Sunflower Lecithin
Allergen-friendly alternative to soy lecithin; same function. Blume's full ingredient database includes category, typical usage, safety score, and common products where this appears.
Products containing Sunflower Lecithin
Sunflower Lecithin — quick answers
Is Sunflower Lecithin safe to eat?
Sunflower Lecithin carries a Blume safety score of 86/100 (low concern). Allergen-friendly alternative to soy lecithin; same function. Always read the full label, and check our app for personalised guidance based on your dietary preferences and allergies.
What is Sunflower Lecithin?
Sunflower Lecithin is a emulsifier food ingredient (identifier: E322) commonly found on packaging in many everyday products. Blume's database tracks where it appears and how each manufacturer uses it.
Which products contain Sunflower Lecithin?
Blume covers millions of food and beauty products. Tap the Download button on this page, install the iOS app, then scan any barcode to see whether Sunflower Lecithin is in it — and how the product overall scores on health, safety, and dietary fit.
What can I use instead of Sunflower Lecithin?
If you're trying to avoid Sunflower Lecithin, the Blume app suggests cleaner alternatives in the same category and lets you set a permanent "avoid" filter so future scans flag any product that contains it.
Scan any label. See what’s really inside.
Blume reads every ingredient on every product and scores it in plain English — for the food on your shelf and the products on your skin.
Download Blume Free trial · iOS 17+ · No ads, ever