The popularity of coconut oil has skyrocketed in recent years. It seems as though everyone is starting to realize what traditional South Pacific cultures with virtually no heart disease knew for centuries: Â coconut oil is one of the healthiest fats on the planet and is a boon to health when plentiful amounts are present in the diet.
Even Dr. Oz recommends coconut oil. When a TV medical doctor is extolling the virtues of coconut oil, you know it has well and truly gone mainstream!
The problem is that good quality virgin coconut oil is not particularly inexpensive. And with more and more budget conscious families demanding coconut oil, the big box wholesalers like Costco have been faced with a dilemma – how best to capitalize on the coconut oil frenzy while keeping the price dirt cheap.
I’ll admit that I’ve been suspicious of the big box wholesaler brands of coconut oil for quite awhile. The price just didn’t jive with the price I knew to be necessary to ensure a quality, pure product.
It seems that evidence is now emerging that my suspicions have been justified.
Mary M. messaged me on my Facebook page just yesterday complaining about the big jar of Costco coconut oil (picture above).  She writes:
“I just opened and began using a big container of coconut oil (got it at Costco) that I’ve had for maybe 3 months and it has sat on my pantry shelf (outside in my garage, I live in Texas so it’s gotten hotter than 100 degrees).
It smells like burned marshmallows, or maybe the inside of a pumpkin on Halloween. Since I can’t find any web sites that describe the smell (other than “yucky” and “very, very bad”) for rancid coconut oil, could you please help me out? I can’t stand to put it on my face….but can I still cook with it?”
Absolutely not.
You don’t want to ever use, cook with, or put on your skin an oil that smells bad!
Mary’s email about her jar of Costco coconut oil raised two big red flags to me. First of all, I’ve been using coconut oil and virgin coconut oil for many years and I have never had it go off, even when kept for a year or two in my garage where the temperature easily reaches a 110-120F on humid August afternoons.
Coconut oil is an extremely stable oil and should never have gone bad such as what Mary M. experienced, provided it is pure, 100% coconut oil and it was filtered properly so that none of the coconut protein was left in the oil.
The second red flag about this Costco coconut oil was the wording of the label. Â There is no such thing as “extra virgin coconut oil”. Â It is either refined coconut oil or virgin coconut oil. A friend of mine who is the owner of a company that is a quality purveyor of virgin coconut oil had this to say:
“… any product that uses the term ‘extra virgin’ and it does not pertain to olive oil is using the term outside its definition… Trying to market something that does not exist.”
Does this mean use of the misleading term “extra virgin coconut oil” indicates an inferior product? Â Not necessarily. Â It is simply a red flag that further investigation to ensure a quality product is required particularly if the product is found on a shelf at Costco or other large retailer for a price that is too good to be true.
Why Inexpensive Costco Coconut Oil is Likely of Poor Quality
There are a couple of potential reasons why Mary M’s Costco coconut oil went bad.
First of all, it might not have been 100% pure coconut oil at all.
Not pure coconut oil? Not so far fetched. This is what the olive oil industry has been doing for years, blending cheaper oils with extra virgin olive oil and marketing it as pure extra virgin olive oil. Since the majority of the oil is indeed “pure” extra virgin, they get away with labeling it as such even though other cheaper usually rancid oils are present. However, what restaurants do is even worse. Most use “olive oil blends” for cooking that are actually 75% canola oil and only 25% olive oil. If you ask them what they use for cooking, most in my experience will simply respond “olive oil” even when this is not really true.
If Mary M’s Costco coconut oil had vegetable oils or cheaper hydrogenated palm oil blended in, even if organic and in small amounts, it would be prone to going off sitting in a hot pantry for a few months causing the entire jar to stink after awhile.
Another possibility is that the oil was improperly filtered and is inferior quality coconut oil subject to rancidity as a result. Â My friend mentioned earlier who is the owner of a company that sells quality virgin coconut oil had this to say when I asked him about Mary’s coconut oil problem and how it could possibly go rancid:
“The only thing I have seen is during the filtering process. Â If they run it too fast or do not change the filters, one can get pieces of coconut (protein) in the product. Â You will not see it other than with time you might see a slight change in color on the bottom of the container. Â And this product can culture at the bottom of the container and it will have a culture smell.”
Another friend who also owns a company that sells high quality virgin coconut oil had this to add:
“It is possible that it was not 100% Coconut Oil. However, I suspect that it was just very old oil and not fresh. Since there is so much demand for Coconut Oil, fresh lots will be sold for money and may not be available at discount stores.”
Was Mary’s Costco coconut oil cut with a small percentage of cheaper oils to boost manufacturer and/or coconut oil reseller profits, poorly filtered causing the coconut protein bits to “culture” the oil, or just old, manufacturer’s defect oil?
It’s anybody’s guess, but one thing is for sure.  It was not fresh, high quality Grade A coconut oil. Good quality, pure coconut oil that has been properly filtered does not go bad in a hot 100F pantry even if in a plastic tub.  Cheaply priced coconut oil at a discount store runs the risk of being old, improperly filtered (manufacturer’s defect) and not the best choice for your health.
Is it a high risk? Â Maybe, maybe not. Â There’s certainly not enough data to confirm one way or the other at this point. As for me, I’m personally not willing to trust a huge corporation to properly source my healthy fats – the fats that build my children’s brain and support their immune function.
The lesson to be learned from Mary’s experience from my perspective is that you get what you pay for whether it be coconut oil or any other food item. Buying coconut oil at Costco, Walmart or some other big box retailer that bases stocking decisions primarily on low price obtained via buying huge quantities at once is a big risk that what you get is going to be poor quality coconut oil that is either potentially blended with cheap oils or is a Grade B, poorly filtered product. Cheap oil that is subject to rancidity and loaded with free radicals risks your health.
It may look and smell fine when you open the jar, but the real test is does it stay looking and smelling fine in a hot pantry or garage after several months?
You can’t tell just by looking at it or tasting it that is 100% virgin coconut oil that has been properly filtered.
Just like with extra virgin olive oil, the only way to ensure a quality product is to buy from a quality small business, not a big box retailer like Costco that buys large amounts of inventory from manufacturers and dumps it on the consumer market at ultra cheap prices. Â While you may get a decent product for a cheap price some of the time, I personally am not willing to take the chance with my healthy fats – the most critical aspect of Traditional Diet – that it will be a quality purchase 100% of the time like what would happen if I bought from a small, trusted producer.
Anything can happen and frequently does as a food item makes its way through the Industrial Food Distribution System!
UPDATE: Since this article was published in June 2013, dozens of other consumers have emailed me with stories of rock bottom priced, poor quality coconut oil being purchased not just at Costco, but other Big Box retailers. Â Buyer beware!
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
More Information
Coconut Oil May Not Be Right for You
MCT Oil: The Coconut Oil Dregs
Sarah Meyers via Facebook
I totally agree with Sarah Johnston. Also this article was purely speculative. Your quotes to other coconut oil manufacturers said nothing about carrington farms quality directly. In Canada it says virgin only. Some of us have done our research and it wasn’t hard to find the correct info.. I just call your article lazy.
Meagan
I have Carrington from Costco here in MI and have had no problems and the same is true for my friends who use the same brand as well.
I realize that the people at Radiant Life are friends of yours, however, if you’re going to post a *warning* about the dangers of cheap oil, why not call to find out more about the term “extra” being used on their label? Why not find out from Carrington if they’re aware of people having problems with their oil? Perhaps the problem lies less with Carrington and more so with that Costco branch. If a jug was opened and then sealed back up it could easily have become contaminated.
Just a suggestion.
Jenn
I’ve been using the Costco coconut oil and have been happy- I’ve never had this happen. Do you think it could be the fact that it was in a plastic container, stored in high heat? High heat would also allow microbes to grow. If a few microbial spores got in the container somehow (she is going into the jar to take out oil, right?) they could proliferate. Coconut oil is decent mold food. Also, a “burnt marshmallow smell” indicates to me more of a chemical smell- plastic breaking down in heat?
Regardless, would it still be safe to use this brand as a lotion, but avoid consumption?
Sarah Johnston via Facebook
Sarah, I really enjoy your blog and have learned SO MUCH from you. With that said, this article really rubbed me the wrong way and I was disappointed like many of the commenters above. First off, my Costco sells Nutiva brand which I find to be a very reputable company, and I love their CO. More importantly though, I find Costco to be a wonderful retailer that is absolutely NOTHING like Walmart or the other “big box” retailers! They sell top quality products, and the reason they can do so for cheap is the fact that they buy entire truckloads rather than cases, their profit per item is very small, and they also charge a membership fee. They are NOT like Walmart. They will also take any product back and issue a full refund if you are unsatisfied for ANY REASON, which is excellent customer service. The woman you described should simply return her oil for a refund and move on. I see your article as borderline slander and an attempt to demonize large chain retailers, while you yourself are trying to sell similar products via your blog. Please don’t take your (understandable) frustration with the system out on Costco, I actually think it’s wonderful that they are branching out and offering more “crunchy” products. Just my 2 cents.
Christa Bateman via Facebook
This is pathetic and absurd. Before I went to the check-out I got out my phone and researched the top coconut oil brands, and the one Costco carries is top/middle on the list.
To suggest saving money by buying at Costco means you are risking quality is as ridiculous as saying that buying any reputable/top brand off amazon to save money means that brand is no longer reputable or “as good” simply because it’s less costly.
And if you knew a lick about Costco, you would understand how immensly serious they take the brands/quality they offer! Sure, you’ll get your regular Kraft brand, but they also sell certified non-gmo foods as well as most recently organic AAA Canadian beef…. Just because it’s sold at Costco doesn’t mean you are sacrificing ANYTHING!
Kristina Campbell Mattson via Facebook
This article is unsubstantiated anecdotal evidence passed as fact.
Sharon
Your articles are great but this is a true hot air piece. On person had a bad experience with a product and you wore way too many Costco-bashing sentences for me to stomach. Why not call Costco or their vendors and try to get a fact before vomiting a bunch of speculation? Please realize you don’t need to give us quantity pieces over quality.
Jayleen Boyd via Facebook
We’ve been loving the organic Nutivia from Costco for a long time now. They’re a VERY conscientious reputable company.
Mae Manaia
Read this and then move to New Zealand to find the finest in REAL coconut oil products. Costco’s model is bulk buy, lower price. The next person along the value chain is incentivized to provide the price point…not the quality point. Since most of you have never had fresh-off-the-plantation coconut oil…you won’t notice the difference…and the once nightmare case is returnable.
Wanda Rivera Bober via Facebook
This article is suspect.