Studie: Schädliche Chemikalien in beliebten Kopfhörern, die in ganz Europa verkauft werden

https://www.euronews.com/next/2026/03/16/harmful-chemicals-found-in-popular-headphones-sold-across-europe-study

Von euronews-english

33 Kommentare

  1. IIIIIlIIIIIlIIIII on

    This was national news in Netherlands a few weeks ago. İ didnt expect this to be this big. 

  2. Available-Ad1376 on

    Bisphenols and phthalates were found in popular headphone sets that can interfere with hormone-regulating systems.

    Several headphones sold by leading tech companies across the European Union may contain hormone-disrupting chemicals, raising concerns over long-term health risks, according to a new study.

    More than 81 different types of headphones were analysed from over 50 well-known brands, including Samsung, Apple, Sony, and Sennheiser. Every single model tested contained at least some traces of harmful substances such as bisphenols, phthalates, and flame retardants.

    Bisphenols are used in consumer products such as food packaging, plastic bottles, feeding bottles, storage containers and some electronics. According to the European Environment Agency (EEA), they can interfere with hormone systems and damage reproductive health.

    Phthalates, which make plastics more flexible and durable, are found in products like shampoo, medical devices and certain fabrics. Exposure to some phthalates is associated with obesity, insulin resistance, asthma and attention disorders, according to the European biomonitoring consortium, HBM4EU.

    The study was carried out by Arnika, a Czech non-profit environmental organisation, in collaboration with the ToxFree LIFE for All project, an EU-funded initiative.

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    While the study emphasises that the headphones do not pose an “imminent” danger to human health, it warns that chronic exposure carries long-term public health risks, as no completely safe level of exposure has been established.

    The researchers disassembled the headphones to collect 180 samples of hard and soft plastics, then a lab analysed whether there were hormone-disrupting chemicals. They tested headphones for adults, children, and gaming, since these headsets are often used for long periods of time.

    The headphones were then ranked based on chemical exposure, with safe headphones given a green rating for lowest risk, yellow for being “legally compliant but exceeding stricter voluntary limits,” or red for great concern.

    Overall, 44 percent of the models scored a “red” for a great concern of exposure, but only 11 percent of those models had traces of these hazardous materials that had contact with the skin.

    This suggests that manufacturers prioritise chemical safety for soft plastic and touch-sensitive parts of the ear, while the other parts of the headphone, such as the hard shell that forms the headphone structure, often contain worrying levels of harmful substances, the researchers said.

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    The highest concentration of bisphenols was found in My First Care earbuds, a product marketed for children that can be found on platforms such as Amazon. The study did not disclose the exact bisphenol level in that set of headphones.

    Phthalates were mostly present in wired headphones and typically in small, legal quantities. However, one pair of children’s headphones sold by Temu had 4,950 mg/kg of phthalates, which is almost five times the legal limit for children’s products in the EU, according to the bloc’s legislation.

    The safest headphones were Apple’s AirPods Pro 2 and JBL’s Tune 720BT. Some children’s models, such as Oceania Trading’s Paw Patrol headphones for kids, received red scores for exposure concerns.

    Nearly 60 percent of the gaming headsets for adults received a “red rating,” but those for children fared better, with approximately 50 percent of them getting a “green status.”

    Euronews Next reached out to the manufacturers mentioned in the study, but did not receive an immediate reply. Dutch media reported that some online retailers, such as Bol.com, CoolBlue and Mediamarkt, stopped selling some headphone models, following the study’s release.

  3. davidfliesplanes on

    Luckily my brand-new Sony WH-CH720N seems to be perfectly safe, would’ve been pissed to buy new headphones just to find out a couple of days later a study said they’re not safe.

  4. LovelyOrangeJuice on

    So fucking happy to see HyperX in all red while wearing them right now…

  5. TheVoiceOfEurope on

    „Oh noes, we have found bisphenols and phthalates in headphones“

    Well, I have news for you: bisphenols and phthalates are everywhere. These are products that are made to soften plastics. If you want to avoid them, don’t use floppy plastics.

    It also explains why hard earbuds fare better than soft cup/foam headphones.

    So yeah, it’s pretty obvious that there are bisphenols and phthalates in headphone cups. Is that bad? Yes, but don’t make it sound as if you have discovered that water is wet.

  6. Shoddy_Squash_1201 on

    I don’t think there is any more room for harmful chemicals in my body with all that BPA, PFAS and micrplastics.

  7. And will the guilty majority shareholders pay anything or be prosecuted fro their lack of supervision of the companies they own? Of course not, they guilty criminal investors won’t face justice.

  8. FuriousGirafFabber on

    unless there is a list with something actionable, who the fck cares? I want the names if im going to care.

  9. Black_Fusion on

    REACH regulations limit these materials in certain markets.

    Polycarbonate can only be made with BPA. But REACH restricts what market it can be sold into. (Not for food contact for instance)

  10. To remain on the safe side: Do not inject a dissolved earplug into your veins. 🚫💉

  11. StrangerConscious637 on

    That’s the difference between the now fascist USA and the democratic EU.

    Americans have poison in their food and their headphones.

    Europeans don’t have poison in their food and don’t want them in their headphones.

  12. Do I understand this right.

    There isn’t any research on long term skin contact/exposure yet done.

    It’s only really an issue if you lick and eat your headphones.

    Or are a parent that just gives your kid headphones at an age who eats or licks earphones for some reason.

    Though I’m also at the risk of natural selection as someone who likes to gnaw on random things or my finger if I have nothing to fidget with when thinking hard at my job…

  13. Enough_Code_3831 on

    For some reason some products are really cheap.

    “However, one pair of children’s headphones sold by Temu had 4,950 mg/kg of phthalates, which is almost five times the legal limit for children’s products in the EU, according to the bloc’s legislation.”

  14. Stunning_Warthog_141 on

    Harmful chemicals? Harmful as in do not use in my ear or harmful as in do not eat?

  15. My WH-1000XM5s are all green! Unfortunately the in-ear XM5s are red, same rating as my current Galaxy Buds 3 Pro.

  16. oh thank, Sony WH-1000MX5 are okay. I use them every single day for commute in public transport, I’d not be able to function without them. this is not something I’d want to find out after 2 years of intensive use lol.

  17. Wasn’t this already debunked by chemists as extremely unlikely to cause any harm as the amounts are tiny and the surface of exposure is small as well?

  18. Unable_Recipe8565 on

    So do you absorb it through your ears or do you have to chew on the headphones?

  19. I have a Bowers & Wilkins P5 serie 2, a Bowers & Wilkins PX (the case is very crapppy plastic it just falls off and I’m not even using the case, pretty bad for a headphone that was so expensive when it released, it sounds really nice though).

    I also have a Beyerdynamic DT 990 PRO that is open which is very comfortable that I use at my desk. I had 2 Senheisers before it but they always broke after 5 years or something and were more expensive.

    No idea how deadly those headphones are. But if I’m reading this, it seems like best to not lick or chew peripherals as everything these days is apparently poisonous, even sand for children needs asbestos in it for some reason.

    It’s pretty cool we are finding out our headphones and sand isn’t healthy, it will force companies to make healthier headphones and sand without asbestos.
    Well I hope companies will take note.
    It’s one of the cool things the EU pays attention too, in the US the sand is probably radioactive instead of just asbestos. California does label everything as cancerous so they are doing some effort.

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