Drinkware Score
← Back to the lead-seal record

Does Stanley have lead?

Last reviewed July 2026.

Yes — in the sealed base, and the brand says so itself. Stanley confirmed (January 2024) that it uses an industry-standard pellet containing some lead to seal the vacuum insulation, while stating no lead is present on any surface a user or the drink touches. Class actions followed over the historical non-disclosure — Brown et al. v. Pacific Market International, No. 24STCV02653 (Cal. Super. Ct., L.A. Cty.) and Franzetti v. PMI, No. 2:24-cv-00191-TL (W.D. Wash.); the federal case was dismissed in January 2025 with leave to amend. An allegation is not a finding, and a dismissal is a dismissal — today the pellet is disclosed, which is why this row sits in the disclosed tier rather than below it. The exposure path the plaintiffs and the brand both discuss — a damaged or detached base cap — is covered in our base-cap guide.

The facts on file

VerdictDisclosed & sealed — Lead in the seal — disclosed, encapsulated
Vacuum-seal methodindustry-standard sealing pellet containing lead at the vacuum base, covered by a stainless base cap; Stanley states no lead on any surface that contacts the user or contents
The brand's claim“"No lead is present on the surface of any Stanley product that comes into contact with the consumer nor the contents"”

Public record: Brown et al. v. Pacific Market International LLC, No. 24STCV02653 (Cal. Super. Ct.); Franzetti v. PMI, No. 2:24-cv-00191-TL (W.D. Wash., dismissed Jan 2025) (source). Allegations concerned historical non-disclosure; no finding of liability.

Sources — read them yourself

How to read this

Nearly every insulated bottle on the market seals its vacuum with a small pellet at the base, and the industry-standard pellet contains lead — sealed under a metal cap, away from the drink and your hands. The questions that separate brands are which sealing method they chose and whether they say so plainly: a documented lead-free seal, an acknowledged-and-encapsulated pellet, or silence. "Accessible components are lead-free" is a carefully scoped claim — see how the sealing methods differ and what a damaged base cap changes.

See where Stanley sits against every brand we track →

Drinkware Score indexes what brands publish about their vacuum-seal construction and what the public record shows, with attribution — we test nothing and make no health claims. A verdict describes the state of the published evidence about a sealing method, not the safety of any bottle. A sealed, inaccessible component containing lead is a different fact from lead a user can touch, and we keep those facts separate on every page. If a brand publishes new evidence, the page changes — the source always wins.

← The ranking: measured cold-hold