preservative INS 218

Methyl Paraben E218

paraben — Primarily synthetic.

🇪🇺 EU: Approved
🇺🇸 USA: Approved
🇯🇵 Japan: Approved
🇦🇺 AU/NZ: Approved
🇨🇦 Canada: Approved
Scientific Name

Methyl 4-hydroxybenzoate

CAS: 99-76-3

Data verified: 2026-04-04

Factual Regulatory Reference

This database provides factual regulatory information compiled from official government sources. It does not constitute medical, nutritional, or safety advice. Regulatory status varies by country and is subject to change. Always refer to your local regulatory authority for the most current information.

? Did You Know?

Beyond food, Methyl Paraben is also used in cosmetics, medicine, industrial applications. Its versatility makes it one of the most multi-purpose chemical compounds in everyday life.

To reach the Acceptable Daily Intake limit, a 60kg adult would need to consume approximately ~15 applications cosmetic product applications (0.4% paraben, 10g) in a single day. (This is a mathematical illustration, not a safety recommendation.)

Regulatory Analysis

Methylparaben illustrates the regulatory challenge of managing a substance whose primary commercial significance lies in cosmetics (over 90% of use) while its food additive status draws it into an entirely separate safety evaluation framework. The 2023 EU classification of all parabens as Category 1 endocrine disruptors has not yet triggered food use restrictions for methyl and ethyl forms, creating a policy lag where the official hazard classification has outpaced the regulatory response. The finding that methylparaben shows no competitive binding to human estrogen or androgen receptors -- unlike its longer-chain relatives -- introduces a chain-length dependent structure-activity relationship that complicates the regulatory instinct to treat the paraben family as a single class.

Detailed Regulatory Assessment

🇪🇺

European Union (EFSA)

approved Max: varies by food category mg/kg

Group ADI of 0-10 mg/kg bw/day for methyl and ethyl parabens; permitted as conditionally permitted preservative in limited food categories; cosmetics limited to 0.4% (or 0.8% for mixed parabens)

🇺🇸

United States (FDA)

approved GRAS

FDA recognizes as GRAS for food and cosmetic antibacterial preservation

🇯🇵

Japan (MHLW)

approved Cat: 指定添加物

Part of paraben group (5 types designated); used with usage standards

Acceptable Daily Intake (ADI)

International Standard (JECFA)

0–10 mg/kg bw/day (group ADI for methyl and ethyl parabens)

mg/kg body weight per day

European Standard (EFSA)

10 mg/kg bw/day (group ADI for methyl and ethyl parabens and their sodium salts)

Everyday Perspective

For a 60kg adult, this limit is roughly equivalent to consuming:

!
~15 applications of cosmetic product applications (0.4% paraben, 10g)
~40mg per serving

Natural Occurrence

This additive is not known to occur naturally in significant quantities.

Manufacturing

Method: chemical synthesis

Produced by esterification of p-hydroxybenzoic acid with methanol in the presence of an acid catalyst (typically sulfuric acid or hydrochloric acid). Industrial production uses continuous esterification processes followed by purification through crystallization.

Applications Beyond Food

Cosmetics

Most widely used preservative in cosmetics, personal care products, shampoos, and lotions (up to 0.4%)

Medical

Extensively used in pharmaceutical preparations, oral medications, and topical products

Industrial

Used in industrial products and coatings

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Methyl Paraben (E218)?
Methyl Paraben (E218) is a preservative used in food products. It is paraben and synthetic. A synthetic ester of p-hydroxybenzoic acid. The most commonly used member of the paraben family, with broad-spectrum antimicrobial and antifungal activity. Widely used in cosmetics and pharmaceuticals; limited but approved use in food products.
What is the ADI for Methyl Paraben?
The Acceptable Daily Intake (ADI) for Methyl Paraben is 0–10 mg/kg bw/day (group ADI for methyl and ethyl parabens) as established by JECFA (Joint FAO/WHO Expert Committee on Food Additives). ADI represents the amount that can be consumed daily over a lifetime without appreciable health risk.
What foods contain Methyl Paraben?
Methyl Paraben is used in various food categories including Beverages. It is used as a preservative in these products.
Is Methyl Paraben the same as Methyl p-hydroxybenzoate?
Yes, Methyl Paraben is also known as Methyl p-hydroxybenzoate, Methylparaben, 4-Hydroxybenzoic acid methyl ester. These are different names for the same substance.