Microplastics in Tea Bags: What the Science Says and What to Brew Instead
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Your morning cup of tea might be doing more than waking you up. A 2019 study published in Environmental Science & Technology found that a single plastic tea bag, steeped at 95°C, releases approximately 11.6 billion microplastic particles and 3.1 billion nanoplastics into your cup. That number is not a typo. And for many people, tea is a several-cups-a-day ritual — which means microplastics in tea bags could be one of the most consistent sources of plastic in their diet.
The good news: this is one of the easiest sources to eliminate. This article explains what the research actually shows, which tea bags are the worst offenders, and what to switch to instead.
Why Do Tea Bags Contain Plastic?
Not all tea bags are made from paper. Many modern tea bags — especially the silky pyramid-shaped ones — are made from nylon, polypropylene, or PET (polyethylene terephthalate). These materials give bags their smooth, heat-resistant mesh structure. They look refined, but they're essentially tiny plastic nets that you're submerging in boiling water.
Even tea bags that appear to be paper often use a small amount of plastic — typically polypropylene — as a heat-seal adhesive to close the bag. When exposed to hot water, these plastics can degrade and shed both microplastics and nanoplastics: particles so small they can cross cellular membranes and enter the bloodstream. The higher the temperature, the more particles are released.
Which Tea Bags Are the Worst Offenders?
The biggest culprits are pyramid-shaped "silky" tea bags. These are almost always made from nylon or PET mesh, and their larger surface area means more plastic in contact with your hot water. Premium loose-leaf blends are often sold in this format, which is an unfortunate irony — you're upgrading your tea quality while degrading your drinking water.
Traditional flat, square paper tea bags are generally better, but they're not automatically safe. Check the packaging: if it says "heat-sealed" or the bag has a smooth, sewn edge rather than a crimped one, it likely contains polypropylene. Truly plastic-free paper bags will typically say so explicitly, often using terms like "unbleached", "compostable", or "sealed with natural starch".
How to Reduce Microplastic Exposure From Your Tea Ritual
The simplest fix is also the most satisfying one: switch to loose-leaf tea. Loose-leaf teas are often higher quality, more flavourful, and produce no plastic waste at all. All you need is an infuser or strainer to hold the leaves while they steep. It takes about ten seconds longer than a tea bag — and that's genuinely the only downside.
If you prefer the convenience of bags, look for brands that explicitly certify their bags as plastic-free. Some use abaca fibre, unbleached muslin, or certified compostable materials. Brands like Pukka, Clipper, and JING offer plastic-free options, though it's always worth double-checking current packaging as formulations change.
Plastic-Free Tea Brewing: What We Recommend
These two tools are all you need to make the switch to loose-leaf tea permanently. Both are made from food-grade stainless steel, require no plastic components, and last for years.
The Bottom Line
Microplastics in tea bags are a well-documented problem, but they're also an entirely avoidable one. Unlike some sources of plastic exposure — like the air you breathe or the water table beneath your town — this one has a straightforward, affordable solution sitting in the tea aisle. Switching to loose-leaf tea with a stainless steel infuser is a one-time change that removes billions of plastic particles from your daily routine. Start there, and you've already done something meaningful.