Can You Get Sick From Eating Rancid Oil?

Can Rancid Oil Make You Sick?
How Does Oil Become Rancid?
Effects of Eating Rancid Nuts
The Takeaway
- Rancid oils won’t give you a foodborne illness, but they have links to long-term health problems like atherosclerosis, heart disease, cancers, allergies, and others. They can also affect nutrient levels by causing digestive distress.
- The oxidation process that makes oil rancid may also severely deplete the nutritional value of heart-healthy, polyunsaturated fats. These oils generally spoil faster than solid, saturated fats.
- Air and light exposure, excessive heat during storage, and contamination with microbes and heavy metals can speed up the oxidation process.
- Store oils and nuts away from light and heat to help them keep for longer.
- Gharby S et al. Vegetable oil oxidation: Mechanisms, impacts on quality, and approaches to enhance shelf life. Food Chemistry: X. May 10, 2025.
- Bao Y et al. Dietary oxidized lipids in redox biology: Oxidized olive oil disrupts lipid metabolism and induces intestinal and hepatic inflammation in C57BL/6J mice. Redox Biology. March 1, 2025.
- Okparanta S et al. Assessment of Rancidity and Other Physicochemical Properties of Edible Oils (Mustard and Corn Oils) Stored at Room Temperature. Journal of Food and Nutrition Sciences. May 2018.
- Deep Fat Frying and Food Safety. U.S. Food Safety and Inspection Service.
- Garden-Robinson J. Prairie Fare: Is It Time for an Oil Change in Your Kitchen? North Dakota State University. April 20, 2017.
- Zhou J et al. Nuts: An overview on oxidation, affecting factors, inhibiting measures, and prospects. Journal of Food Composition and Analysis. March 2025.
- Mycotoxins. World Health Organization. October 2, 2023.
- Go Nuts (But Just a Little!). American Heart Association. August 23, 2024.

Natalia Johnsen, MD
Medical Reviewer
Natalia Johnsen, MD, is a triple board-certified physician in internal medicine, lifestyle medicine, and obesity medicine, practicing as an internist and consultant at the Vancouver Clinic in Vancouver, Washington.
Dr. Johnsen began her medical career as an ob-gyn in Russia before relocating to the United States in 2000. She completed her internal medicine internship at the University of Nevada and her residency at a Stanford-affiliated program in Santa Clara, California.
Deeply interested in the impact of lifestyle on both physical and mental health, Johnsen transitioned her focus toward prevention-based care after witnessing how many chronic conditions could be avoided or improved through lifestyle interventions. She became board-certified in lifestyle medicine in 2021 and further expanded her expertise by earning board certification in obesity medicine in 2025.
Johnsen is passionate about empowering patients with evidence-based tools to achieve sustainable health and long-term well-being.

Barbara Hazelden
Author
Barbara Hazelden is a Florida-based freelance writer who crafts articles about medical and healthy lifestyle topics. She presents often complex subjects in an engaging way. Barbara enjoys dark chocolate, eating vegetarian, and spending time with her rescue dog, who she says is “the best stress reliever on the planet.”