Food Dyes & ADHD: Which Foods Should Your Kids Avoid?

Multiple peer-reviewed studies link artificial food dyes — especially Red 40 and Yellow 5 — to increased hyperactivity and attention problems in children. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends limiting artificial food dyes for children with ADHD. Children consume 3-4x more food dye per pound of body weight than adults.

The Research: Food Dyes and Children's Behavior

Which Dyes Are Most Problematic?

DyeADHD Concern LevelStatusCommon In
Red 40HighPhase-out 2026Candy, cereal, Gatorade
Yellow 5HighPhase-out 2026Mac & cheese, Doritos
Yellow 6ModeratePhase-out 2026Cereal, crackers, candy
Blue 1ModeratePhase-out 2026Candy, ice cream, beverages
Red 3HighBanned Jan 2025Candy, popsicles, cake

Kids' Foods With the Most Artificial Dyes

We scanned thousands of children's food products. These contained the most concerning additive profiles:

ProductBrandScoreFlagged Additives
Cookies & Cream Protein BarBarebells24/100e1200 e322 e322i e422 e955 e965
Cookie Dough Chunk PuffsBuilt24/100e322 e322i e422 e500 e500ii e968
CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIE DOUGH PROTEIN BARS, CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIE DOUGHQuest Nutrition, LLC24/100e1200 e322 e322i e422 e955 e968
Plant-powered super cerealelse28/100e322 e322i e450 potassium iodide
CHOCOLATE CREME GLUTEN-FREE SANDWICH COOKIES, CHOCOLATE CREMEWal-Mart Stores, Inc.28/100e322 e322i e500 e500ii
GERBER CEREAL FOR BABY GRAIN AND GROW 1st Foods Non GMO Oatmeal 8oz N2 CanisterSociété des Produits Nestlé S.A.78/100e340
APPLE, CINNAMON & SPINACH ORGANIC SNACK BARS, APPLE, CINNAMON & SPINACHTarget Stores92/100e422

Dye-Free Alternatives for Kids

Many brands now offer dye-free versions of popular kids' foods:

What Parents Can Do

  1. Scan before you buyDownload CheckIt AI (free) to instantly detect dyes in any product
  2. Talk to your pediatrician — Discuss an elimination diet if you suspect dye sensitivity
  3. Check school lunches — Join our #SchoolLunchCheck challenge
  4. Read labels carefully — Dyes can hide in unexpected products like vitamins, medicine, and toothpaste
Download Free — Scan Your Kids' Food →

Frequently Asked Questions

Do food dyes cause ADHD?

Research doesn't show food dyes directly cause ADHD, but multiple studies demonstrate they can worsen hyperactivity and attention problems in children — both those with and without an ADHD diagnosis. The 2007 Southampton study found significant behavioral effects from artificial dyes like Red 40 and Yellow 5.

Which food dyes are worst for ADHD?

Red 40 and Yellow 5 showed the strongest effects on hyperactivity. Red 3 was banned by the FDA in January 2025 due to cancer risk. All petroleum-based food dyes are being phased out by end of 2026.

What foods have the most artificial dyes?

Children's cereals, candy, fruit snacks, sports drinks, popsicles, cake mixes, and colored mac & cheese typically contain the highest concentrations of artificial dyes. Many are marketed directly to children with bright colors and cartoon characters.