Most people crack an egg, see a tiny red spot floating on the yolk, and instantly panic — Is it dangerous? Is the egg rotten? Should I throw it away? The truth is far more surprising than most shoppers ever expect.
For years, many have believed that these red specks were signs of contamination or unsafe handling. But food experts say something completely different: these spots actually reveal more about the chicken than the egg.
These red dots, known as “blood spots,” appear when a small blood vessel in the hen breaks during the egg’s formation. It sounds alarming, but here’s the part most people don’t know — they are not signs of a fertilized egg and they are not indicators that the egg is spoiled. In fact, some experts claim that eggs with natural specks are often fresher than the perfectly clean ones.
The real reason most store-bought eggs don’t have these spots is simply because they’re removed during factory-level candling — a screening process designed to make eggs look “perfect” for shoppers. But the ones that slip through are usually harmless and completely safe to eat.
So the next time you crack open an egg and see a tiny red spot, don’t panic. It’s not a warning sign — it’s just a natural part of how real eggs form, and it doesn’t affect safety at all.