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Taylor Farms Pulls Mexican Lettuce Linked to Cyclospora Parasite

The company, which reportedly supplied shredded iceberg lettuce to Taco Bell restaurants, did not disclose which products it is removing from the market or where they were sold.

bags of Taylor Farms lettuce
Iceberg lettuce has been implicated in the ongoing cyclosporiasis outbreak.
Photo: Getty Images

Taylor Farms, one of the country’s largest producers of salad greens, said Friday it is removing all iceberg lettuce sourced from central Mexico from the U.S. market after health officials identified a farm in the region as a potential source of the outbreak that has sickened thousands of people across the U.S. this summer.

The statement released by Taylor Farms on Friday did not specify which products are affected or where they were sold. The company said only that no “Taylor Farms-branded salads or kits” were associated with the outbreak and that no “Taylor Farms-branded salad kits contain iceberg lettuce.” It is unclear whether the affected products are sold under Taylor Farms’ brand, or if they were sold to restaurants, grocery stores, or other establishments.

Taylor Farms reportedly supplied the shredded iceberg lettuce from Mexico to Taco Bell restaurants in Michigan, Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky, and Indiana, which federal investigators recently linked to at least 1,644 illnesses and 94 hospitalizations. That investigation is part of a broader effort to identify the source of a sprawling outbreak of intestinal illnesses that has affected people in at least 34 states in recent months. 

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on July 14 that it has identified at least 1,645 lab-confirmed cases of cyclosporiasis, a disease caused by the parasite cyclospora, and is working to confirm an additional 5,100 reports that had occurred since May. The actual number of infections is almost certainly much higher. On July 17, Michigan alone reported 5,002 cyclosporiasis cases and 102 hospitalizations. 

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The statement posted by Taylor Farms on Friday was sparse on details, and a company representative did not immediately respond to Consumer Reports’ questions about which products it was removing from the U.S. market and in which states and stores they were sold.

“The information released by Taylor Farms is vague and inadequate, especially given the gravity of this outbreak,” said Brian Ronholm, CR’s director of food policy. “Consumers need clarity about the products that were affected by this and where they were sold, and CR is urging the company to be more transparent and responsive for the sake of consumer safety.”

The statement by Taylor Farms said: “Based on information provided yesterday by the FDA, Taylor Farms de Mexico is voluntarily removing all iceberg lettuce sourced from central Mexico. While the FDA traceback is indicating a specific independent farm that represents less than 1% of the U.S.’s iceberg lettuce supply as the potential source of the outbreak, we have removed all iceberg lettuce from the region indefinitely.”

This is a developing story, and CR will update the article as more information becomes available.


Paris Martineau

Paris Martineau is an investigative reporter on the special projects team at Consumer Reports. She joined CR in 2025, covering food safety issues and consumer harms. Send her tips and feedback at paris.martineau@consumer.org, or securely via Signal.