PRAGUE, 18 February 2026 – A landmark international study across five Central European countries has found hazardous chemicals in every single pair of headphones analysed, from premium models to cheap imports. Authors say the results reveal a systemic failure in consumer safety regulation across the electronics industry. The investigation, conducted as part of the EU-funded ToxFree LIFE for All project, analysed 180 samples of hard and soft plastic components from 81 headphone products marketed to children, teenagers, and adults in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Slovenia, and Austria.
The Bisphenol Crisis: A Universal Contaminant
Researchers discovered that nearly all headphones contain bisphenols, chemicals known to interfere with hormones. The widely restricted Bisphenol A (BPA) appeared in 98% of samples, while its substitute, Bisphenol S (BPS), was found in over three-quarters. Maximum concentrations reached 351 mg/kg, dramatically exceeding the 10 mg/kg limit originally proposed by the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA).
"These chemicals are not just additives; they may be migrating from the headphones into our body," said Karolina Brabcová, chemical expert at Arnika. "Daily use—especially during exercise when heat and sweat are present—accelerates this migration directly to the skin. Although there is no immediate health risk, long-term exposures, especially vulnerable groups like teenagers, are of great concern. There is no 'safe' level for endocrine disruptors that mimic our natural hormones."
Regrettable Substitutions
The study confirms a broader trend of so‑called regrettable substitution, where banned chemicals are replaced by slightly modified cousins that behave in almost the same way. Manufacturers often change just part of the molecule, so the substance falls outside current rules, but its core structure — and therefore its toxic effects — remain very similar. In flame retardants, this means older halogenated substances are increasingly swapped for organophosphate flame retardants such as RDP (Resorcinol bis(diphenyl phosphate)), an alternative to TPhP that recent research links to neurotoxicity and endocrine‑disrupting effects on thyroid and oestrogen systems.
The highest level of harmful plasticisers and chlorinated paraffins was detected in a sample bought from an international online marketplace. At the same time, the study shows that even established
brands are not immune: hazardous chemicals appeared across the entire price range, so a higher price still does not guarantee a safer product.
A Call for Urgent EU Reform
The "ToxFree LIFE for All" partnership is calling on European policymakers to move away from the slow "substance-by-substance" approach and adopt group-based restrictions on flame retardants and bisphenols. “This commitment from the Chemicals Strategy for Sustainability adopted in 2021 is to be fulfilled as soon as possible given the recent findings from the sampling campaign”, concluded Brabcová.
“The evidence is clear: our current laws are slow and outdated to protect vulnerable consumers, who are exposed to harmful chemicals. However, they lack specialised knowledge, skills, and resources to protect themselves,” says Emese Gulyás, a sustainable consumption expert at the Hungarian Association of Conscious Consumers and head of the ToxFree Life for All partnership. “We need immediate, harmonised EU regulations that ban entire classes of toxic chemicals. This is the only way to protect consumers while fostering a safe circular economy where recycled materials aren’t poisoned by ‘legacy toxins.”
Key Findings:
- 81 headphone models tested across Czechia, Slovakia, Hungary, Slovenia, and Austria
- 100% contained traces of hazardous chemicals (bisphenols, phthalates, flame retardants)
- Up to 351 mg/kg of bisphenols detected—35× higher than proposed EU limits
- Product from online marketplaces (e.g. Temu) showed the highest toxicity
How Consumers Can Act
While individual choice is limited by market-wide contamination, the project recommends that consumers:
Join over 11,000 citizens demanding safer products at ToxFreeProductsNow.eu.
About ToxFree LIFE for All: The ToxFree LIFE for All project (LIFE22-GIE-HU-101114078) is an EU-funded initiative aimed at protecting citizens from hazardous chemical exposure through awareness, testing, and policy advocacy. Partners include VKI (Austria), Arnika (Czechia), dTest (Czechia), TVE (Hungary), and ZPS (Slovenia).
Funded by the EU Life Programme (LIFE22-GIE-HU-ToxFree LIFE for All, 101114078) and the Ministry of Environment of the Czech Republic. Views and opinions expressed are, however, those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or other donors. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.