Are The Sprouts On Potatoes Poisonous? | What To Eat Or Toss

Potato sprouts can carry higher glycoalkaloids; cut small sprouts out deeply, but toss potatoes that are green, bitter, soft, or heavily sprouted.

You open the pantry, spot a potato with little “horns,” and the question hits fast: is this still food, or is it trouble?

Potatoes are safe most days, yet they come with a built-in warning system. Sprouts, green skin, and bitterness can point to glycoalkaloids (mainly solanine and chaconine), natural compounds that rise when potatoes age or get stressed. In high doses, they can make you sick.

This article gives you a clear kitchen test: what you can trim and cook, what you should toss, and how to store potatoes so you see fewer sprouts in the first place.

What Potato Sprouts Mean In Plain Terms

A sprout is a potato trying to grow. That growth uses moisture and starch from the tuber, so the potato can turn wrinkled, rubbery, and dull-tasting over time.

Sprouting alone does not automatically mean “poison.” The risk climbs when sprouting shows up with other red flags: green skin, lots of sprouts, soft spots, or a sharp bitter taste.

That combo matters because glycoalkaloids tend to concentrate in the sprouts, the “eyes,” and the layer under the skin. Some guidance leans conservative and says to toss green or sprouted potatoes to cut risk. Poison Control puts it bluntly: you’re better off throwing green or sprouted potatoes away because those are the cases tied to higher toxin levels and illness symptoms. Poison Control guidance on green or sprouted potatoes.

Sprouted Potatoes And Poison Risk: What Changes

Two natural compounds drive the safety talk: solanine and chaconine. They’re part of the potato plant’s defense system, and they can rise in the tuber as it greens, sprouts, or gets damaged.

You can’t eyeball milligrams in your kitchen. You can spot patterns that tend to go with higher levels. Extension publications describe where glycoalkaloids sit (often near the skin and in sprouts) and how handling and storage affect them. Oregon State University Extension notes that market potatoes are generally expected to stay under a common reference level of 200 mg/kg total glycoalkaloids. OSU Extension on glycoalkaloids in potato tubers.

That number is not a home test. It’s a sign that “normal” potatoes are managed to stay low, while stressed potatoes can drift upward. Your job at home is to sort “normal aging” from “too far gone.”

Green Skin Is A Stronger Warning Than A Tiny Sprout

Green on a potato is chlorophyll, not the toxin itself. Still, it’s a flag that conditions were right for glycoalkaloids to rise near the skin. When green goes deep, or covers a lot of the potato, trimming turns into guesswork.

Some guidance says to discard green and sprouted potatoes as a simple, safer rule for households. Michigan State University Extension notes that green-skinned and sprouted potatoes are best discarded to avoid stomach upset linked to these compounds. MSU Extension on green potatoes and illness risk.

Bitterness Is Your Built-In Alarm

If a raw potato smells “off” or tastes bitter (even a tiny nibble), treat that as a stop sign. Bitter taste is often reported with higher glycoalkaloids. Don’t try to “cook it out.”

When Sprouted Potatoes Are Still Safe Enough To Use

If the potato is firm, not green, and only lightly sprouted, many food-safety educators say you can salvage it by removing the sprouts and the eyes with a generous cut.

The cut needs to be deeper than a quick flick with a peeler. Aim to remove the sprout, the eye, and a little extra flesh around it. Then peel the potato, since glycoalkaloids cluster close to the skin.

Iowa State University Extension’s AnswerLine lays out a practical “keep or toss” approach: small sprouts on a firm potato can be trimmed away, while extensive sprout growth, shriveling, or deep green signals “toss.” Iowa State AnswerLine on sprouting or greening potatoes.

Kitchen Steps For Trimming A Lightly Sprouted Potato

  1. Check texture first. Press the potato with your thumb. If it gives easily, feels rubbery, or leaks liquid, toss it.
  2. Check the skin. If the potato is green over large areas or the green seems to run deep, toss it.
  3. Remove sprouts and eyes. Use a paring knife to cut a cone-shaped plug around each eye and sprout.
  4. Peel thickly. A thin peel is fine for fresh potatoes, yet for sprouted ones, a thicker peel adds a margin.
  5. Rinse and cook right away. Don’t trim and store again. Use it that day.
  6. Taste test after cooking. If it tastes bitter, stop eating it.

Does Cooking Make Sprouted Potatoes Safe?

Heat can reduce some glycoalkaloids in some conditions, yet it’s not a reliable “fix.” You should treat trimming and discarding as your main safety tools.

One extension publication from the University of Alaska Fairbanks notes that peeling removes much of the affected tissue since solanine is concentrated near the skin, and that cooking in steam or water can reduce solanine levels by a reported range. University of Alaska Fairbanks Extension on potato greening.

Even with that, don’t use cooking as permission to keep a potato that is green, bitter, soft, or heavily sprouted. Those are the cases where you’re stacking warnings on top of each other.

Red Flags That Mean “Toss It”

If you want one rule that protects most households: if you hesitate, toss it. Potatoes are cheap. A rough night of nausea is not.

Use this set of red flags as your line in the sand:

  • Lots of sprouts across the surface, or long sprouts that look like the potato is turning into a plant.
  • Green skin that covers large areas, or green that seems to run into the flesh when you cut it.
  • Soft, spongy, or wet spots, slime, or mold.
  • Wrinkled and hollow feel that suggests the potato has lost a lot of water and starch.
  • Bitter taste after cooking.

Decision Table: Keep, Trim, Or Toss

Use this as a fast check while you’re holding the potato in your hand. It’s meant to cut second-guessing.

What You See What It Suggests What To Do
One or two small sprouts on a firm potato Early sprouting; lower risk signals Trim sprouts and eyes with a deep cut, peel, cook right away
Several sprouts, still firm, no green Older potato; risk rising near eyes and skin Treat as “trim with margin”: deep eye removal, thicker peel, cook same day
Long sprouts and a wrinkled potato Starch and moisture loss; higher chance of off taste and higher glycoalkaloids Toss
Green skin in small patches only Light exposure; glycoalkaloids can rise near skin If patch is small: cut away green area with extra flesh and peel the rest; if unsure: toss
Green over large areas or green runs deep More exposure and stress signals Toss
Soft spots, dampness, or slime Spoilage risk plus quality breakdown Toss
Visible mold or strong musty smell Decay; not a trimming situation Toss
Bitter taste after cooking A warning sign reported with higher glycoalkaloids Stop eating and toss leftovers
Firm potato, no green, no bitterness, only tiny eyes Normal storage aging Use as normal; peel if you prefer

Who Should Be Extra Cautious

Most healthy adults will spit out a bitter potato long before eating enough to feel sick. Kids can’t always do that, and smaller bodies have less room for mistakes.

Use a tighter rule set if you’re cooking for children, older adults, or anyone who tends to snack straight from the pan before you taste the batch. In those cases, tossing sprouted or green potatoes is the cleaner call.

Symptoms: What “Potato Toxin” Illness Can Feel Like

When glycoalkaloids hit hard, people usually report stomach and gut symptoms first. Nausea, vomiting, cramps, and diarrhea are common descriptions in poison-center education materials. Some people also report headache or feeling off.

If multiple people feel sick after the same meal, treat it seriously. If symptoms are intense, or the person is a child, call local medical services. In the U.S., Poison Control is also a practical first call for guidance on next steps.

Storage That Slows Sprouting And Greening

Most sprout problems start with storage that’s too warm, too bright, or too sealed up. A potato kept in the right spot holds longer, tastes better, and saves money.

Here’s what tends to work in real kitchens:

  • Keep them dark. Light drives greening.
  • Keep them cool, not cold. A cool pantry or cupboard works better than a sunny counter. Refrigeration can change texture and flavor in ways many people dislike.
  • Let them breathe. Use a paper bag, mesh bag, or bin with airflow. Don’t seal potatoes in an airtight container.
  • Sort often. One bad potato can spoil the rest. Check the bag every few days.

Storage Table: Where Potatoes Last Longer

This table is about practical trade-offs: sprouting risk, greening risk, and how often you’ll need to sort your stash.

Storage Spot What Happens Over Time What Works Best
Cool, dark pantry shelf Lower sprout and green risk if the shelf stays cool Use a breathable bag; keep away from sunlight
Countertop near a window Greening risk rises fast Avoid this spot
Cabinet above the oven Heat speeds sprouting and shriveling Move potatoes to a cooler cabinet
Closed plastic bin with lid Moisture buildup can push spoilage Swap to breathable storage
Paper bag in a dark corner Good airflow and light control Fold the top loosely; sort the bag twice a week
Mesh bag hanging in shade Strong airflow; light can be an issue Hang away from light; keep it cool
Refrigerator Sprouting slows, texture can change Use only if your kitchen is hot and you’ll cook them soon
Near onions Faster spoilage is often reported with mixed storage Store separately

How To Use Up Older Potatoes Without Risky Choices

If you’ve got a bag heading toward sprouting, plan meals that use them fast and let you spot problems early.

These are safer patterns:

  • Peel-and-cube recipes. You see the flesh, you cut out flaws, and you taste the batch early.
  • Mashed potatoes from peeled tubers. Easy to stop if any bitterness shows up.
  • Soups and stews with peeled chunks. You can discard a suspect piece before it hits the pot.

Skip recipes where you cook whole potatoes with the skin on if you’re already seeing sprouts or green. That’s a tight corner to cook your way out of.

Kitchen Checklist For Sprouted Potatoes

Stick this in your notes app and use it as a quick pass before you cook:

  • Firm potato? If no, toss.
  • Green skin across large areas? Toss.
  • Only small sprouts and no green? Deep-trim eyes and sprouts, peel, cook the same day.
  • Bitter after cooking? Stop eating, toss leftovers.
  • Store the rest in a cool, dark, breathable setup and sort twice a week.

References & Sources