Health experts and agencies, including the FDA and EPA, recognize PTFE cookware as safe when used under normal conditions. Here’s what matters most:

  • Safe at typical cooking temperatures (below 500°F / 260°C).
  • Risk rises if overheated: Above ~600°F, PTFE can begin to degrade and release fumes.
  • Everyday cooking rarely reaches those extremes, but using pans for broiling or forgetting them on high heat can push the limits.

HexClad pans are also oven-safe up to 500°F, giving cooks flexibility while staying within the safety zone.

The Health Debate Around PTFE and PFAS

The cookware safety debate often gets tangled up with the larger controversy around PFAS, sometimes called “forever chemicals.” While PTFE (the nonstick material in HexClad) is part of the fluoropolymer family, it is not the same as the industrial PFAS compounds that have polluted water systems and raised serious health concerns.

The EPA’s updated PFAS guidelines (2023–2025) focus mainly on drinking water contamination, not cookware. That said, public concern spills over into kitchen products, leading many to believe all PTFE is harmful. In reality, PTFE in cookware is chemically stable when used below 500°F, and studies suggest it does not migrate into food during normal cooking.

This distinction matters: industrial PFAS exposure carries documented risks, but PTFE-coated pans like HexClad remain safe within recommended use.


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