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Heavy Metals in Tea: Why We Test Every Batch (Lab Results) (Preview)

Heavy Metals in Tea: Why We Test Every Batch (Lab Results) (Preview)

Green tea is one of the most studied beverages on earth — linked in research to polyphenols, catechins, and potential benefits for metabolism, heart health, and more. After water, tea is the most consumed drink in the world.

But have you ever wondered what else might be in the leaves — especially if you drink matcha whole, not just an infusion?

Tea plants are bioaccumulators: they draw minerals (and contaminants) from soil into the leaf. That is why origin, harvest, organic certification, and independent testing matter as much as grade or colour.

At Purematcha, safety is our number one priority. We test at source in Japan and again through independent Australian laboratories — and we publish the results.


At a glance

What we test Lead, cadmium, arsenic, mercury (heavy metals)
Who tests Agrifood Technology and NMI (National Measurement Institute), Australia
Our results Well below Australian and international safety guidelines
Why it matters Tea plants absorb soil contaminants; matcha = whole leaf consumed
What to look for Organic certification, known origin, brands that publish lab data
Full reports Laboratory certificates on this page

Our commitment

Tested in Australia, not just overseas

We randomly test for contaminants including heavy metals, radiation, pesticides, and mould — at the farms in Japan and through third-party labs here in Australia before product reaches you.


How toxic is your tea?

Green tea’s health halo only holds if the leaf itself is clean.

Factors that affect contamination risk:

  • Soil and air quality at the farm (industrial regions vs clean mountain terroir)
  • Harvest timing — older leaves on lower-grade tea have longer to accumulate contaminants
  • Processing and packaging — including microplastics in some tea bags
  • Country of origin — studies have found higher pesticide residues in some mass-market teas from heavily industrialised regions compared with Japanese production

A 2012 Greenpeace China investigation (reported in the Financial Times) found pesticides in all tested Chinese tea samples — 14 of 18 with compounds potentially harmful at consumed levels. That is why who you buy from and what they publish matters.


What Purematcha tests for

We screen for the four heavy metals most relevant to tea safety:

Metal Why it matters
Lead Neurotoxic; accumulates in soil near industry and old orchards
Cadmium Kidney and bone risk with long-term exposure
Arsenic Naturally occurring in some soils; regulated in food
Mercury Environmental contaminant; rarely detected in our tests

Tests are run to method TP/394 (Agrifood Technology) or NT2_46 (NMI). Results are compared against Australian food safety guidelines.


Lab results summary (mg/kg)

All results below are well below safety guidelines or not detected. Expand any product for the full breakdown, or scroll to laboratory certificates for the original PDF reports.

Product Arsenic Cadmium Lead Mercury Lab / date
EISAI ceremonial 0.020 0.014 0.050 <0.010 Agrifood · Dec 2025
MISAKI ceremonial 0.026 0.015 0.096 <0.010 Agrifood · Aug 2025
KOZAN-JI premium 0.027 0.018 0.066 <0.010 Agrifood · Dec 2025
HINOKA premium 0.026 0.011 0.071 <0.010 Agrifood · Jul 2025
KIYOMIDORI premium 0.027 0.015 0.150 <0.010 Agrifood · Dec 2025
KINARI culinary 0.016 0.010 0.032 <0.010 Agrifood · Dec 2025
OYAMA premium 0.021 0.017 0.080 <0.010 Agrifood · Dec 2025
TAKANE ceremonial 0.022 0.015 0.120 <0.010 Agrifood · Dec 2025
WAKABA premium 0.012 0.012 0.046 <0.010 Agrifood · Dec 2025
Yamabuki Nadeshiko loose leaf ND 0.011 0.078 ND NMI · Aug 2023
NISHI ceremonial ND 0.019 0.077 ND NMI · Aug 2023
GOKOU ceremonial ND 0.014 0.085 ND NMI · Aug 2023

ND = not detected at method limit. Values in mg/kg.


Results by product

EISAI ceremonial grade organic matcha
Element Result Method Status
Arsenic 0.020 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Cadmium 0.014 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Lead 0.050 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Mercury <0.010 mg/kg TP/394 Not detected ✓

Sampled 10 December 2025 · Report 452482 · Agrifood Technology · View PDF certificate · View product →

MISAKI ceremonial grade organic matcha
Element Result Method Status
Arsenic 0.026 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Cadmium 0.015 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Lead 0.096 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Mercury <0.010 mg/kg TP/394 Not detected ✓

Sampled 4 August 2025 · Report 418659 · Agrifood Technology · View PDF certificate · View product →

Kozan-ji organic premium grade matcha
Element Result Method Status
Arsenic 0.027 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Cadmium 0.018 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Lead 0.066 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Mercury <0.010 mg/kg TP/394 Not detected ✓

Sampled 10 December 2025 · Report 452482 · Agrifood Technology · View PDF certificate · View product →

Hinoka organic premium grade matcha
Element Result Method Status
Arsenic 0.026 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Cadmium 0.011 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Lead 0.071 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Mercury <0.010 mg/kg TP/394 Not detected ✓

Sampled 14 July 2025 · Report 413380 · Agrifood Technology · View PDF certificate · View product →

Kiyomidori premium grade matcha
Element Result Method Status
Arsenic 0.027 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Cadmium 0.015 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Lead 0.150 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Mercury <0.010 mg/kg TP/394 Not detected ✓

Sampled 10 December 2025 · Report 452482 · Agrifood Technology · View PDF certificate · View product →

Kinari superior culinary grade matcha
Element Result Method Status
Arsenic 0.016 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Cadmium 0.010 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Lead 0.032 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Mercury <0.010 mg/kg TP/394 Not detected ✓

Sampled 10 December 2025 · Report 452482 · Agrifood Technology · View PDF certificate · View product →

Oyama premium grade matcha
Element Result Method Status
Arsenic 0.021 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Cadmium 0.017 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Lead 0.080 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Mercury <0.010 mg/kg TP/394 Not detected ✓

Sampled 10 December 2025 · Report 452482 · Agrifood Technology · View PDF certificate · View product →

Takane ceremonial grade matcha
Element Result Method Status
Arsenic 0.022 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Cadmium 0.015 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Lead 0.120 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Mercury <0.010 mg/kg TP/394 Not detected ✓

Sampled 10 December 2025 · Report 452482 · Agrifood Technology · View PDF certificate · View product →

Wakaba premium grade matcha
Element Result Method Status
Arsenic 0.012 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Cadmium 0.012 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Lead 0.046 mg/kg TP/394 Well below guidelines ✓
Mercury <0.010 mg/kg TP/394 Not detected ✓

Sampled 10 December 2025 · Report 418659 · Agrifood Technology · View PDF certificate · View product →

Yamabuki Nadeshiko loose leaf tea
Element Result Method Status
Arsenic <0.05 mg/kg NT2_46 Not detected ✓
Cadmium 0.011 mg/kg NT2_46 Well below guidelines ✓
Lead 0.078 mg/kg NT2_46 Well below guidelines ✓
Mercury <0.01 mg/kg NT2_46 Not detected ✓

Sampled 7 August 2023 · Report RN1/400876 · NMI (National Measurement Institute) · View product →

Nishi ceremonial grade organic matcha
Element Result Method Status
Arsenic <0.05 mg/kg NT2_46 Not detected ✓
Cadmium 0.019 mg/kg NT2_46 Well below guidelines ✓
Lead 0.077 mg/kg NT2_46 Well below guidelines ✓
Mercury <0.01 mg/kg NT2_46 Not detected ✓

Sampled 7 August 2023 · Report RN1/400876 · NMI (National Measurement Institute) · View product →

Gokou ceremonial grade organic matcha
Element Result Method Status
Arsenic <0.05 mg/kg NT2_46 Not detected ✓
Cadmium 0.014 mg/kg NT2_46 Well below guidelines ✓
Lead 0.085 mg/kg NT2_46 Well below guidelines ✓
Mercury <0.01 mg/kg NT2_46 Not detected ✓

Sampled 7 August 2023 · Report RN1/400876 · NMI (National Measurement Institute) · View product →


Laboratory certificates

Independent Agrifood Technology certificates are embedded below — the same PDF reports published on our original safety page. Each report may cover multiple products tested in the same batch.

Agrifood Technology · Report 452482 · December 2025

EISAI, Kozan-ji, Kiyomidori, Oyama, Takane & Kinari

Download PDF

Agrifood Technology · Report 418659 · August 2025

Misaki & Wakaba

Download PDF

Agrifood Technology · Report 413380 · July 2025

Hinoka & Akinomori

Download PDF

NMI report RN1/400876 (Yamabuki Nadeshiko, Nishi, Gokou — August 2023) is summarised in the product results above.


How to choose safer, higher-quality tea

  • Buy organic-certified tea — JAS / Australian organic standards reduce pesticide exposure
  • Know the origin — country, region, and ideally the farm or co-op
  • Choose brands that test and publish — transparency beats marketing claims
  • Prefer early-harvest, higher-grade leaf — less time in soil to accumulate contaminants
  • Check packaging — avoid tea bags with plastic mesh if that concerns you

Japanese teas from reputable farms — especially organic, first-flush matcha — consistently test cleaner than many mass-market alternatives. That is the lane we operate in, and why we keep testing.


Frequently asked questions

What heavy metals are tested in tea?

The four we routinely screen for are lead, cadmium, arsenic, and mercury — the metals most relevant to tea and food safety standards in Australia.

Why is heavy metal testing important for matcha?

With matcha, you consume the entire leaf, not just a steeped infusion. Any contaminant in the leaf ends up in your cup — so testing is non-negotiable for daily drinkers.

How often does Purematcha test its teas?

We test regularly and randomly — at farms in Japan and through independent Australian labs (Agrifood Technology, NMI). New harvests and SKUs are screened before sale.

Are Purematcha teas safe to drink daily?

Our published results show all tested products well below Australian safety guidelines for heavy metals. See the summary table, product breakdowns, and PDF certificates on this page.

What are the health risks of heavy metals in tea?

Long-term exposure to elevated lead, cadmium, or arsenic can contribute to neurological, kidney, and developmental health concerns. Levels in properly tested Japanese organic tea are typically far below risk thresholds — which is why we test and publish.

How can I tell if a tea brand is trustworthy?

Look for organic certification, clear origin, and published third-party lab reports — not just marketing copy. If a brand cannot show you data, that is worth noting.

Does organic tea have fewer heavy metals?

Organic certification primarily governs pesticides and farming practices. Heavy metals come from soil and environment, so organic alone is not enough — you still want independent heavy metal testing from a transparent supplier.


Shop lab-tested matcha · Ceremonial vs culinary grades · Matcha health benefits


— The Purematcha team

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