preservative INS 252

Potassium nitrate E252

curing agent — Primarily synthetic or mineral.

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

Potassium nitrate

CAS: 7757-79-1

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?

Potassium nitrate occurs naturally in Mineral deposits (niter) and Bat guano caves. Many people consume it daily without realizing it's also a listed food additive.

Beyond food, Potassium nitrate is also used in medicine, industrial applications, household products. 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 ~148 slices of cured salami (typical 50mg/kg potassium nitrate) in a single day. (This is a mathematical illustration, not a safety recommendation.)

Regulatory Analysis

Potassium nitrate's dual history as both a meat-curing agent and the oxidizer in black powder gunpowder offers an unusual lens on how the same chemical acquires entirely different regulatory identities depending on context. In the food safety domain, its controversy is identical to other nitrate/nitrite curing agents -- conversion to nitrite in the body, subsequent nitrosamine formation under heat, and the IARC processed meat classification. The compound's significance in the current regulatory landscape lies in traditional dry-cured charcuterie, where its slow conversion to nitrite during extended aging periods makes it functionally irreplaceable, and where cultural heritage protections in European food law create additional resistance to any restriction.

Detailed Regulatory Assessment

🇪🇺

European Union (EFSA)

approved Max: varies by meat type (typically 150-300 mg/kg residual) mg/kg

Only permitted in specific meat products

Official EFSA Link
🇺🇸

United States (FDA)

approved GRAS (Generally Recognized As Safe)

Limited to 500 ppm in finished product when used alone, 200 ppm when used with nitrite

🇯🇵

Japan (MHLW)

approved Cat: 指定添加物

Permitted in meat curing

Acceptable Daily Intake (ADI)

International Standard (JECFA)

0–3.7 mg/kg bw/day (as nitrate ion)

mg/kg body weight per day

European Standard (EFSA)

3.7 mg/kg bw/day (as nitrate ion)

Everyday Perspective

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

!
~148 of slices of cured salami (typical 50mg/kg potassium nitrate)
~1.5mg per serving

Natural Occurrence

A preservative and curing salt used in processed meats. Historically known as saltpeter and famously used in gunpowder production. Also used to cure meat and prevent botulism.

Mineral deposits (niter)Bat guano cavesManure heaps

Manufacturing

Method: chemical synthesis or mineral extraction

Produced industrially by neutralizing nitric acid with potassium hydroxide, or extracted from natural nitrate deposits.

Applications Beyond Food

Medical

Historically used as diuretic

Industrial

Gunpowder and fireworks manufacturing, fertilizer, rocket fuel oxidizer

Household

Stump remover, tree stump killer

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Potassium nitrate (E252)?
Potassium nitrate (E252) is a preservative used in food products. It is curing agent and synthetic or mineral. A preservative and curing salt used in processed meats. Historically known as saltpeter and famously used in gunpowder production. Also used to cure meat and prevent botulism.
Where is Potassium nitrate found naturally?
Potassium nitrate is naturally found in Mineral deposits (niter), Bat guano caves, Manure heaps. A preservative and curing salt used in processed meats. Historically known as saltpeter and famously used in gunpowder production. Also used to cure meat and prevent botulism.
What is the ADI for Potassium nitrate?
The Acceptable Daily Intake (ADI) for Potassium nitrate is 0–3.7 mg/kg bw/day (as nitrate ion) 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 Potassium nitrate?
Potassium nitrate is used in various food categories including Meat preparations, Meat products. It is used as a preservative in these products.
Is Potassium nitrate the same as Saltpeter?
Yes, Potassium nitrate is also known as Saltpeter, Saltpetre, Niter. These are different names for the same substance.