The Five Most Common Things Added to Milk in India — and Which Ones Actually Harm You | Shunya Blog
Milk Safety Know What's in Your Milk

The Five Most Common Things Added to Milk in India — and Which Ones Actually Harm You

Viral posts claim 87% of Indian milk will cause cancer. FSSAI says Indian milk is largely safe. Neither is telling the full story. Here is a calm, factual breakdown of what adulteration actually involves, how common each type is, and what the real health risk is.

Milk Adulteration in India  ·  Part 1 of 4

Milk adulteration in India has generated more viral panic than almost any other food safety topic. WhatsApp forwards claiming that Indian milk will cause cancer by 2025, videos showing milk that "burns blue" as evidence of synthetic content, and social media posts attributing every chronic illness to dairy — most of it is misinformation, some of it is exaggeration, and a meaningful portion is genuine concern that deserves a straight answer.

The straight answer is this: adulteration in Indian milk is real and statistically significant, particularly in unpackaged and informal supply channels. Most of what is found is economically motivated dilution — primarily water — rather than dangerous chemical contamination. The genuinely harmful adulterants exist and are found at lower frequencies. The distinction between the two is important, and almost no popular coverage makes it.

This series covers what is actually in Indian milk, how it gets there, what the regulatory framework does and does not catch, and what a consumer buying milk in an Indian city can reasonably do with that information.

"Most milk adulteration in India is economically motivated dilution. The dangerous adulterants are real but less common than the headlines suggest. The distinction matters — for consumers and for the brands trying to earn genuine trust."

A note on the numbers

Adulteration statistics in India vary widely depending on the study, the region, the channel (formal vs informal), and the definition of "adulteration." A 2024 peer-reviewed study found 70.6% adulteration across sampled milk, primarily water and SNF dilution. FSSAI's national survey found 10–12% non-compliance in branded packaged milk. Both figures are accurate — they are measuring different things. This post uses the distinction between informal/unpackaged and formal/packaged channels throughout, because the risk profile is genuinely different.

What is actually found

The Five Adulterants — Ranked by Prevalence and Actual Risk

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1. Water

Most common adulterant · Found in 40–70% of informal channel samples
Low health risk

Water is by far the most common adulterant in Indian milk. It is added at the farm, at the collection point, by the transporter, or by the retailer — often at multiple points in the chain, each adding a small percentage. The motivation is simple: every litre of water added to five litres of milk generates the revenue of one litre at near-zero cost.

The health risk from water dilution alone is low if the water is clean. The real risks are nutritional — diluted milk delivers less protein, fat, and calcium than labelled — and indirect: diluted fat and SNF levels fall below FSSAI standards, which is why fat and SNF testing at collection points is mandatory and effective at catching this adulterant.

The verdict: Economically damaging, nutritionally dishonest, but not a direct health hazard unless the water source is contaminated with microbes or nitrates — which is a separate concern in rural supply chains.
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2. Skimmed Milk Powder (SMP) or Reconstituted Milk

Common in urban informal channels · Used to restore SNF after water addition
Low health risk

After adding water, milk SNF levels drop detectably. A common workaround is adding skimmed milk powder or reconstituted milk solids to restore the SNF reading to an acceptable level while the fat remains diluted. This is adulteration in a regulatory sense — the product is misrepresented — but the health risk from SMP itself is minimal since it is a dairy ingredient.

The more significant concern is when imported or sub-standard SMP is used — powder with bacterial contamination or improper storage history. This is a supply chain quality problem, not a direct adulterant risk, but it contributes to the overall uncertainty in informal milk quality.

The verdict: Regulatory fraud, but not a direct health threat from the SMP component itself. The indirect risks come from what the SMP was, how it was stored, and what else entered the chain alongside it.
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3. Neutralisers — Caustic Soda, Sodium Carbonate, Baking Soda

Moderately common in informal channels · Used to extend shelf life
Moderate health risk

As milk ages and bacteria produce lactic acid, acidity increases and the milk approaches souring. Adding an alkali — caustic soda (sodium hydroxide), washing soda (sodium carbonate), or baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) — neutralises the acidity, making old milk smell and test fresh. It is added by transporters and small retailers to extend the usable window of milk that would otherwise be rejected or go unsold.

The health risks vary by substance and quantity. Baking soda at low levels is low-risk. Sodium carbonate at higher concentrations is an irritant. Caustic soda (sodium hydroxide) is genuinely harmful at any significant dose — it is a corrosive alkali used in industrial cleaning. FSSAI testing using the rosalic acid test or MBRT can detect alkalinity, and large processors test for this routinely. It is most prevalent in informal channels where testing does not occur.

The verdict: A genuine health concern when caustic soda is involved, primarily in informal, unpackaged supply chains. Rarely found in branded packaged milk from large processors with testing infrastructure.
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4. Starch, Glucose, and Other Solids

Found in targeted regional surveys · Adds density and SNF appearance
Moderate risk (depends on source)

Starch — from wheat, maize, or arrowroot — is added to increase the apparent density and total solids of diluted milk. It is detectable with iodine solution, which turns blue-black in the presence of starch. Glucose is added for similar reasons and to restore sweetness lost through dilution. These adulterants are more common in specific regions and distribution channels than nationally.

The direct health risk from food-grade starch or glucose is low. The concern is twofold: first, consumers with diabetes or metabolic conditions are unknowingly consuming added sugars in a product they consider unsweetened. Second, industrial starch sources may carry their own contamination — mycotoxins from maize starch being one relevant example given the broader supply chain problems discussed in the previous series.

The verdict: Moderate concern, particularly for consumers managing blood sugar. Detectable with simple home tests. More prevalent in unpackaged milk in specific markets than in branded national supply chains.
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5. Urea, Detergent, and Hydrogen Peroxide

Less common but genuinely dangerous · Preservative and SNF manipulation
High health risk

Urea is added to increase nitrogen content — which artificially inflates protein readings in standard tests. Industrial urea is not food-grade; chronic consumption is linked to kidney and liver stress. Detergent (typically low-grade soap or surfactant) is occasionally used to emulsify cheap fat substitutes into milk and to create a foam similar to fresh milk. Hydrogen peroxide, used as a preservative to extend shelf life, inhibits bacterial growth but is not approved for use in milk at any concentration.

These adulterants are found at lower frequencies than water or neutralisers, but they represent genuine harm when present. The FSSAI 2018 national milk survey found urea in a meaningful percentage of samples, concentrated in specific states and informal channels. They are almost never found in formal packaged milk from large processors — the testing infrastructure at procurement points catches them — but they are a real risk for consumers buying loose milk from informal vendors, particularly in states with weaker enforcement.

The verdict: The adulterants that justify genuine concern. Present at lower frequencies than water dilution but concentrated in informal supply chains with no testing. The primary risk for consumers who buy packaged milk from established brands is low. For consumers buying loose unpackaged milk, the risk is not negligible.

How to read the risk

Packaged vs Unpackaged: The Risk Profile Is Not the Same

The most important variable in Indian milk adulteration risk is not which brand is being consumed — it is whether the milk is packaged and procured through a formal channel with testing infrastructure, or whether it is loose, unpackaged, and moving through an informal chain.

AdulterantPackaged branded milkUnpackaged / loose milk
Water dilutionLow — fat and SNF testing at procurement catches itHigh — common at multiple points in the chain
SMP / reconstituted solidsLow — ingredient fraud detectable in quality auditsModerate — used to restore SNF after water addition
Neutralisers (soda, caustic)Very low — alkalinity testing standard at plantsModerate to high — used to extend shelf life without testing
Starch / glucoseVery low — detectable in standard FTIR analysisModerate — found in regional studies of loose milk
Urea / detergent / H₂O₂Rare — procurement testing catches before plant entryLow to moderate — present in surveys, concentrated in specific states
Aflatoxin M1Moderate — present across both channels; branded milk tested but results not disclosedModerate to high — no testing at any point in informal chain
The one exception to the packaged milk safety assumption

For most of the adulterants above, packaged milk from established national brands carries genuinely low risk. The exception is aflatoxin M1, which the previous series covered in detail. Unlike water dilution or urea, aflatoxin M1 enters the supply chain at the farm level through contaminated feed — before any procurement testing occurs. It is present in branded packaged milk at rates that are not publicly disclosed and not meaningfully reduced by processing. This is the one contamination type where the branded vs unbranded distinction provides less protection than consumers assume.

The misinformation problem

What the Viral Claims Get Wrong

The WHO "87% cancer" advisory that circulated widely on WhatsApp does not exist. FSSAI has confirmed this explicitly. The claim that Indian milk is "synthetic" — made from oil, detergent, and urea with no actual milk — is not supported by any peer-reviewed study or regulatory survey. It conflates isolated cases of fraud with the norm across a supply chain producing 230 million tonnes of milk annually.

This does not mean Indian milk has no problems. It means the problems are different from the viral narrative — less dramatic, more systemic, concentrated in specific channels, and addressable through supply chain transparency rather than wholesale fear. A consumer who switches from informal loose milk to branded packaged milk eliminates most of the adulterant risk above. A consumer who then asks the right questions about aflatoxin — covered in the previous series — addresses the one risk that packaging alone does not solve.

Why misinformation is itself a problem

Viral panic about synthetic milk pushes consumers toward unverified "natural" alternatives — often unpackaged, untested, and sold through informal channels with no traceability — which actually carry higher adulteration risk than the branded product they left. The misinformation loop ends up harming the consumers it claims to protect.

What to take away from this

  • Milk adulteration in India is real and concentrated in informal, unpackaged supply chains. It is significantly less common in branded packaged milk from large processors with testing infrastructure.
  • The most common adulterant is water — economically motivated, nutritionally dishonest, but not directly dangerous unless the water is contaminated.
  • The genuinely harmful adulterants — caustic soda, urea, detergent — exist but are found at lower frequencies, primarily in informal supply chains with no procurement testing.
  • Viral claims about synthetic milk and WHO cancer advisories are misinformation. The real adulteration picture is more nuanced and more fixable than the panic narrative suggests.
  • Aflatoxin M1 is the one contamination type where branded packaged milk offers less protection than consumers assume — it enters at the feed level, before any processing plant testing occurs, and is rarely disclosed.
  • Switching from informal loose milk to branded packaged milk eliminates most adulteration risk. Asking brands about their feed quality and aflatoxin testing addresses the remainder.

Milk quality starts before the procurement test.

The adulterants that testing catches are important. The ones that enter through feed — before any processor sees the milk — require a different answer. Shunya builds that answer at the supply chain level.

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