reverse osmosis poses other problems because of lack of beneficial minerals in the water).