No, McDonald’s Chicken McNuggets in the US do not contain silicone oil


DO NOT USE iframe test

McDonald’s had another main character moment in the 2024 election cycle, appearing as the airplane feast of choice Nov. 17 for President-elect Donald Trump and advisers Elon Musk, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Donald Trump Jr. and House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La.

But is there something going on with the golden arches’ famous McNuggets?

A Facebook post showing a box of Chicken McNuggets reads: “McDonalds chicken nuggets contain silicone oil, which is a synthetic material used to make contact lenses, caulking, and lubricants.”

The caption of the Nov. 15 post says: “This sounds unhealthy and disgusting!! They need to fix this!!”

Another Nov. 17 Facebook post shared the same image. A user in the comments wrote: “I always wondered why they went down my throat so easily.”

MF Graphic of Chicken nuggets containing silicone oil
Figure 1: MF Graphic of Chicken nuggets containing silicone oil

(Screenshot from Facebook.)

The posts were flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook, Instagram and Threads.)

The U.S. McDonald’s website does not name “silicone oil” as an ingredient in the chicken nuggets. The website lists the following ingredients, and silicone oil (or a related chemical name, “dimethylpolysiloxane”) isn’t among them:

White boneless chicken, water, vegetable oil (canola oil, corn oil, soybean oil, hydrogenated soybean oil), enriched flour (bleached wheat flour, niacin, reduced iron, thiamine mononitrate, riboflavin, folic acid), bleached wheat flour, yellow corn flour, vegetable starch (modified corn, wheat, rice, pea, corn), salt, leavening (baking soda, sodium aluminum phosphate, sodium acid pyrophosphate, calcium lactate, monocalcium phosphate), spices, yeast extract, lemon juice solids, dextrose, natural flavors.

PolitiFact contacted McDonald’s about this claim and received no reply by the time of publication. 

In our research, we learned that U.S. McDonald’s chicken nuggets once contained dimethylpolysiloxane, an antifoaming agent derived from silicone. It is found in a variety of foods, such as cooking oil, vinegar and chocolate. It’s also added to oil to prevent it from bubbling up when frozen ingredients are added.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approves dimethylpolysiloxane as a food additive. The Code of Federal Regulations Title 21, as of November 2024, says that dimethylpolysiloxane can be added to food not to exceed 1 part per million.

But in 2016, McDonald’s USA announced the removal of artificial preservatives from several menu items, including Chicken McNuggets. Since then, dimethylpolysiloxane has not been in the nuggets’ ingredients. 

The U.S. has more than 13,000 McDonald’s restaurants, by the far the most of any country as of 2023, according to Statista, a German data gathering site. Japan and China are the other countries with the most restaurants, but we could not find complete ingredient lists for their McNuggets.

We also didn’t find silicone oil or dimethylpolysiloxane in the United Kingdom’s and India’s Chicken McNuggets. However, dimethylpolysiloxane is on the ingredient list in Canada’s McNuggets.

This is not the first time we have fact-checked claims about McDonald’s food. In September, we rated a video that claimed the FBI found human remains at a McDonald’s meat supplier Pants on Fire!

McDonald’s Chicken McNuggets in the U.S. — the country with the most McDonald’s locations — no longer contain silicone oil, though it is still listed on the ingredients list in at least Canada. We rate the claim Mostly False.

RELATED: McDonald’s didn’t add xylitol, a sugar alcohol toxic to dogs, to its soft serve ice cream

By
Maria Briceño
Staff writer
November 22, 2024

Truth-o-meter Ruling

Mostly False

IF YOUR TIME IS SHORT

  • In the U.S., McDonald’s chicken nuggets contain no silicone oil. 

  • The company’s Chicken McNuggets once contained dimethylpolysiloxane, an antifoaming agent derived from silicone that’s approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

  • In 2016, McDonald’s USA announced the removal of artificial preservatives from several menu items, including its Chicken McNuggets.

Statement

"McDonalds chicken nuggets contain silicone oil."

Context

a Facebook post

Speaker/Target

Statement Date

November 15, 2024
Our Sources

McDonald’s Canada, 4 Chicken McNuggets, accessed Nov. 20, 2024

McDonald’s U.K., 6 Piece Chicken McNuggets, accessed Nov. 20, 2024 

McDonald’s USA, Chicken McNuggets, accessed Nov. 20, 2024

PolitiFact, That burger is safe to eat: Human remains were not found at McDonald’s meat supplier. Oct. 2, 2024

McDonald’s, McDonald’s USA Announces Big Changes to its Food, Aug. 1, 2016

ECFR, TITLE 21, CHAPTER 1, SUBCHAPTER B, PART 178—INDIRECT FOOD ADDITIVES: ADJUVANTS, PRODUCTION AIDS, AND SANITIZERS, accessed Nov. 20, 2024

Thoughtco.com, Chemical Additives in Foods You Eat, accessed Nov. 20, 2024

Web.archive.org, McDonald's USA Ingredients Listing for Popular Menu Items, 2007

Facebook post, Nov. 15, 2024

Facebook post, Nov. 17, 2024

X post, Nov. 17, 2024

PolitiFact, Denied free fries? No, Trump didn’t dupe McDonald’s customers out of a free meal, Oct. 22, 2024

PolitiFact, No, McDonald’s didn’t say there’s ‘no record’ Kamala Harris worked at the fast food chain, Sept. 5, 2024

McDonald’s India, Chicken McNuggets, Nov. 21, 2024

Statista, Number of McDonald's restaurants worldwide from 2005 to 2023, accessed Nov. 21, 2024

Chowhound, How Many McDonald's Are There In The World In 2024?, May 6, 2024

Statista, Number of McDonald's restaurants worldwide from 2019 to 2023, by business region, June 4, 2024 

 

Translations

Language: en

More by This Author

Latest Fact Checks