Is Ninja third-party tested?
Last reviewed July 2026.
It mostly doesn’t need to be. Ninja’s position in our table isn’t about test reports — it’s about disclosure. What the cooking surface is made of is stated plainly, and no safety claim is being made that would need a lab to check.
Every claim, and where the proof stands
| Line | Coating | PTFE? | Claim | Status | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NeverStick (Foodi NeverStick, NeverStick Premium) | PTFE-based nonstick | yes — PTFE is a PFAS | Made without PFOA | ✓ verified | industry-wide phase-out under the EPA 2010/15 PFOA Stewardship Program |
| Coating is PTFE-based | ✓ verified | manufacturer product Q&A / retailer spec sheets |
NeverStick (Foodi NeverStick, NeverStick Premium)
NeverStick is a PTFE-based coating — the same chemistry family as every mainstream nonstick — marketed on durability rather than chemistry. The PFOA-free claim is true (see the T-fal row: it is true of all current US PTFE cookware) and does not make the pan PFAS-free, because PTFE is a PFAS. Ninja does not publish third-party test reports.
How to read this
“PFOA-free” is true of virtually every pan sold today and is not the same claim as “PFAS-free” — PTFE itself is a PFAS. If a coating’s chemistry matters to you, the questions that cut through are: what is the coating, and who published the test? Our PFOA vs PFAS guide covers the first; the main table tracks the second for every brand here.
See where Ninja sits against every brand we track →
We do not test cookware — we index published third-party lab results and public legal records, with attribution, and make no health claims. A verdict describes the state of the published evidence for specific marketing claims, not whether a pan is safe or dangerous. An allegation is not a finding; a settlement is not an admission; a lab report speaks only for the samples tested. If a brand publishes new evidence, the page changes — the source always wins.
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