Skip to content

Moringa Seeds Filter Microplastics: What the Study Found

Science & the Miracle Tree

The Seed That Cleans Water

By Tzvi Ginzburg May 2026 10 min read

There are nearly 400,000 published studies on the Moringa oleifera tree. And just when you think you understand what this plant is capable of, it surprises you again.

In April 2026, researchers published findings in ACS Omega, a journal of the American Chemical Society, showing that a simple saline extract of Moringa seeds can remove more than 98% of PVC microplastics from drinking water. The extract performed comparably to aluminum sulfate, one of the most widely used chemical coagulants in water treatment plants globally. In more alkaline water, the moringa seed extract actually outperformed the chemical alternative.

This is not a fringe study. It is peer-reviewed science from the Institute of Science and Technology of São Paulo State University (ICT-UNESP) in Brazil, with researchers from both Brazil and the United Kingdom contributing to the work. And it is one more piece of evidence that moringa water purification — in its broadest sense — has far more to offer than the world has yet recognized.

Moringa seeds beside a glass of water with moringa seed powder — moringa seeds water purification — All Moringa

Moringa oleifera seeds — the same seed used in the 2026 ACS Omega water purification study

What Did Scientists Find About Moringa Seeds and Microplastics?

Researchers at ICT-UNESP found that a saline extract made from Moringa oleifera seeds removed more than 98% of PVC microplastics from tap water under laboratory conditions. The extract performed on par with aluminum sulfate, the standard chemical used in water treatment, and outperformed it in alkaline water conditions.

The study, led by Professor Adriano Gonçalves dos Reis and conducted by Gabrielle S. Batista during her master's degree research, was published in ACS Omega (2026; 11 (4): 6602). The researchers specifically evaluated moringa seed extract as a plant-based water filtration alternative to conventional chemical coagulants. The team tested both direct filtration and in-line filtration systems, and both approaches demonstrated comparable microplastic removal rates.

The optimal treatment conditions involved 30 mg/L of moringa seed saline extract combined with 9 mg/L of alum at a pH of 6.0, achieving 98.5% removal of aged PVC microplastics. The alum-only treatment removed 98.7% under the same conditions, making the two approaches essentially equivalent.

"We showed that the saline extract from the seeds performs similarly to aluminum sulfate, which is used in treatment plants to coagulate water containing microplastics. In more alkaline waters, it performed even better than the chemical product."
— Gabrielle S. Batista, lead researcher, ICT-UNESP. Cited in ScienceDaily, April 2026.

How Do Moringa Seeds Remove Microplastics From Water?

Moringa seeds contain natural proteins that act as cationic polymers, meaning they carry a positive electrical charge. Microplastics in water carry a negative electrical charge, which causes them to repel each other and resist capture during filtration. When moringa seed extract is added to contaminated water, those proteins neutralize the negative charges, causing the plastic particles to stick together and form larger clusters called flocs, which can then be removed by filtration.

This process is called coagulation followed by flocculation. It is the same basic process that conventional water treatment uses, but moringa accomplishes it with a naturally occurring seed protein rather than a mined chemical compound.

The saline extract used in the study is made by crushing moringa seeds into a powder and dispersing that powder in a salt solution. Earlier work by the same research group demonstrated that moringa seeds are effective through a complete treatment cycle that includes coagulation, flocculation, sedimentation, and filtration. Independent studies across Africa and South Asia have confirmed the same mechanism: a 2015 Nigerian laboratory study found moringa seed protein extract achieved 96.67% turbidity reduction in raw river water, with progressive decreases in coliform bacteria as seed concentration increased.

The elegance of this mechanism is that moringa is doing something human engineers designed chemical plants to do, and it has been doing it naturally for as long as the tree has existed. The practice of moringa seeds water purification has deep roots across Africa and South Asia, where communities have used the seeds for traditional water clarification for generations. A technical brief by Germany's development agency (GATE/GTZ) documents this history — including how Dr. Samia Al Azharia Jahn's laboratory work in Sudan first confirmed moringa seeds could clarify turbid Nile River water, and how a single mature moringa tree's annual harvest can treat up to 30,000 liters of water. What the 2026 study adds is rigorous, peer-reviewed confirmation that this traditional knowledge holds up under controlled laboratory conditions specifically for microplastic removal. A 2024 study in the Journal of Emerging Investigators (Nadella & Nadella) demonstrated that moringa seed powder combined with coconut shell-activated carbon removed 100% of lead, copper, ammonium nitrate, and E. coli from polluted river water — extending moringa's purification reach well beyond microplastics.

The 4-step moringa water purification process — from crushed seed to 98.5% microplastic removal

How Does Moringa Seed Extract Compare to Aluminum Sulfate?

Moringa seed extract and aluminum sulfate achieved statistically comparable microplastic removal rates in the study, with moringa performing better in alkaline water conditions. The key difference between the two coagulants lies not in their effectiveness, but in what they leave behind.
Moringa Seed Extract Aluminum Sulfate
Microplastic removal (lab) 98.5% (aged PVC) 98.7% (aged PVC)
Performance in alkaline water Better than alum Standard performance
Biodegradable Yes No
Residual toxicity Low (organic matter increase noted) Aluminum residue concerns
Source Renewable plant Mined mineral
Regulatory concern Minimal Growing scrutiny
Sludge production Lower Higher
"There's increasing regulatory scrutiny and health concerns regarding the use of aluminum- and iron-based coagulants, as they aren't biodegradable, leave residual toxicity, and pose a risk of disease. For that reason, the search for sustainable alternatives has intensified."
— Professor Adriano Gonçalves dos Reis, ICT-UNESP. Cited in ScienceDaily, April 2026.

The one limitation noted for moringa seed extract is that it can increase dissolved organic matter in the treated water, which may require an additional removal step. At small scale, this trade-off is manageable. At large urban scale, it adds cost. Researchers continue to investigate optimization approaches.

What Types of Microplastics Did the Study Test?

The study specifically tested polyvinyl chloride (PVC) microplastics with a mean size of 18.8 micrometers. The researchers chose PVC intentionally because it is considered one of the most harmful plastics for human health, with known mutagenic and carcinogenic properties. PVC is also commonly detected in surface water and has been shown to persist even after conventional water treatment.

To make the test more realistic, the research team exposed the PVC microplastics to ultraviolet radiation before testing. UV aging simulates the degradation that plastic undergoes after years of exposure to sunlight and weather in the environment. Aged microplastics behave differently from fresh particles, so testing aged material brings the lab results closer to real-world conditions.

Microplastics are defined as plastic particles smaller than 5 millimeters. They enter drinking water through a variety of pathways, including the breakdown of larger plastic waste, synthetic textile washing, packaging degradation, and atmospheric deposition. Studies have detected microplastics in tap water, bottled water, and municipal water supplies globally. Their long-term effects on human health are still being studied, but the presence of particles with known mutagenic potential in drinking water is a legitimate area of scientific concern.

Can You Use Moringa Seeds to Filter Water at Home?

Yes — and communities across Africa and South Asia have been doing exactly that for centuries. The process is simpler than you might expect. But there is one thing almost everyone gets wrong the first time: you do not use the whole seed. You need the white kernel inside. That is where the magic lives.

Step One: Find the White Kernel

Look at a moringa seed and you will notice it looks different from most seeds you have seen. It comes out of the pod with a papery outer shell — three little wings fanning out from the center, a bit like a small tan propeller or star. That outer shell is just packaging. It is not what you need.

Crack it open — gently, with your fingers or a small tap — and peel it away. Inside, you will find a round, cream-white kernel about the size of a small pea. Smooth. Soft. Pale. That little white kernel is everything. It is the same kernel we cold-press to make our Moringa Seed Oil. And it is the part the 2026 study used to remove 98% of microplastics from water. Discard the wings and outer shell. Use only the white kernel inside.

Moringa seeds with outer shells beside shelled white inner kernels on a ceramic plate — how to prepare moringa seeds for water purification — All Moringa
The papery outer shells (top) get discarded. The cream-white kernels (bottom) are what you crush — these carry the coagulant proteins that remove microplastics from water.

Why It Works: The World's Simplest Explanation

Here is the beautiful part — and you do not need a chemistry degree to understand it.

The tiny particles in dirty water — microplastics, dirt, sediment, bacteria — all carry a small negative electrical charge. Because they all have the same charge, they push each other away, like two magnets facing the same direction. They stay suspended, spread out, invisible. That is why you cannot just filter them with a cloth. They are too small and they repel each other.

The white moringa kernel contains natural proteins that carry a positive charge. When you crush that kernel into powder and mix it into the water, those proteins are drawn toward the negatively charged particles. They wrap around them, neutralize their charge, and cause them to stick together. Tiny invisible particles become visible clumps. Those clumps get heavy and sink to the bottom. The water above them clears.

That is it. That is the whole mechanism. A seed doing in minutes what a water treatment plant uses chemicals to do.

In the 2026 ACS Omega study, researchers dissolved the crushed white kernel powder in a salt solution — salt helps pull more of these proteins out of the kernel — then added it to water contaminated with microplastics. After the particles clumped and settled, they filtered the water. 98.5% of the microplastics were gone. That result matched what aluminum sulfate — the standard chemical used in water treatment plants — achieved under the same conditions.

How to Try It: 5 Simple Steps

This is the basic method that communities have used for water clarification for generations. ECHO Community's video on moringa-coated sand filters shows what this looks like in practice at the village scale. It is not the exact laboratory procedure from the 2026 study — that required precision equipment — but it follows the same principle and uses the same biology.

  1. Crack open the seed and remove the outer shell. You want only the white kernel inside. The papery wings and husk get thrown away — they do nothing for the water.
  2. Grind the white kernel into a fine powder. Use a mortar and pestle, a spice grinder, or even a clean smooth stone. The finer the powder, the better it works. You are trying to break the kernel apart so those proteins can release into the water.
  3. Mix the powder with a small amount of clean water to make a paste, then stir it into the water you want to treat. One kernel is enough for roughly 10 liters of water. Add the paste and stir the water quickly and consistently for about 5 minutes. You are activating the process — giving the proteins a chance to find and bind to the particles in the water.
  4. Leave it alone for 1 to 2 hours. Walk away. Let the water rest undisturbed. You will begin to see particles gathering and sinking. The water above will slowly clear.
  5. Carefully pour off the clear water from the top — and then boil it. Leave the cloudy sediment at the bottom behind. The moringa has pulled the particles out of the water, but it has not killed bacteria. You must boil the water before drinking. This is not a step you can skip.
A note about salt: In the 2026 laboratory study, the researchers dissolved the moringa powder in a concentrated salt solution rather than plain water before adding it to the contaminated water. Salt helps draw more of the coagulant proteins out of the kernel — which is part of why the study achieved such striking results. For a home experiment, a salt solution (roughly a teaspoon of salt dissolved in a cup of water before mixing in your powder) can improve your results. It is not strictly required, but it is what the science used.
Good to know: The 2026 study was conducted under precise laboratory conditions. The at-home version of this method is great for learning, experimenting, and understanding what the Moringa seed is capable of. For drinking water, always boil after treatment regardless of how clear the water looks. Moringa removes particles — it does not remove all pathogens.

What the research does confirm is that moringa seeds water purification works as a mechanism — and a remarkably effective one. The researchers are now testing the method on real river water supplying entire cities in Brazil, to see how it performs with the full complexity of natural water conditions. The results so far suggest the Miracle Tree has a bigger role to play in clean water access than the world has yet imagined.

Why Is Moringa Water Purification Better Than Chemical Alternatives?

Plant-based water filtration using moringa seed extract offers significant environmental advantages over chemical alternatives like aluminum sulfate. Moringa seeds are renewable, biodegradable, and require no mining or heavy industrial processing. They do not leave aluminum residues in treated water, and they produce less sludge during the treatment process — making moringa water purification a cleaner solution at every stage of the cycle.

The environmental case matters beyond just the water itself. Aluminum sulfate production requires bauxite mining, which has significant land and ecological impacts. Aluminum residues in treated water and in treatment plant sludge have raised growing regulatory concern in multiple countries. Moringa water purification sidesteps all of this: the coagulant can be grown, harvested, and applied locally, with no synthetic chemistry involved — a meaningful shift in how communities can approach water treatment sustainably. A 2015 comparative study in Environmental Monitoring and Assessment tested moringa and alum head-to-head on natural and polluted water in Colombia: moringa achieved 95% color removal versus alum's 80.3%, and both achieved 100% removal of color and turbidity from polluted water — confirming moringa can match or outperform chemical alternatives depending on water conditions.

For small communities in tropical and subtropical regions where moringa grows naturally, this is particularly significant. The seeds are already present, already known to local populations, and already used in some traditional contexts for water clarification. What the 2026 study adds is rigorous, peer-reviewed confirmation that this traditional knowledge holds up under controlled laboratory conditions specifically for microplastic removal. A 2024 study in the Journal of Emerging Investigators (Nadella & Nadella) demonstrated that moringa seed powder combined with coconut shell-activated carbon removed 100% of lead, copper, ammonium nitrate, and E. coli from polluted river water — extending moringa's purification reach well beyond microplastics.

What Does This Discovery Tell Us About the Intelligence of One Tree?

At All Moringa, we have spent years working closely with Moringa oleifera. We press the seed into oil. We dry and grind the leaf into powder. We steep the leaves into tea. We have built an entire brand around the conviction that this one tree contains more nutritional and biological intelligence than most people realize.

So when a peer-reviewed study confirms that the same seed we cold-press for skincare oil can also neutralize the electrical charge of toxic microplastics in water, our reaction is not surprise. It is recognition.

The seed of Moringa oleifera contains proteins that behave as natural coagulants. Those same seeds, when cold-pressed, yield an oil rich in oleic acid, behenic acid, vitamin E, and phytosterols. These are different applications of the same seed's biological intelligence. The proteins purify. The lipids nourish. One seed, serving both purposes, as nature designed.

Pure Moringa Seed Oil dropper bottle cold-pressed from moringa seeds — All Moringa skincare
Our Pure Moringa Seed Oil is cold-pressed from that same seed. It is not a water treatment product. What the skin receives from the seed oil is its lipid fraction: the oleic acid that supports the skin barrier, the vitamin E that protects against oxidative stress, the behenic acid that conditions and smooths. That is a different expression of the same plant's capabilities, not the same one.
A seed complex enough to synthesize cationic proteins that neutralize microplastics is also complex enough to press into an oil that your skin recognizes and absorbs. That is not marketing language. That is biology.

The same tree whose leaf gives the body vitamins A, C, and E, all nine essential amino acids, calcium, potassium, and iron (USDA FoodData Central) is now being studied as a solution to one of the most urgent water contamination problems of our time. One tree. One plant. An extraordinary range of expression.

If you want to experience what the Moringa seed produces for your skin, our Pure Moringa Seed Oil is a place to start. And if you want to nourish your body with what the Moringa leaf carries inside it, our whole-leaf Moringa Leaf Powder brings the full-spectrum nutrition of the tree to your daily routine. Because the most remarkable thing about this tree is that it keeps giving, leaf to seed, inside and out.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can moringa seeds remove microplastics from drinking water?
Yes. A peer-reviewed study published in ACS Omega (2026) found that a saline extract made from Moringa oleifera seeds removed more than 98% of PVC microplastics from tap water in laboratory conditions. The extract performed comparably to aluminum sulfate, a standard chemical coagulant, and outperformed it in alkaline water.
How do moringa seeds filter microplastics?
Think of it like opposite magnets. Microplastics and other particles in water carry a negative charge — they push each other away and stay suspended, too small and scattered to filter out. The white inner kernel of the moringa seed contains natural proteins with a positive charge. When you crush the kernel into powder and add it to water, those proteins are drawn toward the particles, wrap around them, and cancel their charge. The particles stop repelling each other and start sticking together — forming visible clumps that sink to the bottom. The water above clears. You pour off the clean water, and the contaminants stay behind. The 2026 ACS Omega study confirmed this mechanism removed 98.5% of microplastics from tap water.
Is moringa seed extract the same as moringa seed oil?
No. Moringa seed extract, as used in the water filtration study, is a saline solution made from crushed moringa seeds that captures the seed's water-soluble proteins. Moringa seed oil is cold-pressed from the seed to extract its lipid fraction, primarily oleic acid, behenic acid, and vitamin E. These are different components of the same seed with different applications.
How does moringa compare to aluminum sulfate for water treatment?
The 2026 ACS Omega study found both achieved more than 98% removal of PVC microplastics. Moringa performed better than aluminum sulfate in alkaline water. The key difference is that moringa is renewable and biodegradable, while aluminum sulfate is a mined chemical with residual toxicity concerns. Moringa seed extract does increase dissolved organic matter in treated water, which may require an additional treatment step.
Can you use moringa seeds to filter your tap water at home?
The process is technically possible at small scale. One moringa seed can treat approximately 10 liters of water. However, the study was conducted under controlled laboratory conditions. Standardized home application protocols have not yet been established. The technique is most practical for small communities or settings where conventional chemical coagulants are not accessible.
Why is PVC the type of microplastic that was tested?
The researchers chose polyvinyl chloride (PVC) because it is considered one of the most harmful plastics for human health, with known mutagenic and carcinogenic properties. PVC is also commonly detected in surface water and persists even after conventional water treatment. The researchers aged the PVC particles with ultraviolet radiation to simulate real-world microplastic degradation before testing.
Do you use the whole moringa seed for water purification, or just part of it?
Only the white inner kernel — not the whole seed. The moringa seed has a hard, three-winged papery outer shell (husk) that must be removed first. Inside that husk is a round, cream-white kernel about the size of a small pea. The coagulant proteins are concentrated in that white kernel. The outer shell is discarded. Crushing the white kernels into a fine powder and mixing that powder with water (or a saline solution, as in the 2026 study) is what releases the coagulant proteins into the water to neutralize and capture suspended particles.

The Miracle Tree Keeps Revealing Itself

The 2026 study out of São Paulo State University is one more chapter in the long story of what Moringa oleifera is capable of. For centuries, communities across tropical regions have used moringa for food, medicine, and water clarification. For years, researchers have been confirming, compound by compound, why it works. Now moringa seeds water purification has entered the scientific record — with 98.5% microplastic removal to back it up.

At All Moringa, we have always believed that the closer you look at this tree, the more you find. That is why we use whole plants, not extracts. It is why we press the seed and powder the leaf. And it is why we share research like this with the people who trust us.

The leaf nourishes. The seed restores. And apparently, the seed also cleans your water. One tree. Wholeness from one source.

Experience the Miracle Tree

Explore what the Moringa seed produces for your skin and what the Moringa leaf carries for your body.



About the Author

Tzvi

Co-Founder, All Moringa

Tzvi and Maya founded All Moringa in 2019 after discovering the Moringa oleifera tree's extraordinary nutritional depth. Every product in the All Moringa line comes from one plant, made the way nature intended: pure, whole, and honest.

These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

Sources & Further Reading

  1. Batista, G.S. et al. (2026). Moringa oleifera seed saline extract as a natural coagulant for microplastic removal. ACS Omega, 11(4), 6602. View study →
  2. Magaji, U.F. et al. (2015). Biocoagulation Activity of Moringa oleifera Seeds for Water Treatment. The International Journal of Engineering and Science, 4(2), 19-26. View study →
  3. Salazar Gamez, L.L. et al. (2015). Comparative study between M. oleifera and aluminum sulfate for water treatment: case study Colombia. Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, 187(10), 668. View on PubMed →
  4. Nadella, S. & Nadella, L. (2024). Heavy metal and bacterial water filtration using Moringa oleifera and coconut shell-activated carbon. Journal of Emerging Investigators. View study →
  5. GATE - Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Technische Zusammenarbeit. Water Clarification using Moringa oleifera. Technical Information Sheet W1e. View technical brief →
  6. ECHO Community. Moringa-coated sand filters as a sustainable solution for clean water. Watch video →

Leave a comment

This site is protected by hCaptcha and the hCaptcha Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

All comments are moderated before being published.

*This statement has not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.