Why Outdoor Brands Are Quietly Dropping Nonstick (And You Should Too) — 2026 Update

Why Outdoor Brands Are Quietly Dropping Nonstick (And You Should Too) — 2026 Update

Cooking Tips Health & Safety 2026 Update

Something has been happening quietly in the outdoor industry over the past 24 months that almost nobody has reported as a single story. REI went PFAS-free across all cookware in Fall 2024. Minnesota became the first US state to ban PFAS nonstick cookware sales on January 1, 2025. Colorado's PFAS cookware ban kicks in January 1, 2026. Vermont, Connecticut, and Rhode Island are following with enforcement dates between 2026 and 2028. The EU's broader PFAS regulation is reshaping global cookware sourcing. And per a 2025 Consumer Reports survey, 65% of US adults are now at least somewhat concerned about PFAS in their cookware. This isn't a fringe health movement anymore. It's regulatory reality. Here's what changed, why, and what to actually buy now.

11 min read  ·  Regulatory data from Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner, Morgan Lewis 2026, NC Health News  ·  Industry data from REI, Consumer Reports 2025  ·  Health data from UNC 2025 study, EPA  ·  Honest about what science does and doesn't show  ·  No sponsored content

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5 US states + EU acting MN, CO, VT, CT, RI all have PFAS cookware bans in 2025-2028. Plus EU + New York pending.
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REI: PFAS-free since 2024 Quietly required all cookware vendors to ship PFAS-free starting Fall 2024.
⚠️
"PFOA-free" ≠ PFAS-free The biggest consumer trap: most "PFOA-free" pans still contain PTFE — which is itself a PFAS.
⚡ Bottom Line — The Honest Status, January 2026

Nonstick isn't being "banned everywhere" — but enough major regulators and retailers have moved that outdoor brands are quietly phasing it out, and consumers should follow

The full status as of January 2026: (1) PFAS-containing nonstick cookware is now illegal to sell in Minnesota and Colorado, with three more states (VT, CT, RI) following by 2028. (2) REI — the largest outdoor co-op in North America — required all cookware vendors to ship PFAS-free products starting Fall 2024. (3) The EU is moving toward broader PFAS regulation, though cookware was exempted in the latest French legislation after intensive industry lobbying from Tefal manufacturer Groupe SEB. (4) The consumer health concern is mainstream — Consumer Reports' 2025 survey found 65% of US adults are at least somewhat concerned about cookware PFAS. What you should do: not panic, but plan. If your current nonstick is scratched, flaking, or pre-2010, replace it. If you're buying camping cookware, choose stainless steel, cast iron, food-grade silicone, or titanium. Avoid anything with PTFE coatings (this includes most "ceramic nonstick" products that quietly use PTFE in the base layer).

Already illegal in
Minnesota (Jan 2025) First state. Set the precedent.
Illegal as of Jan 1, 2026
Colorado Took effect this year. Active now.
Coming 2026–2028
VT · CT · RI · NY pending The map keeps changing.
65%
of US adults are at least somewhat concerned about PFAS in their cookware as of 2025 — mainstream concern, not fringe
Consumer Reports 2025 survey
10,000+
distinct PFAS chemicals exist as a family — sometimes called "forever chemicals" because they don't break down in nature
EPA / Purecook 2026
Fall 2024
REI's PFAS-free cookware deadline — already in effect for over a year. All co-op vendors now ship PFAS-free
REI direct statement, 2025
5 states
have PFAS cookware bans active or scheduled by 2028: MN, CO, VT, CT, RI — plus NY pending and EU regulation
Morgan Lewis 2026 state regulation tracker

What PFAS Actually Are (And Aren't)

Before getting deeper, a brief technical primer — because the most important consumer mistake in this space is confusion about terminology.

PFAS = a family of 10,000+ chemicals

Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances. Used since the 1940s for nonstick, waterproofing, stain resistance. They share one chemical feature (carbon-fluorine bonds) that makes them extremely stable — which is why they're useful for industrial purposes and why they accumulate in the environment and human bodies for decades. Hence "forever chemicals."

PTFE (Teflon) is a type of PFAS

This is the single most-misunderstood fact in the consumer cookware conversation. PTFE — polytetrafluoroethylene, the standard nonstick coating sold under the Teflon brand and dozens of others — is itself a PFAS. When regulators ban PFAS in cookware, they're banning PTFE coatings. When a pan says "PFOA-free," that means the manufacturing process doesn't use the old, already-phased-out PFOA chemical — it does not mean PFAS-free, and the coating itself is still a PFAS compound.

GenX is the replacement that may be worse

When PFOA was banned, DuPont introduced GenX as a replacement. Emerging research suggests GenX may be similarly persistent in the environment and similarly bioaccumulative — possibly even more toxic than what it replaced. This is why regulators have shifted from banning specific PFAS to banning the entire class.

The labels you'll see on cookware (and what they actually mean):

"PFOA-free" Only means no PFOA. Still likely contains PTFE (a PFAS). Misleading by omission.
"PFAS-free" The honest claim. Means no PFAS in any form — including PTFE, GenX, etc.
"Ceramic nonstick" Inconsistent. Some are genuinely PFAS-free; others use PTFE base layers under a thin ceramic coat. Read the spec sheet.
"Nontoxic" / "natural" Marketing terms with no regulatory definition. Ignore them — check material specs.

The 2024–2026 Regulatory Timeline (What Quietly Changed)

Below is the chronology of what's actually happened in the past 24 months. Most consumers don't realize how much of this has already taken effect.

Date Action Status
Fall 2024 REI requires all cookware vendors to ship PFAS-free Active
Jan 1, 2025 Minnesota becomes first US state to ban PFAS nonstick cookware sales In effect
Feb 27, 2025 France passes Law 2025-188 banning PFAS in textiles, cosmetics, footwear In effect Jan 2026
June 2025 New York Senate Bill S1767 introduced to ban PTFE cookware Pending
2025 Consumer Reports survey: 65% of US adults concerned about cookware PFAS Documented
Jan 1, 2026 Colorado PFAS cookware ban takes effect Active now
2026–2028 Vermont, Connecticut, Rhode Island bans rolling out with phased enforcement Phasing in

Why Outdoor Brands Moved Quietly (Not Loudly)

Two reasons. First, regulatory compliance — selling PFAS cookware in Minnesota is now illegal, and in Colorado it became illegal on January 1, 2026. National retailers like REI can't easily maintain state-specific inventory, so going PFAS-free everywhere is operationally cleaner than ban-by-ban compliance. Second, brand reputation risk — being publicly associated with "forever chemicals" is a liability that outdoor brands (whose customer base trends environmentally aware) particularly want to avoid. So they shift their supply chain quietly, update their product pages without fanfare, and let the change diffuse through the market.

The notable industry holdouts are the cookware manufacturers themselves. Per Purecook's 2026 analysis, Groupe SEB (the parent of Tefal/T-fal) lobbied intensively to keep cookware exempted from the EU's recent PFAS restrictions in France — a holding action, not a long-term win. Environmental groups have called the exemption "a major shortcoming," and the regulatory pressure continues to build.


What to Actually Buy (Without the Hype)

If you're replacing pans now, here are the four genuinely PFAS-free options, with honest pros and cons of each. None are perfect — pick based on your cooking style and trip type.

Material Pros Cons Best for
Cast iron Naturally nonstick (seasoned); heirloom durability; works on any heat source Heavy (~3 lb); requires seasoning maintenance Car camping, base camp, "real cooking"
Stainless steel Indestructible; safe at any temp; cheap Food sticks without oil; heavier than aluminum Backpacking pots, family kits, kettles
Titanium Ultralight; very durable; no coating concerns Expensive; uneven heat distribution; hot spots Thru-hiking, bikepacking, ultralight
Food-grade silicone + stainless PFAS-free; collapsible (saves volume); easy to clean Not for open flame; production has its own carbon cost Car camping, van life, family kits where pack-flat matters

What to avoid regardless of state: any nonstick cookware with PTFE coating, anything pre-2010 (likely contains PFOA), anything labeled only "PFOA-free" without a separate PFAS-free claim, ceramic nonstick from brands that don't explicitly disclose their base-layer chemistry, and any worn/scratched/flaking nonstick pan you already own — these leach chemicals faster as the coating degrades.


Where RIDGESTOK Fits — Honestly

Disclosure first: RIDGESTOK sells food-grade silicone + stainless steel collapsible cookware, so we have a commercial interest in the PFAS-free conversation. Here's our honest position.

What's genuinely true: our cookware has no PFAS, no PTFE, no PFOA, no GenX. The food contact surfaces are food-grade silicone (FDA and LFGB compliant) over stainless steel bases. The 2026 regulatory wave — Minnesota's already-active ban, Colorado's January 1 enforcement, the pending New York legislation, the EU's broader PFAS restriction — doesn't affect our products because they were never in scope.

What's also true: silicone manufacturing has its own environmental costs (energy use, hard-to-recycle end-of-life). We're not zero-impact. We're a meaningfully better alternative to PTFE-coated cookware on the specific PFAS dimension — not a magical solution. Cast iron and uncoated stainless steel also avoid PFAS and might be better choices depending on your cooking style and trip type. We tell you when they are (see our material comparison table above).

🍽️
RIDGESTOK — Compliant in all 5 PFAS-ban states

Collapsible Dinnerware Set 3-Piece (Bowl + Plate + Cup)

Food-grade silicone (BPA-free, PFAS-free, PTFE-free, PFOA-free) with stainless steel rims. Compliant with current FDA and LFGB food contact standards. Folds to ~1.5cm. The honest replacement for paper plates, plastic camp dinnerware, and worn nonstick alternatives — without buying into a regulatory time bomb.

View Dinnerware Set →

🥘
RIDGESTOK — The nonstick replacement

85oz Collapsible Camping Pot with Lid (2.5L)

For families switching out coated aluminum or nonstick pots: this is the modular replacement. Silicone walls with a stainless steel base — works on camp stoves and home induction. No coatings to scratch, no PFAS to leach. Folds to ~4cm, fits in a single grab-and-go storage bin.

View 2.5L Collapsible Pot →


The Health Science: What's Actually Established

We're not going to overstate the science here. Some PFAS health claims you'll see online are well-supported; others are speculative. Here's the honest current state, drawn from a 2025 UNC study and EPA position.

Established (multiple peer-reviewed studies):

  • PFAS persist in the environment for decades to centuries — they don't break down
  • PFAS bioaccumulate in human bodies over time, particularly in blood
  • Cookware is one documented exposure pathway (per UNC 2025 study)
  • Damaged nonstick coatings (scratched, flaking) leach more PFAS into food during cooking
  • Some PFAS exposures correlate with elevated cholesterol, thyroid issues, and certain cancer risks at high doses

Less established (active research / contested):

  • The specific health risk of intact PTFE-coated cookware at normal use temperatures
  • Precise dose-response thresholds for chronic PFAS exposure
  • Comparative toxicity of GenX vs older PFAS chemicals
  • How much cookware contributes to total PFAS body burden vs water, food packaging, and textile sources

The honest summary: regulators have decided the precautionary principle applies — there's enough established risk plus enough uncertainty that banning the entire chemical class makes sense even before every dose-response curve is mapped. That's a policy decision, not a settled-science conclusion. But the policy decisions are real, and they're affecting what's legal to sell.

"We're proud of our efforts to shift away from the use of PFAS in multiple product categories — including cookware. Since Fall 2024, we've required all vendors supplying cookware to the co-op to ensure their products are free of PFAS."

— REI Co-op spokesperson, quoted in NC Health News, October 2025. The largest outdoor retailer in North America has made the shift. Most consumers haven't noticed because REI didn't make it a marketing campaign.

Should You Replace Your Cookware?

✓ Replace now if

  • Your nonstick pans are scratched, flaking, or visibly worn
  • Your pans are pre-2010 (likely contain PFOA)
  • You live in MN or CO (selling them is illegal; replacement parts won't be available)
  • You're pregnant or have small children (precautionary principle)
  • You cook on camping cookware regularly (camp stoves run hotter and uneven, accelerating coating degradation)
  • You're buying new cookware anyway — just pick PFAS-free this time

✗ Don't panic-replace if

  • Your nonstick is intact and post-2013 (PFOA-free era)
  • You cook on low-medium heat and never preheat dry
  • Replacing everything immediately is a financial stretch
  • You'd just be throwing away working cookware (waste isn't free either)
  • You're already mostly using cast iron or stainless
  • You're feeling pressured by online "everything is poison" content (the truth is more nuanced)

The honest summary in one sentence: Five US states have moved to ban PFAS cookware between 2025 and 2028, REI quietly phased out PFAS cookware in Fall 2024, and the science supports moving away from PTFE coatings — so when you're buying new outdoor cookware in 2026, just choose stainless steel, cast iron, food-grade silicone, or titanium, and don't fall for the "PFOA-free" marketing trap.


Replacing the family kitchen?

If you're transitioning your camping or family cookware away from nonstick, our complete two-person collapsible camp kitchen guide maps the full system — every piece, what it replaces, and how the cost works out long-term vs disposables and coated alternatives.

Read: The Ultimate Collapsible Camp Kitchen for Two →

Related Guides

Gear Comparisons
Family Camping Cookware for 4 (PFAS Discussion)
Adventure Cooking
Car Camping Beginner Checklist (Don't Bring Home Nonstick)
Gear Comparisons
The Real Cost of Disposable Camping Gear
Cooking Tips
Why Serious Campers Are Ditching Nonstick (Original)

© 2026 RIDGESTOK · Cook Anywhere. Carry Less.

Sources: NC Health News "UNC study finds cookware, food processing contributes to PFAS exposure" October 2025 (REI Fall 2024 PFAS-free policy direct quote; state regulation summary; MN/VT/CT/RI/CO timeline) · Grand Junction Sentinel "Your cookware could be banned in January" December 2025 (Colorado January 1, 2026 ban effective date and scope) · Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner "PFAS in Cookware: State-by-State Regulations" (Minnesota MPCA interpretation: cookware with nonstick PFAS coating only; legal definitions and enforcement detail) · Morgan Lewis "State Regulation of PFAS in Consumer Products Continues to Gain Momentum in 2026" January 2026 (multi-state regulatory tracker; Colorado disclosure requirements; outdoor apparel for severe wet conditions) · Purecook "EU PFAS Ban 2026: What It Means for Cookware Sourcing" February 2026 (PFAS family of 10,000+ chemicals; PTFE = PFAS technical fact; France Law 2025-188 February 27, 2025; Groupe SEB/Tefal lobbying exemption; Consumer Reports 2025 65% concerned data point) · The Good Trade "I Tested The 10 Best Nontoxic Cookware Brands For 2026" (Lodge cast iron heirloom-quality, no PFAS/PFOA/PTFE; Prop 65 compliance framework) · Organic Authority "9 Best Non-Toxic Cookware of 2026" (GenX as DuPont's PFOA replacement; possibly more toxic than predecessor) · Diamond Pans "Colorado's 2026 PFAS Ban" January 2025 (ceramic nonstick limitations; PTFE coating reality check) · Fox News "Nonstick pans face potential ban in New York" June 2025 (NY Senate Bill S1767 PTFE prohibition pending) · Minnesota House of Representatives H.F. 2907 (Minnesota PFAS cookware ban legal text and definitions) · REI official statement October 2025. All regulatory dates verified against state legislative records as of January 2026 — laws and timelines may continue to evolve.

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