Landmark Study Finds Crumb Rubber in Synthetic Turf Poses No Significant Cancer Risk
Summary
OEHHA released a landmark study on March 5, 2026, finding that recycled tires used as crumb rubber infill in synthetic turf fields pose no significant risk of cancer or other health problems to players, coaches, referees, or spectators. The comprehensive study tested 35 synthetic turf fields across all California climate regions, coordinated with Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, UC Berkeley, and University of Arizona, and surveyed over 1,000 soccer players ages 7 to 71 to assess exposure through skin contact, breathing, and ingestion. OEHHA found no acute risk to any group tested, including toddlers who might crawl on fields, with negligible risk for sensory irritation, cancer, or reproductive harm.
About this source
GovPing monitors CA Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment for new environment regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 3 changes logged to date.
What changed
OEHHA published a comprehensive health risk assessment study finding no significant risk from crumb rubber infill in synthetic turf fields. The study tested over 100 chemicals across 35 fields representing different ages and climate regions throughout California, collaborating with Lawrence Berkeley National Lab to identify chemical exposure pathways including sweat and digestion simulation. Researchers surveyed more than 1,000 soccer players and recorded player-turf contact during games and practices.
For field operators, sports organizations, municipalities, and school districts with synthetic turf installations, this study provides scientific support that may reduce regulatory pressure to replace crumb rubber fields and lower liability concerns. The findings do not create new compliance obligations but may inform risk assessments and public communications about field safety. Public health authorities and environmental agencies may reference this methodology for future chemical exposure assessments.
Archived snapshot
Apr 22, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Landmark Study Finds No Significant Risk from Key Component of Synthetic Turf Fields
March 5, 2026
For Immediate Release
Contact: Amy Gilson
(916) 764-0955
Amy.Gilson@oehha.ca.gov
SACRAMENTO – The California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA) released a study finding that recycled tires used as crumb rubber in synthetic turf are not likely to harm users or spectators. There is no evidence of significant risk for cancer or other health problems from this recycled rubber to players, coaches, referees and spectators based on the available data, even for young athletes.
"This study should ease concerns about the safety of crumb rubber use in synthetic turf fields," said OEHHA Director Kris Thayer, "Athletes of all ages can use these fields without parents worrying about this commonly used material."
Synthetic turf fields are engineered to resemble natural grass but require less maintenance, use less water, and provide consistent playability without rest periods. These properties have led to widespread use on athletic fields, including more than 900 installations in California.
Many fields use crumb rubber, small granules produced by grinding up recycled waste tires, as infill material placed between the synthetic grass blades. This infill helps keep the blades upright, provides cushioning, and improves traction during play.
Informing California’s circular economy
OEHHA studied this material to inform California’s sustainability goals. California’s Waste Tire Program sets standards for safely managing waste tires and explores appropriate markets for materials that might otherwise be landfilled. "Protecting public health is our top priority, and California is committed to making sure waste tires are managed safely so they don’t litter communities or pose risks to residents," CalRecycle Director Zoe Heller said. "CalRecycle appreciates the work of OEHHA and its partners to advance our understanding in support of a cleaner, healthier circular economy."
Comprehensive study design
To evaluate safety, OEHHA tested 35 synthetic turf fields. The sampling accounted for both old and new fields, as well as fields from every climate region in California. Multiple samples from each field were collected to account for variations in source materials. OEHHA also collected air samples both during active use of the field and when no use occurred. OEHHA’s groundbreaking study focused on more than 100 chemicals that could pose a risk — unlike past studies that only looked at a small number of chemicals. To identify the full suite of chemicals present, OEHHA coordinated with the Lawrence Berkeley National Lab to simulate sweat and digestion and identify chemicals to which the public could be exposed.
To understand how people might be exposed to chemicals found, OEHHA worked with researchers from UC Berkeley and the University of Arizona. They studied how soccer players might contact crumb rubber—through skin, breathing, or swallowing small pieces. The team surveyed more than 1,000 soccer players, ages 7 to 71, about how they play, like sliding or diving on the field. They also recorded players during games and practices to see how often they touched the turf. Because goalies dive the most, the study used goalie data to estimate risk for players. Researchers also looked at chemical risk to toddlers who might crawl on the field.
No significant risk found
OEHHA found no acute risk to athletes, referees, coaches, or spectators, including toddlers. In most cases, risk of sensory irritation, cancer, harm to the reproductive system or a developing fetus, or other health effects were negligible.
About the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment
The California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA) is the lead state agency for the assessment of health risks posed by environmental contaminants. OEHHA’s mission is to protect and enhance the health of Californians and our state’s environment through scientific evaluations that inform, support and guide regulatory and other actions. As the California Environmental Protection Agency’s (CalEPA) scientific adviser, OEHHA works within CalEPA and across state government, with other state and federal agencies, businesses, community-based organizations, and Native American Tribes across California to develop actionable science that protects public health.
In addition to assessing health risks posed by chemicals, OEHHA develops data tools that support environmental health, performs outreach and education about pesticides and other chemicals, surveys exposure to harmful chemicals through Biomonitoring California, and assists in emergency response through expert consultation on matters related to chemical exposures.
Related changes
Get daily alerts for CA Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment
Daily digest delivered to your inbox.
Free. Unsubscribe anytime.
About this page
Every important government, regulator, and court update from around the world. One place. Real-time. Free. Our mission
Source document text, dates, docket IDs, and authority are extracted directly from CA OEHHA.
The summary, classification, recommended actions, deadlines, and penalty information are AI-generated from the original text and may contain errors. Always verify against the source document.
Classification
Who this affects
Taxonomy
Browse Categories
Get alerts for this source
We'll email you when CA Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment publishes new changes.
Subscribed!
Optional. Filters your digest to exactly the updates that matter to you.