Glyphosate in yards and food: what it is and where it shows up

Glyphosate in yards and food: what it is and where it shows up

Published January 9, 2025 • Updated February 28, 2026
Reviewed by Julie Miller, BA in Language Arts, Editorial Lead, Dr. Killigan’s

TL;DR: Glyphosate is a widely used weed killer on farms, in home yards and along roadsides. Small residues can show up in food, especially grains. It is detected more often in rivers and streams than in groundwater. If you use a private well, your risk depends on runoff, well depth and nearby use. If you want to reduce unnecessary exposure, rinse produce, read labels, avoid overusing herbicides at home and test your well water when your setup has risk factors.

Before we dive into the data, it’s important to be clear about where we stand.
At Dr. Killigan’s, we believe that when a chemical is labeled “probably carcinogenic,” that’s not a shrug-and-move-on moment. In the world of chemistry, uncertainty isn’t permission to proceed; it often means organizations like the EPA or other regulatory institutions have not conducted the large-scale studies needed to label risks more conclusively. We are also aware of the varying opinions on this topic, and we respect that many people have decided glyphosates are problematic. It is with empathy and understanding of those concerns that we’ve created many of our own products.

In this article, you’ll hear phrases like “acceptable exposure levels.” We don’t find that phrase particularly comforting. Chemicals don’t exist in isolation. They accumulate in our soil, water, food, and—eventually—our bodies.

We’re not here to tell anyone what they must believe or how they must live. People are capable of making their own decisions. But we’re also not interested in pretending we’re neutral about things we’re not neutral about. We are not fans of glyphosate herbicides.

We believe the future of pest control needs to move away from heavy chemical dependencies, not deeper into them. We believe there are solutions that protect people, plants, and pets while still dealing with pests.

At Dr. Killigan’s, we don’t believe in doing nothing. We believe in doing better.
This guide exists for one reason: to show you the information clearly and honestly, so you can decide for yourself.

Glyphosate is not a niche chemical. It is a system.

“Glyphosate is the most heavily used agricultural and residential herbicide in the world—and it’s been detected in soil, air, surface water, groundwater and food.” — IARC

What is glyphosate? 

Glyphosate is a broad-spectrum herbicide, meaning it is made to kill many kinds of weeds and unwanted plants.

How glyphosate works and why it's controversial

Here is the quick science explanation: glyphosate works by blocking the shikimate pathway, a process plants use to make certain amino acids they need to grow. When that pathway is blocked, the plant cannot keep building and it eventually dies. Humans and animals do not have this pathway, which is why glyphosate was initially considered plant-specific.

Here is where it gets messy. Humans don’t use the shikimate pathway—but many microbes do. In a University of Turku analysis, researchers estimated that about 54% of core human gut bacterial species may carry a version of the enzyme that glyphosate targets, meaning they could be sensitive under certain conditions.

Translation: this does not prove real-world harm in people. It does explain why “plant-only” was never the whole story.

Where glyphosate shows up: farms, lawns and roadsides

Glyphosate is used where weeds cost time, money and patience.

Tracktor spraying pesticide

On farms
Glyphosate is widely used in modern crop production, especially in large-scale row crops. An NBC News report described herbicides containing glyphosate being applied across a major share of U.S. corn and soybean acreage.

Around homes
Glyphosate-based weed killers are commonly used along fences, driveways, patios and gravel. You will also see it used for spot treating weeds in lawns, edging, mulch beds and fence lines. If you have ever sprayed a crack in the walkway and watched the weeds collapse a week later, you know why people reach for it.

Along roads and rights of way
Roadsides, utility corridors and fence lines are often managed with herbicides to keep growth down and access clear.

This is the part labels do not explain: use patterns create exposure patterns.


Glyphosate’s dominance in modern agriculture: how we got here

Glyphosate did not become the default by accident. It became the default because modern farming systems were built around it.

A major turning point was the rollout of glyphosate-tolerant “Roundup Ready” crops in the 1990s. That shift made it possible to spray fields with glyphosate without injuring the crop itself. It normalized repeat applications at scale. Weed control stopped being a one-time tool and became a season-long strategy.

Herbicide Spray

Usage followed the system. A large peer-reviewed analysis found global glyphosate use rose almost 15-fold after glyphosate-tolerant crops were introduced in 1996.

Scale check from the EPA:

  • From 2012 to 2016, EPA’s usage analysis estimated about 281 million pounds applied across 298 million acres each year in U.S. agriculture
  • Most of that use by pounds was concentrated in soybeans (117.4 million), corn (94.9 million), cotton (20 million)

When a chemical runs the biggest acres, it shows up in the biggest questions. And eventually it shows up in the biggest ingredients.

Wheat and the desiccant conversation: why this keeps coming up

In some farming systems, glyphosate is used shortly before harvest as a pre-harvest desiccant. That means it is sprayed to dry the crop down more uniformly and move harvest along, especially in regions where weather can delay natural drying. Extension guidance notes that in wheat production, glyphosate may be used at specific maturity stages to help even out moisture and support timely harvest when conditions narrow the harvest window.

When a herbicide is applied that late in the season, the time between field application and food processing is shorter, especially for wheat and oats.

The practice has drawn increasing scrutiny in recent years. Advocacy outlets such as The Organic and Non-GMO Report have argued that pre-harvest use contributes disproportionately to dietary exposure and have called for tighter restrictions or phase-outs in some regions.

And it explains the endless “glyphosate in wheat flour” searches. We’ll come back to what testing has found in common staple foods below.

Surface water or groundwater: where glyphosate shows up more often

Once glyphosate is applied, weather and water do the rest.

Rain water

Surface water is the first stop. Rain can move soil and dissolved residues into gutters, drainage ditches, creeks, streams and rivers. As a result, glyphosate is detected more often in surface water than groundwater, especially after rainfall and in places with frequent applications.

This matters because surface water is not just “out there.” It can be a source of water for drinking supplies. In Minnesota, the Department of Health notes glyphosate is “frequently detected at low levels in both urban and rural surface waters,” while finished drinking-water detections are rare.

That gets us to groundwater. It has more natural filtration between the surface and the aquifer. Water has to move through layers of soil and rock, which can reduce what gets through. Still, less common does not mean impossible. Well depth, soil type, rain events and nearby spraying patterns can change the odds.

EPA and glyphosate in groundwater: what “potential” really means

When someone searches “EPA glyphosate groundwater contamination potential,” they’re usually asking one thing: can this show up in drinking water?

Here is EPA’s core point: glyphosate tends to stick to soil. In an EPA reregistration fact sheet, the agency notes glyphosate “adsorbs strongly to soil,” and is “not likely to move to ground water” under typical soil conditions because of those strong binding characteristics.

So why does EPA still use the word “potential”? Because “unlikely” is not the same as “impossible.” Conditions change the outcome and EPA draws a bright line between two different pathways:

  • Groundwater: generally less likely because the compound binds to soil and tends not to move straight down
  • Surface water: more plausible because glyphosate can move with erosion and runoff (soil particles in runoff) and it can reach water depending on use patterns

The nuance shows up in real-world monitoring.

United states EPA

A peer-reviewed study analyzing approximately 140 groundwater samples in Catalonia, Spain detected glyphosate above quantification limits in 41% of samples, with concentrations as high as 2.5 micrograms per liter. The authors concluded that although glyphosate has low mobility in soils, it is capable of reaching groundwater under certain conditions.

That does not overturn EPA’s assessment. It does show that “low mobility” does not mean “zero detections.”

Advocacy groups such as the Environmental Working Group argue that federal drinking water limits for glyphosate are not precautionary enough, particularly for children, and have proposed lower health benchmarks. That position reflects an ongoing policy debate about how protective drinking water standards should be.

Where groundwater risk gets more real (the “pathway” problem)
Groundwater concerns usually come down to site-specific pathways, like:

  • shallow wells or poorly sealed wellheads
  • sandy or highly permeable soils 
  • heavy rain soon after application
  • spraying close to hard surfaces or drainage routes that funnel runoff toward a well area
  • mixing, loading or storage areas where spills can happen 

Translation: EPA says groundwater contamination is less likely, but the word “potential” stays on the page because local conditions decide whether water has a route in.

Private wells and glyphosate: when risk goes up

How glyphosate can reach a private well

Private wells are personal infrastructure. The risk profile depends on where you live and how your well is built.

Common pathways that can raise the odds of glyphosate showing up include:

  • Application near hard surfaces like driveways, where runoff is more likely
  • Spraying before heavy rain
  • Spraying near the well head, gravel pad or any runoff path that drains toward the well
  • A shallow well or an older well with compromised casing
  • Proximity to treated areas like fields, drainage routes or rights of way

Waterway contamination

Are detections uncommon or just under-tested?

In many places, detections are not commonly reported. Two things can be true at once.

Fewer tests means fewer documented detections.

Second, when testing does happen, results can vary widely by soil type, weather, application intensity and well construction. Risk factors matter more than national averages.

If you want to stop guessing, test the well.

Private wells vs public water systems

If you are on a municipal system, monitoring and treatment are handled through regulated programs. If you are on a private well, you control the monitoring. That is not meant to scare you. It is meant to keep you in control.

What a “detection” does and does not mean

A detection is not a diagnosis. It is a data point.

The better question isn’t just “Was it detected?” It’s “How much, how often and under what conditions?”

When to test and what to ask a lab

Most people do not need routine glyphosate testing.

You may want to consider testing if:

Water testing in Lab
  • You rely on a private well
  • Your well is shallow
  • Agricultural spraying happens nearby
  • You notice runoff toward your well area
  • You have never tested your well before

When you contact a lab, ask:

  • Do you test for glyphosate specifically
  • Do you also test for AMPA
  • What is the detection limit
  • Is the lab certified for drinking water analysis

Test before you treat. 

Timing matters, because soil is often the first place residues settle after an application. If glyphosate and AMPA (its breakdown product) persist in that top layer, they have a longer window to be detected and to move through the environment.

How long does glyphosate stay in the soil?

In that context, persistence depends on conditions. In many cases glyphosate can persist for months.

According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), “The average half-life in soil is about 60 days... In field studies, residues are often found the following year.

Translation: A half-life is the time it takes for about half of a substance to break down. It is not a countdown clock to zero. Soil type, temperature and microbial activity all influence how quickly breakdown happens.

Man soil testing

While concentrations typically decline over months, field studies show that detectable residues of glyphosate can remain in soil for a year or longer under certain conditions. In some environments, especially where applications are repeated annually, low levels may remain detectable for extended periods. That does not mean residues stay constant—it means decline can be slower than many people assume.

AMPA is the reason “breakdown” does not always mean “gone”

When glyphosate degrades, it can form AMPA (aminomethylphosphonic acid), which often persists longer in soil.

In an EPA terrestrial field dissipation study cited in the agency’s glyphosate reregistration materials, AMPA had a median half-life of 240 days with a reported range from 119 days in Ohio to 958 days in California. The EPA also reported that AMPA “was shown to remain predominantly in the 0–6 inch soil layer throughout the duration of the study at all eight field sites.”

That detail matters because the top few inches of soil are exactly where a lot of real-life action happens: garden beds, runoff flow, foot traffic and the root zone for many plants.

The practical takeaway

Under typical conditions, glyphosate may degrade over a few months. AMPA can extend the timeline. So when people search “how long does it take for glyphosate to break down,” they are really asking two questions:

  • How long does glyphosate itself persist
  • What happens next after it breaks down

If you want the most control, focus on what you can actually manage: reduce unnecessary applications, avoid spraying before heavy rain and keep treatments targeted instead of blanketing large areas.

Glyphosate residues in food: what ppm and ppb are telling you

glyphosate's presence in various food items

Here’s what current testing suggests about glyphosate residue and why certain staple foods keep showing up in search results.

Numbers can be useful or they can be used to scare you. Let’s make them useful.

  • ppm means parts per million
  • ppb means parts per billion

In a 2015 to 2017 food analysis published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, detections appeared in 39% of grain foods and 42% of legumes, compared with 15% of fruits and vegetables. The highest grain result reported was 2.5 ppm.

Consumer advocacy testing reported frequent detections in oat-based products. In 2019, Environmental Working Group (EWG)  testing reported glyphosate detected in more than 95% of popular oat-based samples. Separate EWG testing on wheat-based foods like dried pasta and cereal reported that all samples contained glyphosate, with pasta results ranging from 60 to 150 ppb.

A result of 150 ppb equals 0.15 ppm. In other words, ppb values are fractions of a ppm.

What does 2.5 ppm mean?

A result of 2.5 ppm means 2.5 milligrams of glyphosate per kilogram of food. In everyday testing reports, “low” often means ppb-range detections or fractions of a ppm.

What ppm and ppb tell you is concentration, not risk by themselves. A higher number means more residue per unit of food, but context matters—including how often the food is eaten, how it compares to regulatory residue limits and how exposure accumulates over time.

Public health implications

Public health implications

This is where it gets messy: “low” is not the same as “irrelevant.” Some research debates exist precisely because low-dose effects aren’t always intuitive.

One example people point to is a 2-year rat study published in Environmental Health that used drinking water containing 0.1 ppb Roundup (about 50 ng/L) and reported liver and kidney signals alongside large gene-expression changes in those tissues.

“Observed alterations in gene expression were consistent with fibrosis, necrosis, phospholipidosis, mitochondrial membrane dysfunction and ischemia.”Environmental Health (2015) 

Translation: tiny numbers can still move biology. That does not automatically convert into everyday human outcomes. 

Common foods that come up in glyphosate residue conversations

If you are searching ‘glyphosate in wheat flour’ or ‘glyphosate levels in food,’ these are the foods that come up most often in published testing discussions:

  • Oats
  • Pasta
  • Wheat flour and other wheat-based products
  • Cereal products
  • Corn
  • Lentils 
  • Chickpeas

EWG chickpea testing adds another clue

Legumes show up in testing too, not just grains.

EWG published testing focused on chickpeas and reported detectable glyphosate in nearly 90% of conventional chickpea samples. It also reported detections in some organic chickpea samples at lower levels which was discussed as possible drift or nearby field exposure.

Two grounded takeaways

  • Look for the details behind the headline: sample size, lab method and reporting limit.
  • Compare like with like: ppb vs ppm, serving size assumptions and how results line up with published residue limits.

Sweeteners and the 20 ppb claims: stevia, Splenda, Equal

If you searched glyphosate stevia 20 ppb, glyphosate splenda ppb or glyphosate in Equal, you are not alone.

Sweeteners get attention because people use them daily. Large-scale surveillance testing has been limited compared with grains and legumes, so most headlines reflect product-specific tests rather than national monitoring data.

Artificial sweeteners

A headline number like “20 ppb” or “20 to 25 ppb” is a concentration, not a verdict. In liquids, 20 ppb is 0.02 ppm. Whether that matters depends on how much you consume and whether the test measured the product as sold or a prepared serving.

If you see a claim about glyphosate in stevia, Splenda or Equal, slow down and check what makes it meaningful:

  • What lab ran the test and what method was used
  • What the detection limit was
  • Whether multiple lots were tested
  • Whether the report measured glyphosate, AMPA or both
  • How serving size was used to translate ppb into intake 

If the report doesn’t include those basics, treat the number as a signal to investigate, not a conclusion.

How to reduce unnecessary exposure (food + yard choices)

You do not need to overhaul your life. You need to control what you actually control.

In the kitchen

  • Rinse fresh produce under running water before eating
  • Rotate staple grains instead of relying on one daily
  • Read labels and look for sourcing transparency
  • Store dry goods in sealed containers to avoid cross-contamination

Washing does not eliminate systemic residues inside plant tissue. It does remove surface debris and reduces unnecessary contact.

In the yard

  • Spot treat weeds instead of blanket spraying
  • Avoid spraying before heavy rain
  • Keep herbicides away from driveways, drainage paths and well heads
  • Consider mechanical removal, mulching or plant-based alternatives for small areas 

If you use a product, follow the label exactly. More is not better. Targeted is better.

Cancer cells

Explore more: glyphosate research and primary sources

Glyphosate has been the subject of regulatory reviews, environmental monitoring programs and peer-reviewed health research. If you want to examine the primary documents directly, start here:

Go deeper 


 

Julie standing outside with red shirt and blurred background

Content Strategist & Eco-Living Advocate

Julie Miller

Julie is Dr. Killigan’s in-house writer and content strategist with a passion for science-backed, natural living. She holds a degree in Language Arts and brings over a decade of writing experience to the team. At Dr. Killigan’s, she works closely with the product and customer experience teams to ensure every article delivers accurate, helpful and trustworthy information. When she’s not writing, Julie is tending her vast array of indoor plants, crafting homemade moisturizers or fermenting carrots with her children.

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