Gerber Baby Food Lawsuit (2026): Heavy Metals, Autism Claims & MDL Status
Over 400 families have sued Gerber and other baby-food makers in federal court, alleging heavy metals in commercial baby food — including lead, arsenic, and cadmium — caused autism and ADHD. The litigation is at a critical turning point after a major 2026 court ruling.
Last reviewed: April 2026
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Reviewed by Leonard Goldberg, Editor · Last updated
What the Lawsuit Alleges
Plaintiffs allege that Gerber Products Company knowingly sold baby food containing unsafe levels of toxic heavy metals — including lead, arsenic, mercury, and cadmium — and that repeated exposure during infancy caused or contributed to autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and ADHD. The litigation stems from a February 2021 U.S. House Subcommittee report finding major baby-food brands contained heavy metals at levels exceeding federal guidelines. Gerber is one of several defendants; co-defendants include Beech-Nut, Hain Celestial (Earth's Best), Happy Baby, Plum Organics, and Walmart's Parent's Choice.
Case Details
U.S. District Court, Northern District of California — MDL-3101 (Case No. 3:24-md-3101-JSC), In Re: Baby Food Products Liability Litigation, Hon. Jacqueline Scott Corley.
Current Status
Who Is Affected & Can You Join?
Parents or guardians may have a potential claim where a child: (1) was born on or after January 1, 2007; (2) regularly consumed Gerber or other named baby-food products for roughly six months or more during infancy/toddlerhood; and (3) received a formal diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder or ADHD. Because the litigation's viability is currently uncertain pending the July 2026 dismissal hearing, consult a licensed attorney for an honest case evaluation.
Is There a Payout?
Case Timeline
- 1
February 2021 — Congressional Report Triggers Lawsuits
A U.S. House Subcommittee report found major commercial baby-food brands contained high levels of toxic heavy metals, prompting regulatory scrutiny and a surge of personal-injury lawsuits from parents of children diagnosed with autism and ADHD.
- 2
April 2024 — Federal MDL Established
The Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation consolidated the baby-food autism lawsuits into MDL-3101 before Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley in the Northern District of California, naming Gerber, Beech-Nut, Hain Celestial, and others as defendants.
- 3
April 2025 — Judge Allows Cases to Proceed
The court denied defendants' motions to dismiss, ruling plaintiffs' claims were legally plausible and allowing the litigation to advance into expert discovery.
- 4
December 2025 — Daubert Causation Hearings
Over five days, the court heard plaintiffs' and defendants' expert testimony on whether heavy metals in baby food can cause autism and ADHD.
- 5
Early 2026 — Most Plaintiff Experts Excluded; Dismissal Hearing Set
The court excluded nearly all of the plaintiffs' general-causation experts, finding their methodologies unreliable. Defendants moved to dismiss all MDL claims on May 1, 2026, with a hearing scheduled for July 9, 2026 — the case's survival now hinges on that ruling.
Scam & Misinformation Warnings
Whenever a brand lawsuit goes viral, scam sites and bad actors follow. Watch for these red flags:
Unsolicited Calls Promising 'Guaranteed' Settlements
No settlement fund exists and no amounts have been established. Anyone calling or texting with guaranteed payout figures or asking for upfront fees is not a legitimate attorney. The federal MDL may even be dismissed at the July 2026 hearing. Legitimate attorneys work on contingency and never guarantee outcomes.
Online Claim Forms Harvesting Personal Data
Many sites invite you to 'file a Gerber lawsuit claim' via a simple form. These are lead-generation pages, not courts — submitting your information does not file a lawsuit, and your personal and medical data may be sold to multiple firms. Contact a law firm directly instead.
Inflated Settlement Estimates With No Legal Basis
Some sites advertise $350,000–$1.5 million ranges for baby-food autism claims. No such case has ever settled or reached a verdict, and the 2026 expert-exclusion ruling makes individual payouts highly uncertain. Treat any specific figures as marketing, not legal fact.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Gerber baby-food lawsuit still active in 2026?
Yes, but its future is uncertain. As of mid-2026, roughly 402 cases remain consolidated in federal MDL-3101 before Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley. However, the court excluded nearly all of the plaintiffs' scientific experts in early 2026, and defendants moved to dismiss the entire MDL, with a critical hearing set for July 9, 2026. The outcome will determine whether the federal litigation continues.
What heavy metals are at the center of the lawsuit?
The primary metals alleged are lead, inorganic arsenic, cadmium, and mercury. A 2021 Congressional report found these present in multiple commercial baby-food products at levels it characterized as dangerous to developing brains. Plaintiffs allege repeated early-childhood exposure caused autism and ADHD.
Which baby-food brands are defendants alongside Gerber?
MDL-3101 names several co-defendants including Beech-Nut Nutrition, Hain Celestial (Earth's Best), Happy Baby (Nurture), Plum Organics, and Walmart's Parent's Choice, in addition to Gerber. As the largest U.S. baby-food brand, Gerber is the most prominently named defendant.
What does the early-2026 expert-exclusion ruling mean for families?
It is a significant setback. Plaintiffs must use expert witnesses to prove a product caused a specific condition. When a judge excludes those experts under the Daubert standard, it becomes very difficult — often impossible — to win at trial, and courts generally dismiss the claims. The July 9, 2026 hearing will address whether the entire MDL should be dismissed on this basis.
Has there been any settlement in the Gerber heavy-metals case?
No. As of mid-2026, no settlement has been reached in the heavy-metals/autism MDL. There is a separate, unrelated settlement of a false-advertising class action over Gerber's Good Start Gentle infant formula (offering small per-consumer amounts) — that case is entirely separate from the autism/heavy-metals litigation.