What Are Seed Oils
And Why Are They Used Everywhere?
From the supermarket shelf to restaurant kitchens, seed oils have quietly become one of the most prevalent ingredients in the modern food supply. But what exactly are they — and how did they get there?
Introduction
The Oils You Use Every Day — But Rarely Think About
Open almost any packaged food in your kitchen right now and there is a good chance you will find at least one seed oil listed in the ingredients. Biscuits, bread, salad dressing, plant-based spreads, crisps, ready meals, stir-fry sauces — seed oils appear in all of them, often without much fanfare.
Yet despite their quiet dominance in our food supply, most people know remarkably little about what seed oils actually are, where they come from, or why the food industry relies on them so heavily. And in an era when these oils have become the subject of heated online debate, understanding the basics is more useful than ever.
This article explains what seed oils are, how the three most widely used varieties — soybean, sunflower, and canola — are produced and used, and why they became so prevalent in modern food manufacturing in the first place.
What Exactly Is a Seed Oil?
A seed oil is any edible oil extracted from the seed — rather than the fruit or flesh — of a plant. The seed contains the plant’s stored energy in the form of fats, which can be pressed or chemically extracted to produce a liquid oil.
The term “seed oil” is often used interchangeably with “vegetable oil,” though technically not all vegetable oils come from seeds. Avocado oil is extracted from the fruit pulp. Olive oil comes from the olive fruit. True seed oils include soybean, sunflower, canola (rapeseed), corn, safflower, grapeseed, and cottonseed oil — the varieties most commonly found in food manufacturing.
Modern industrial extraction involves mechanical pressing followed by chemical solvent extraction (typically using hexane), refining, bleaching, and deodorising. This process produces a stable, consistent, neutral-flavoured oil at high volume and low cost — qualities that make seed oils ideal for food manufacturing.
Soybean, Sunflower & Canola — What Sets Them Apart?
While dozens of seed oils exist, three dominate global production and are the most likely to appear in the foods you buy. Each has a distinct origin, fatty acid profile, and set of uses.
Soybean Oil
The World’s Most Produced Oil
Extracted from soybeans, this is the single most produced edible oil globally. It has a mild flavour and high smoke point, making it suitable for frying, baking, and as a base for margarines and dressings. It is high in omega-6 linoleic acid and contains some omega-3 alpha-linolenic acid.
Main fat: Omega-6 (linoleic acid ~51%)
Sunflower Oil
Bright, Neutral & Versatile
Pressed from sunflower seeds, this oil is prized for its light colour, neutral taste, and high smoke point. It is one of the most popular cooking oils in Europe and widely used in snack food production. High-oleic varieties have become more common as manufacturers seek greater heat stability.
Main fat: Omega-6 (linoleic acid ~65%)
Canola Oil
The Low-Erucic Acid Rapeseed
Canola is a variety of rapeseed bred specifically to be low in erucic acid. The resulting oil is mild, light, and relatively high in heart-healthy monounsaturated fats. It also contains a meaningful amount of omega-3 ALA, making it nutritionally distinctive among common seed oils.
Main fat: Monounsaturated (oleic acid ~62%)
Why Did Seed Oils Become So Ubiquitous?
The dominance of seed oils in the modern food supply is not accidental. Soybean, sunflower, and rapeseed crops can be grown at enormous scale in temperate climates, yielding large quantities of oil per hectare at very low cost. Refined seed oils are also near-flavourless and remarkably stable at room temperature — with shelf lives often exceeding twelve months — making them ideal for packaged food production and distribution.
From the 1960s onward, public health guidance began steering consumers away from saturated fats. Seed oils, being predominantly unsaturated, were positioned as the healthier alternative, and the food industry reformulated products accordingly. Beyond cost and health messaging, seed oils perform specific technical functions in food: emulsifying dressings, giving baked goods their tender crumb, and providing the fry-stability needed in snack food production.
🎙 Listen to the Episode
Are Seed Oils Inflammatory? What the Research Actually Says
The Seed Oil Debate · Vitality & Wellness
Open in SpotifyKey Takeaways
What to Remember from This Article
- Seed oils are edible oils extracted from plant seeds. The most widely used are soybean, sunflower, and canola (rapeseed).
- They dominate the food supply for practical reasons: low cost, neutral flavour, long shelf life, and technical versatility in food manufacturing.
- Their fatty acid profiles differ meaningfully. Canola is notably higher in monounsaturated fat and omega-3 ALA compared to soybean or sunflower oil.
- Seed oils are not the same as ultra-processed foods. Their presence in unhealthy foods is a product of food system economics — it does not tell us whether the oils themselves are harmful.
- The debate around seed oils and inflammation is covered in depth in our companion article and podcast episode.
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources
References
- Petersen KS, Maki KC, Calder PC et al. (2024). Perspective on the health effects of unsaturated fatty acids and commonly consumed plant oils high in unsaturated fat. British Journal of Nutrition, 132(8):1039–1050.
- Fornari Laurindo L et al. (2025). Evaluating the effects of seed oils on lipid profile, inflammatory and oxidative markers, and glycemic control. Frontiers in Nutrition, 12:1502815.
- World Cancer Research Fund. (2025). Are seed oils good or bad for our health? WCRF.org.
- Gardner C. (2025). Five things to know about seed oils and your health. Stanford Medicine News & Insights.
- Rett BS & Whelan J. (2011). Increasing dietary linoleic acid does not increase tissue arachidonic acid content in adults consuming Western-type diets. Nutrition & Metabolism. PMC6179509.
- U.S. Department of Agriculture & Department of Health and Human Services. (2020). Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2020–2025. 9th Edition.
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