The Short Answer
If you eat cinnamon every day for health benefits, you must use Ceylon.
Most cinnamon sold in supermarkets is Cassia (or "Chinese cinnamon"). It is cheap, tasty, and loaded with coumarin, a natural compound that causes liver toxicity in high doses. Eating just one teaspoon of Cassia cinnamon can put an average adult over the safe daily limit for liver health.
Ceylon cinnamon (Cinnamomum verum) is known as "true cinnamon." It comes from Sri Lanka, has a milder, floral taste, and contains practically zero coumarin. It is the only safe option for smoothies, oatmeal, or supplements.
Why This Matters
Your liver can't handle the "Spice."
Coumarin is hepatotoxic—meaning it damages the liver. The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) sets the tolerable daily intake at 0.1 mg per kg of body weight. Cassia cinnamon is so potent that a child can exceed their safety limit with just a heavy sprinkle on toast. Lead In Cinnamon
Lead contamination is a separate issue.
Beyond the natural toxin (coumarin), cinnamon is currently facing a massive heavy metal crisis. In 2024 and 2025, the FDA recalled dozens of cinnamon brands due to lead contamination. While Ceylon is safer for coumarin, both types can contain lead if grown in contaminated soil. You need a brand that tests for both. Heavy Metals In Spices
"Saigon" is the dangerous "premium."
Marketers often sell Saigon (Vietnamese) cinnamon as a premium product because it has a strong, spicy kick. In reality, Saigon cinnamon has the highest coumarin levels of all—often up to 7%. It is the most dangerous variety for daily consumption.
What's Actually In Cinnamon
- Cinnamaldehyde — The oil responsible for the "hot" flavor and most health benefits (blood sugar regulation, anti-inflammatory). Both types have this, but Cassia has more (95% of its oil), making it spicier.
- Coumarin — The blood-thinning, liver-damaging compound.
- Cassia: ~1% (up to 10,000 mg/kg)
- Ceylon: ~0.004% (barely detectable)
- Heavy Metals (Lead/Cadmium) — Contaminants from soil and processing equipment. Recent tests show roughly 1/3 of commercially available cinnamon exceeds safety thresholds. Cleanest Spice Brands
What to Look For
Green Flags (Ceylon):
- Label: Must say "Ceylon" or "Cinnamomum verum."
- Color: Tan, light brown, or buff (not reddish).
- Sticks: Rolled like a cigar with multiple thin, papery layers.
- Texture: Fragile, easily broken or ground in a coffee grinder.
- Taste: Mild, sweet, floral, citrusy.
Red Flags (Cassia):
- Label: Just says "Cinnamon" (or "Saigon," "Korintje," "Chinese").
- Color: Dark reddish-brown or rusty.
- Sticks: One single thick layer of bark curled inward (hollow center).
- Texture: Hard, woody, almost impossible to break by hand.
- Taste: Pungent, spicy, "Red Hot" candy flavor, sometimes bitter.
The Best Options
If you are baking cookies once a month, any cinnamon is fine. If you are "taking" cinnamon for health, use these.
| Brand | Product | Type | Verdict | Why |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Simply Organic | Ceylon Cinnamon | Ceylon | ✅ | Widely available, labeled clearly, reliably tests low for lead. |
| Morton & Bassett | Organic Ground | Cassia* | ⚠️ | Low lead in CR tests, but it's likely Cassia (high coumarin). Good for baking. |
| McCormick | Ground Cinnamon | Cassia | ⚠️ | Standard "Red Cap" is Cassia. Safe for occasional use only. Low lead history. |
| Badia | Cinnamon | Cassia | 🚫 | High lead levels found in recent testing. Avoid. |
| Rani | Cinnamon Powder | Cassia | 🚫 | Flagged for high lead. Avoid. |
Note: Even "clean" Cassia brands are only recommended for occasional culinary use, not daily health supplementation.
The Bottom Line
1. Check your label. If it doesn't say "Ceylon," it is Cassia.
2. Dose matters. Occasional cookie? Cassia is fine. Daily smoothie? Must be Ceylon.
3. Watch the lead. Even Ceylon can have lead. Stick to major brands like Simply Organic or Whole Foods 365 that have better quality control than budget dollar-store brands.
FAQ
Is Saigon cinnamon better than regular cinnamon?
For flavor? Yes, it's stronger. For health? No, it's worse. Saigon cinnamon has the highest levels of coumarin (liver toxin) of any variety. Use it sparingly for baking, never for supplements.
Can I just switch to cinnamon sticks to be safe?
Yes, this is the easiest way to tell them apart. Ceylon sticks look like a fragile cigar with many thin layers. Cassia sticks look like a hard, thick scroll. You can grind Ceylon sticks easily at home for the freshest, safest powder.
Does cooking destroy coumarin?
No. Coumarin is a stable compound. Baking your cinnamon rolls does not reduce the coumarin content. If you eat a lot of cinnamon-heavy baked goods, the exposure adds up.
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