India is the world's largest producer of milk. It is also one of the countries with the highest rates of milk adulteration. FSSAI surveys have repeatedly found that more than two-thirds of milk samples tested across India do not meet quality and safety standards. Yet millions of families pour this milk into their children's glasses every morning, assuming it is safe.

68%

of milk samples in FSSAI surveys were found to be adulterated or substandard

8.4%

of samples contained detergent — a substance that causes serious gastrointestinal harm

70%

of loose milk sold in India does not conform to FSSAI quality standards

What adulteration actually means

Milk adulteration means substances have been added to milk that don't belong there — either to increase volume, extend shelf life, improve appearance, or mask poor quality. Some adulterants are relatively harmless (excess water). Others are genuinely dangerous.

The problem is that none of these adulterants are visible to the naked eye. Adulterated milk looks, smells, and tastes identical to pure milk. The only way to detect it is through a certified lab test.

What's commonly found in adulterated milk

AdulterantWhy it's addedHealth risk
WaterIncreases volume, reduces costRelatively harmless but dilutes nutrition; contaminated water introduces bacteria
Detergent / soapCreates artificial froth to simulate creaminessGastrointestinal damage, disrupts gut bacteria, toxic in high doses
Starch (rice, wheat, arrowroot)Thickens watered-down milkDigestive issues, allergic reactions in gluten-sensitive individuals
UreaBoosts apparent protein content in testsKidney damage, liver toxicity with prolonged exposure
FormalinExtends shelf lifeCarcinogenic. Damages kidneys, liver, and respiratory tract
Hydrogen peroxideKills bacteria to extend shelf lifeOxidative damage to cells; irritant to GI tract
Synthetic milkReplaces real milk entirely in some casesMade from urea, caustic soda, refined oil — no nutritional value, toxic

Is packaged milk safer than loose milk?

Most consumers assume that branded, packaged milk is safe by default. This is not always true. While large dairy brands generally have better quality control than loose milk vendors, FSSAI inspections have found quality violations in packaged milk too — including fat content below declared levels, presence of antibiotics, and in some cases, adulterants.

Antibiotic residue is a particular concern in packaged dairy. Dairy farmers routinely use antibiotics to treat mastitis in cows. When adequate withdrawal periods are not followed, antibiotic residues enter the milk supply. Long-term consumption of antibiotic-laced milk contributes to antibiotic resistance in humans — one of the most serious public health challenges globally.

FSSAI standards for milk: Cow's milk must have a minimum fat content of 3.5% and SNF (Solid Not Fat) of 8.5%. Buffalo milk must have minimum fat of 5% and SNF of 9%. Any milk below these thresholds is legally substandard — regardless of what the packaging claims.

What a dairy purity test checks

What you can do

You can't detect milk adulteration at home with any reliability. Home test kits are available but are highly unreliable — they produce false negatives for most adulterants and cannot detect antibiotic residues at all.

The only reliable method is a certified NABL lab test. BiteVerify handles the entire process — we collect your milk sample at home and send it to an accredited lab. Your report tells you exactly what's in your milk, in plain language.

If you have young children, elderly family members, or anyone with compromised immunity at home, a dairy test is not optional — it is essential.