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BPA-Free & Food-Grade: How to Verify Your Stainless Steel Divided Plates Are Truly Safe

Date: 2026-04-21
Browse times: 1

A stainless steel divided plate stamped "BPA-free" and "food grade" sells for USD 2.50–8.00 at wholesale. A plate that actually holds FDA, LFGB, and DGCCRF certifications from accredited labs — with a traceable mill test certificate — costs USD 1.80–4.50 factory-direct. The price overlap tells you something: many "food grade" claims on the market are unverified labels, not tested compliance. The difference is documentation, not metal.

This guide is for kitchenware brand owners, Amazon/e-commerce sellers, school and hospital procurement managers, foodservice distributors, and promotional product buyers who need to verify — not assume — that their stainless steel divided plates meet food-contact safety standards.

BPA-Free Food-Grade Stainless Steel Divided Plates Safety Guide


1. BPA-Free by Nature: Why Stainless Steel Does Not Contain BPA

BPA (bisphenol A) is a chemical used in polycarbonate plastics and epoxy resins. It has no role in stainless steel manufacturing. A stainless steel divided plate — an alloy of iron, chromium, and nickel — is inherently BPA-free without any reformulation or substitution.

MaterialContains BPA?Chemical Leaching RiskHeat Stability
SUS304 Stainless SteelNo — not in compositionNegligible (Cr/Ni within safe limits)Stable to 300 °C+
Polycarbonate PlasticYes — BPA is a raw materialHigh (especially with heat and acidic foods)Degrades above 100 °C
MelamineNo BPA, but releases formaldehydeModerate (formaldehyde + melamine migration)Unsafe above 70 °C
"BPA-Free" PlasticNo BPA, may contain BPS/BPF substitutesUnknown — substitutes are under-studiedVaries by formulation

Key point: Stainless steel is not "BPA-free" in the way plastics use the term — it never contained BPA to begin with. There is no reformulation, no substitute chemical, and no reliance on voluntary labeling. The material composition is verifiable through mill test certificates.


2. What "Food Grade" Actually Means: Certifications Explained

"Food grade" means a product has been tested for metal migration — the amount of chromium, nickel, manganese, and other elements that transfer from the plate into food under controlled conditions. Different markets set different thresholds.

CertificationMarketWhat It TestsStrictness
FDA 21 CFRUnited StatesCr, Ni, Mn migration into food simulants (acetic acid, water, oil)Baseline standard
EU 1935/2004 + CEEuropean UnionOverall migration limit (10 mg/dm2) + specific metal release limitsStrict — especially for Ni
LFGB S30-31GermanyStricter Ni release limits + organoleptic testing (taste/odor transfer)Most strict in EU
DGCCRFFranceFrench-specific migration testing + labeling requirementsStrict — separate from EU framework

A product that passes FDA does not automatically pass LFGB. If you distribute in multiple markets, you need test reports for each. A single "food grade" claim without specifying which standard is meaningless — always ask for the actual test report number and issuing lab.


3. Red Flags: How to Spot Non-Food-Grade Steel

Not every stainless steel product on the market meets food-contact standards. Low-cost divided plates sometimes use grades with excessive manganese, recycled steel with unknown composition, or surface coatings not tested for food contact.

Red FlagWhat It MeansRisk Level
No grade stamped on productManufacturer avoids traceability — could be 201, 202, or unknown alloyHigh
"Stainless steel" with no grade numberCould be any grade, including those not rated for food contactHigh
Magnetic responseMay indicate 201 grade (higher Mn) or ferritic steel — worth investigatingMedium
Rust spots after short useChromium content likely below 16% — passive oxide layer is insufficientHigh
Metallic taste or odorMetal migration exceeds safe thresholds — would fail LFGB organoleptic testHigh
Price significantly below market averageSUS304 has a floor cost driven by nickel prices — if too cheap, grade may be lowerMedium

4. How to Verify Material Grade

If you already own plates or are evaluating samples, these methods range from quick field checks to definitive lab analysis:

MethodHow It WorksAccuracy
XRF Handheld AnalyzerX-ray fluorescence reads exact alloy percentages in secondsDefinitive
Nickel Drop TestChemical reagent changes color based on nickel contentSemi-quantitative — can distinguish 304 from 201
Magnet Test304 is generally non-magnetic; 201 may attract a magnetRough indicator only — cold-worked 304 can show slight magnetism
Mill Test CertificateLab report from steel mill tracing exact chemical composition to a specific coilDefinitive (when sourcing)

5. Certification Checklist for Bulk Buyers

When evaluating a supplier for stainless steel divided plates at volume, request these documents before placing an order. A credible manufacturer will have them ready.

Mill Test Certificate (MTC 3.1): Proves steel grade and chemical composition. Check: Cr ≥ 18%, Ni ≥ 8% for 304. Heat number must match the coil.

FDA Test Report: Confirms US food-contact compliance. Must be issued by an accredited lab (SGS, Intertek, TUV).

EU 1935/2004 Declaration: Legal requirement for EU market. Must reference the specific product SKU, not a generic statement.

LFGB Test Report: Required for Germany. Check Ni release ≤ 0.14 mg/kg threshold + organoleptic pass.

DGCCRF Report: Required for France. Separate migration testing regime + French-language labeling requirements.

Factory Audit Report: BSCI, ISO 9001, or equivalent. Check audit date is current (within 12 months).

If a supplier says "our products are food grade" but cannot produce a specific test report from an accredited laboratory — walk away. Verbal assurances and generic certificates that do not reference your product category are not sufficient for regulatory compliance or liability protection.


6. Made in USA vs Made in China: Does Origin Matter for Safety?

Country of origin alone does not determine product safety. What matters is the steel grade, the testing regime, and the supplier's transparency.

FactorMade in USAMade in China (Certified)Made in China (Uncertified)
Steel Grade TraceabilityStandard practiceAvailable on request (MTC provided)Often unavailable
Food-Contact CertificationFDA compliance assumedFDA + EU + LFGB + DGCCRF availableMay lack any certification
Third-Party AuditsCommon for large brandsSGS, TUV, Bureau Veritas availableRarely conducted
Price PointHigher (labor + overhead)Competitive (scale manufacturing)Lowest (often at the expense of material quality)
Product RangeLimited SKU optionsWide range with OEM customizationGeneric designs, no customization

Instead of asking "Where was it made?" ask: "Can you provide a mill test certificate, an accredited food-contact test report, and a third-party factory audit?" A Chinese manufacturer that holds CE, FDA, LFGB, and DGCCRF certifications from recognized labs has demonstrated a higher standard of compliance than an unaudited supplier in any country.


Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Is all stainless steel food grade?

No. Only certain grades — primarily 304 (18/8) and 316 — are considered food-safe by major regulatory bodies. Grades like 201 and 202 have higher manganese content and may not pass strict EU migration tests, especially with acidic foods.

Q: What is 18/8 stainless steel?

18/8 refers to the approximate composition: 18% chromium and 8% nickel. This is SUS304 — the most widely used food-grade stainless steel. Chromium creates the corrosion-resistant oxide layer; nickel stabilizes the crystal structure and improves acid resistance.

Q: Can stainless steel leach into food?

All metals release trace amounts of ions into food. With SUS304, migration levels for chromium and nickel fall within FDA and EU limits under normal use. Prolonged cooking of highly acidic foods (vinegar, tomato sauce) in damaged or low-grade steel can increase migration.

Q: Is "food grade" a regulated term?

Not universally. In the US, it generally means FDA 21 CFR compliance. In the EU, it means passing EU 1935/2004 migration testing. There is no single global standard — always ask for the specific certification, not just the label.

Q: Does surface finish affect food safety?

Smoother finishes (#4 satin or mirror) have fewer micro-pits where bacteria can harbor. For HACCP-compliant operations, #4 satin is the standard — it balances cleanability with durability.


Najor Stainless Steel Divided Plates: MOQ 200 pcs, Factory-Direct

  • Material: SUS304 (18/8) — FDA, LFGB, DGCCRF, CE certified

  • Range: Round, rectangular, square, oval divided plates — 3 to 7 compartments, 20cm to 40cm

  • Customization: Compartment layout, PVD color coating, laser logo engraving, custom packaging

  • MOQ: 200 pcs (stock) / 1,000 pcs (logo) / 5,000 pcs (OEM)

  • Lead time: Sample 7 days / Production 25–30 workdays

  • Capacity: 500,000+ divided plates per month

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