Dark glass is the best container for olive oil. It is chemically inert, blocks the UV light that destroys polyphenols, and does not leach any compounds into the oil — making it the only packaging that protects quality from bottling to your kitchen.
Walk into any specialty food store and you will find olive oil in three types of containers: glass bottles, plastic bottles, and tins. All three can legally hold extra virgin olive oil. All three are sold at every price point. But they are not equal — and the differences matter more than most people realize. The container your olive oil lives in from the moment it is bottled until the moment you use it directly affects its chemical integrity, polyphenol content, and flavor. Here is an honest comparison of all three, based on what the science actually shows.
The Three Enemies of Olive Oil Quality
Before comparing containers, it helps to understand what you are protecting olive oil from. There are three primary drivers of olive oil degradation:
Light — UV and visible light accelerate oxidation and destroy polyphenols, the compounds responsible for olive oil's anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties. Polyphenols are among the first things to degrade when olive oil is exposed to light. Based on articles retrieved from PubMed, a 12-month study published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry (Charles Sturt University, 2006) found that light-stored oils showed the greatest and fastest departure from freshness of any storage condition tested — ahead of heat or air exposure alone.
Oxygen — Contact with air triggers oxidation, turning fresh oil flat, stale, and eventually rancid. Every time a container is opened, oxygen enters. Every design that allows air back in between uses accelerates this process. Read more about how olive oil goes bad here.
Heat — Elevated temperatures speed up chemical reactions that degrade oil quality and accelerate the migration of compounds from packaging into the oil. Temperature stability matters from bottling through storage and transport. Research from the University of Pisa published in Heliyon (2018) found that olive oil stored in tinplate tin at 26°C developed significant rancid flavor from oxidative processes within 125 days, while oil stored in glass at cooler temperatures maintained its bitterness, pungency, and freshness throughout the same period.
The best container minimizes all three. Now let us look at how each option performs.
Glass Bottles
The Case for Glass
Glass is chemically inert. It contains no plasticizers, no BPA, no phthalates, and no compounds that can migrate into the oil it holds. A glass bottle of olive oil will not contaminate its contents regardless of temperature, acidity, or storage duration. This is the single most important quality glass has over every alternative.
Dark glass adds another critical layer of protection. By blocking UV and visible light, dark glass significantly slows the photodegradation of polyphenols and the oxidation process. This is why quality producers choose dark glass — amber, dark green, or opaque — over clear glass. Clear glass bottles, while aesthetically appealing, offer none of this protection and should be avoided for the same reason you would not leave fresh herbs in direct sunlight.
Glass is also the only container that lets you see the oil. Color, clarity, and texture are all visible indicators of quality. A properly filtered oil should be clear at room temperature — cloudiness can indicate age, temperature exposure, or filtration issues. You cannot assess any of this through an opaque container.
The Case Against Glass
Glass is heavier and more fragile than alternatives, which increases shipping costs and breakage risk. It is also more expensive to manufacture than plastic. Clear glass — which some producers still use for visual appeal — provides no UV protection and should be treated as a quality red flag when shopping.
Verdict: Dark glass is the gold standard. Chemically inert, blocks light, allows visual inspection, zero migration risk. Every bottle of EXAU olive oil is bottled in heavy dark glass — each weighing approximately two pounds — because that thickness provides additional insulation and protection during transit from our family's groves in Calabria to your door.
Plastic Bottles
The Case for Plastic
Plastic is lightweight, inexpensive, and shatterproof. For producers optimizing for cost and logistics it is an attractive option, which is why it dominates grocery store shelves globally.
The Case Against Plastic
The research against plastic packaging for olive oil is substantial and consistent. Plastic containers — particularly PET, PVC, and polyethylene — contain chemical plasticizers called phthalates. These compounds are not chemically bonded to the plastic, so they migrate into whatever fatty food contacts the container. Olive oil, being pure fat, is particularly susceptible to this migration.
Research tracking plasticizer contamination across the entire olive oil production and storage process found that while glass and plastic samples showed similar contamination levels at six months, plastic-packaged samples showed significantly higher plasticizer concentrations after 18 months of storage. The researchers concluded that prolonged storage in plastic should be avoided.
Bisphenol A (BPA), another compound found in certain plastics, has also been detected migrating into olive oil stored in plastic bottles at levels exceeding EFSA daily intake limits. BPA is a known endocrine disruptor. Beyond chemical contamination, most plastic bottles are clear or lightly tinted — providing minimal UV protection, meaning the oil inside is losing quality every hour it sits under fluorescent store lighting. Microplastics have also been detected in commercially sold olive oil, with plastic-packaged samples showing higher levels over time.
Verdict: Avoid plastic, especially for long-term storage. The chemical migration risk, UV exposure, and microplastic evidence all point in the same direction. The cost savings are not worth what you sacrifice in oil quality and safety.
Squeeze Bottles
Squeeze bottles deserve their own section because they have become increasingly popular and present specific problems beyond standard plastic concerns.
Most squeeze bottles are made from soft, flexible plastic — which requires a higher concentration of plasticizers to achieve that flexibility. More plasticizer content means higher migration potential into the oil. More critically, squeeze bottles work by compressing and releasing. Every time you squeeze and release, air is sucked back into the bottle, introducing oxygen directly into the oil and progressively oxidizing it with every use. An oil that starts fresh and peppery will become flat and stale significantly faster in a squeeze bottle than in a sealed glass bottle.
Verdict: Not recommended. If you want easy pouring, decant a small amount of oil from your dark glass bottle into a ceramic or stainless steel pourer for daily use. Keep the bulk of your oil in its original sealed glass bottle.
Tins
The Case for Tins
Tins block light completely — better than even dark glass in that respect. They are also relatively lightweight compared to glass and provide good physical protection during shipping. Some quality producers use tins, particularly for larger format containers.
The Case Against Tins
The interior of most commercial olive oil tins is lined with a coating — typically an epoxy or polymer lining applied to prevent the metal from reacting with the acidic oil inside. That lining is plastic-derived. The quality of that lining varies significantly by manufacturer. BPA-based epoxy linings were historically common in food tins and are still used in some markets. While BPA-free alternatives exist, there is limited consumer-facing transparency about what specific lining compounds are used in any given tin.
Tins also do not allow visual inspection of the oil. You cannot assess color, clarity, or sediment through an opaque container. And once opened, a tin cannot be resealed as effectively as a glass bottle with a tight cap, increasing oxygen exposure between uses.
Verdict: Better than clear plastic, but not better than dark glass. If a tin is your only high-quality option, it is a reasonable choice. But the interior lining concern, lack of visibility, and resealing limitations make dark glass the stronger overall choice.
The Summary: Which Packaging Is Best for Olive Oil?
Ranked from best to worst for preserving olive oil quality and minimizing chemical exposure:
- Dark glass — chemically inert, blocks UV light, allows visual inspection, no migration risk. The clear winner.
- Tins (BPA-free lined) — blocks light completely, but interior lining is a variable, no visual inspection, resealing limitations.
- Clear glass — chemically inert but offers no UV protection. Better than plastic, worse than dark glass.
- Hard plastic (PET, PE) — chemical migration risk, typically poor UV protection, microplastic release over time. Avoid for long-term storage.
- Soft plastic squeeze bottles — highest plasticizer content, oxygen introduced with every use, typically clear. Worst option available.
What To Look for When Buying
When choosing an olive oil, the container is one of the first quality signals you have before you even open the bottle. A producer who cares about the quality of their oil will protect it in packaging that reflects that care. Dark glass, a tight seal, an opaque or dark label — these all signal that someone has thought carefully about what happens to the oil between pressing and your kitchen.
Combined with a harvest date, a named producer, and a specific region of origin, packaging gives you a remarkably complete picture of quality before you spend a dollar. Read our full guide to buying olive oil here. And for the full storage picture once you get the bottle home, read our complete guide to storing extra virgin olive oil.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is glass or tin better for olive oil?
Dark glass is generally better. Both block light effectively, but glass is fully chemically inert with no lining concerns, allows visual inspection of the oil, and reseals more reliably between uses. Tins with BPA-free linings are a reasonable alternative, particularly for larger formats.
Why is dark glass better than clear glass for olive oil?
Clear glass offers no UV protection. Light — both UV and visible — degrades polyphenols and accelerates oxidation. Dark glass blocks this exposure significantly, extending the window during which the oil remains at peak quality. Research confirms light-stored oil degrades faster than oil stored under any other condition.
Can I store olive oil in a plastic container at home?
Short-term transfer for daily use is unlikely to cause significant harm. But storing olive oil in plastic for weeks or months — particularly near heat sources — is not recommended given what the research shows about plasticizer migration and microplastic release over time.
Are tins lined with plastic?
Most commercial food tins have an interior polymer lining to prevent metal-food interaction. The composition of that lining varies by manufacturer and is rarely disclosed on consumer packaging. This is a legitimate concern when choosing tin-packaged olive oil.
What is the worst container for olive oil?
Soft plastic squeeze bottles. They combine the highest plasticizer content of any packaging type with a design that actively introduces oxygen into the oil every time you use it — the worst possible combination for both oil quality and chemical safety.
Does the container affect olive oil shelf life?
Yes, significantly. Research comparing glass and tin at different storage temperatures found measurable differences in rancidity, bitterness, and pungency within just 125 days. Dark glass stored at cooler temperatures consistently outperformed every other combination. Read our full guide on olive oil shelf life and how to tell when it has gone bad.
Shop our 100% Italian extra virgin olive oil, bottled in heavy dark glass, direct-to-consumer from our family's groves in Calabria.
We wrote a book called The Olive Oil Enthusiast. Order your copy today.
You May Also Like:
Why You Should Never Store Olive Oil in a Plastic Bottle
Microplastics in Olive Oil: What the Research Actually Says
How to Store Extra Virgin Olive Oil: 5 Rules to Keep It Fresh
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