Puberty is one of the most complex and sensitive stages of development in a child’s life.
It is driven by finely tuned hormone signaling: estrogen, testosterone, growth hormone, and many others, all working in coordination.
When parents hear that glyphosate may act as an endocrine disruptor, a natural question follows:
Could glyphosates affect puberty?
As a board-certified pediatric endocrinologist, I approach this question carefully. The goal is not fear, it is clarity.
An endocrine disruptor is a chemical that interferes with the body’s hormone systems.
Hormones regulate:
Even very small changes in hormone signaling during development can have measurable biological effects.
A 2021 review published in Chemosphere concluded that glyphosate satisfies 8 of the 10 key characteristics of endocrine-disrupting chemicals (Muñoz et al., 2021).
This means laboratory and mechanistic studies demonstrate hormone-related biological activity.
It does not automatically mean proven clinical harm in children.
A 2024 study evaluating 964 children ages 6–19 found that higher urinary glyphosate concentrations were associated with:
An earlier NHANES-based analysis also identified associations between glyphosate exposure and altered sex steroid hormone levels (Geier & Geier, 2023).
It is critical to emphasize:
These studies show associations, not proof of causation.
Association means two variables are linked. It does not prove one caused the other.
However, in pediatric endocrinology, we pay attention to patterns, especially during adolescence.
Puberty depends on activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis.
This system regulates:
This hormonal cascade is precisely timed.
Even subtle disruptions during this window may theoretically:
Research has not proven glyphosate causes these outcomes.
But this is why endocrine researchers monitor environmental exposures closely.
The American Academy of Pediatrics has noted that prenatal glyphosate exposure may be associated with altered anogenital distance in female infants, a marker of in-utero hormone signaling effects (Abrams et al., 2023).
Animal studies have also explored neurodevelopmental changes following maternal exposure (Marins et al., 2024).
Human data remain limited.
It does not mean:
Most dietary exposures fall within regulatory limits.
Regulatory agencies currently state that typical intake does not pose health risk.
But endocrine science often evolves over decades.
As pediatric endocrinologists, we advocate continued research, not panic.
Concern should be proportional to evidence.
What has much stronger data supporting hormonal disruption?
These factors consistently show stronger associations with puberty timing changes than trace pesticide exposure within regulatory thresholds.
Environmental exposures are part of a broader picture — not the sole driver.
If you want to support optimal hormone development, focus on:
Reducing unnecessary environmental exposure when feasible is reasonable.
But the foundation of healthy puberty remains lifestyle and metabolic health.
For broader context on dietary exposure, read:
Are Glyphosates Harmful for Kids?
For food-specific discussion, read:
Glyphosates in Bread: What Parents Should Know
Here is what current evidence suggests:
Puberty is sensitive to many influences.
Environmental exposures deserve ongoing research — but panic is not supported by current evidence.
If you are concerned about early puberty, delayed puberty, irregular cycles, or growth concerns, evaluation by a pediatric endocrinologist can provide individualized assessment and reassurance.
Muñoz JP et al. Chemosphere. 2021.
Sun X et al. Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety. 2024.
Geier DA & Geier MR. Chemosphere. 2023.
Abrams SA et al. Pediatrics. 2023.
Marins K et al. Environmental Pollution. 2024.
Dr. Kelli Davis is a board-certified pediatric endocrinologist with specialized expertise in bone health, pubertal development, and endocrine disruptor research. She provides comprehensive hormone evaluation and evidence-based pediatric endocrine care through Life Pediatric Endocrinology.