Some eggs are making me sick, and I figured out why!

This post may contain affiliate links and/or codes. You won't pay anything extra, but I might make a commission.

Do you feel sick after eating eggs, but not all eggs? I may have cracked the code on why some eggs leave me feeling nauseous and achy, while others leave me feeling fine.

Scrambled eggs on a plate.

Why do eggs make me sick?

I've been meaning to write about this for a long time. Someone other than me must be suffering from this and not know it. It took me months to figure out that eggs were making me sick to my stomach. Maybe I can help someone else figure it out quicker than I did.

About fifteen months ago, I started feeling sick to my stomach. Not always nauseous, more like how you feel when you know you're going to have diarrhea. And my back was killing me all the time. Sometimes I felt feverish. I felt like this all day, every day, for the summer of 2013. It really sucked. I slept a lot, and was in fog much of the time.

Ruling Out Wheat

My big fear, at first, was that I was having a problem with wheat. I live on bread and pasta. Take away my carbs and you might as well take away my soul as well. But I was feeling so terrible that I actually tried giving up wheat.

My plan was to do it for a week and see if things got better. But I quit after four days because there was no change. On the one hand I was glad - I could still eat bread! But on the other, I still had no clue what was going on.

Blood and stool tests

After about a month I really started to get worried. Did I have some kind of horrible intestinal disease? Were the amoebas that had hitch-hiked back home with me after a trip to South America in 1998 making a comeback tour? Did I have some kind of cancer?

I went to my doctor, who checked me out and ordered some blood tests and stool tests (man, was that an experience, let me tell you…on second thought, I'm not going to, because it was a really really really gross process). I was afraid of what the tests would find, but whatever it was would be better than not knowing and just feeling sick all the time.

The tests showed nothing.

Breakthrough

Then, after about three months of feeling like that (it was beginning to feel normal - I have no idea how I was functioning), I took the kids to my mom's house in Buffalo for a six-day visit.

One of the reasons I love visiting my mom is that my favorite fast food restaurant, Mighty Taco, is on her corner. Usually, when I'm staying with her I just wait to eat until Mighty Taco opens up at 10:30 and have a nice healthy breakfast of burritos and nachos.

Despite how I was feeling, I kept to my usual Might Taco breakfast schedule (I mean, it wasn't going to make my stomach worse). And by day three I realized that I was feeling better! Not just better, but good. By the time I left my mom's house to head back to Brooklyn, I felt totally normal.

And on the drive back it hit me. It hit me like a ton of bricks falling on my head. I hadn't had a single egg in six days.

At home I start pretty much every single day off with an egg or two, scrambled or in an omelet. I've been doing this for decades. And now, suddenly, eggs appeared to be making me sick.

Was it an egg allergy?

I started reading everything I could about egg allergies, and at first it seemed like that was what I had. It was weird, though, to develop an egg allergy as an adult. Everything I read said that it was most common in kids, and that they usually outgrew it. Also, allergy symptoms usually happen immediately, not several hours later. And I didn't have any kind of respiratory or skin symptoms, which usually go with allergies.

Was it an egg intolerance?

Doing more reading, I discovered that there is such a thing as egg intolerance, which is different from an allergy. I seemed to match the most common symptoms perfectly:

  • nausea
  • diarrhea 
  • stomach cramps
  • acid reflux
  • achy feeling
  • brain fog
  • fatigue
  • headaches
  • joint pain
  • feverish feeling

Experimenting

When I got home I started experimenting. First, I made some cookies using eggs as an ingredient, and ate a couple. I was fine. I could still eat baked goods! Yay!

Then I hard-boiled an egg and ate that. Again, no reaction. Eggs cooked very well seemed to be OK. Egg salad and deviled eggs were still a go!

Then, just to make sure, I scrambled an egg on my third morning back and ate it. And within three or four hours, that sick feeling came back. Bingo. It took almost two days until I felt OK again.

I was glad (dancing-in-the-streets thrilled, actually) that I'd found the culprit. I would miss eating scrambled eggs, but at least I knew what to avoid.

Fresh brown eggs didn't make me sick!

A couple of months later I was back at my doctor's office for something routine and I mentioned what I'd discovered. She suggested that I try a really fresh egg. Like, right out of the chicken fresh. Hmm.

I figured that Fresh Direct was my best shot. I bought the freshest, most expensive eggs they carried. And I ate one scrambled. And I was fine!!!

Then the next time I bought them, I felt sick again. What the heck was going on?

I kept experimenting with different brands, and found one that never makes me sick. They're expensive, brown eggs from pastured chickens. Maybe it's what the chickens are eating, or maybe this farm gets its eggs to the store quickly. I have no idea! All I know is that I can even eat runny eggs with this brand and I feel fine. (For people who have these brands in their stores, brown pastured eggs from Handsome Brook Farms and Vital Farms are both fine for me.)

Is it the egg whites?

A wheat English muffin with scrambled eggs on top of yellow cheese.

A bunch of things that I read said that for most people with an egg sensitivity, it's usually the whites that are causing the problem. I don't think that's what happened with me. I can eat those liquid egg whites no problem.

I also have no problem with egg sandwiches from Burger King and Dunkin' Donuts, which both use a pasteurized liquid egg product, the kind you pour out of a carton.

I'm able to eat egg sandwiches from McDonald's with no problems as well, which initially confused me. I used to be a grill cook at McDonald's and had personally cracked thousands of white eggs on breakfast shifts. I assumed they still used fresh whole eggs, and had originally written here that perhaps McDonald's just went through so many eggs that they never got the chance to get old.

But a reader clued me in that McDonald's now also uses liquid packaged eggs! (I'm not sure why I didn't look this up myself while writing this post instead of just assuming that everything was still the same as when I worked there several decades ago. I guess I didn't want to admit that I'm that old!!)

Sure enough, McDonald's now uses liquid eggs in some of its breakfast menu items, but not all.

Basically, if you get an Egg McMuffin, that egg was a whole egg cracked onto the grill. If you get scrambled eggs, those are made from packaged liquid eggs, but are cooked right there on the grill.

The folded eggs that are used on biscuit sandwiches are also liquid eggs, but they were cooked off-site and frozen, and then heated up on the grill at McDonald's. And lastly, the eggs in their breakfast burritos are made from liquid eggs that are cooked off-site, and then microwaved at McDonald's.

So if you have issues with fresh eggs but not packaged liquid eggs, choose accordingly!

Old Eggs

As eggs age, they develop sulfur, and I'm guessing that that's the key here for me (and it's only a guess-I am very much not a doctor!). Really really old, rotten eggs smell overwhelmingly like sulfur, but it takes a long time for an egg to get to that point. There's an in-between point where they don't smell like sulfur yet, but they're no longer fresh.

You can get a clue as to how old an egg is based on whether it floats, stands, or sinks in water. As an egg ages, its protective membrane gets weaker, and air gets inside. A fresh egg will sink, an older egg will stand on end, and a really old egg will float (doesn't mean that that egg isn't safe, it's just old).

According to the USDA, which regulates eggs, the "use by" date can be as long as 45 days after the egg was packed (and they don't seem to define how long the egg can hang around the farm before being packed, either!):

Terminology such as "Use by", "Use before", "Best before" indicates a period that the eggs should be consumed before overall quality diminishes. Code dating using these terms may not exceed 45 days including the day the eggs were packed into the carton.

But here is a factory egg on the left and an expensive farm-fresh egg on the right. Both sank. So if age really is the culprit, we're talking about an amount of time that's a lot smaller than this test can determine.

one white egg and one brown egg, each at the bottom of a glass of water

If I had the patience, I would buy several dozen eggs with the same dates and eat one a day until I got sick, to determine how old an egg could be before it affected me. But I don't see myself doing that any time soon. I buy a dozen eggs from pastured hens each week, and I use the leftovers from the week before for hard-boiled eggs or baking.

Restaurants

I can no longer eat eggs at any old restaurant. Diner and coffee shop eggs have made me sick.

Sometimes if I'm at a really nice restaurant I'll grill my server on how fresh the eggs are (yes, I've had to become that person) and get some, but usually, I just skip them.

As I mentioned before, fast food egg sandwiches seem to agree with me just fine. I cannot, however, eat breakfast sandwiches from our local bagel place, which really bums me out, because we order from there almost every weekend. I tried it twice, and felt sick both times.

Why Write Now?

So why am I writing about this today of all days? Because I'm still getting tripped up by this and did it to myself again yesterday!

I made fresh pasta the way I always make fresh pasta: one egg per person. And since I was making a large amount of pasta and meatballs, I had to send my husband to the store for a couple cartons of eggs. Cheap, factory eggs, because that's what he buys. And since I wasn't cracking the eggs into a pan and eating them right away, it totally didn't occur to me that I needed to use the good eggs!!!

I had two big bowls of pasta last night and then went to bed. I woke up several times last night with reflux and I felt terrible. Feverish and crampy and nauseous.

I woke up this morning thinking it was just the red sauce, which always gives me trouble if I eat it too late. But as the day wore on I felt worse and worse. I asked my husband if he felt OK. I was scared to ask our dinner guests from the night before if they felt sick. Had I poisoned our friends somehow?

And then my back started to hurt and I realized what was going on. Crap.

The good news is (besides the fact that I didn't sicken my friends and family with a pasta dinner somehow), I know that I should feel fine by this time tomorrow.

So what can you do?

If you suspect that you have an intolerance to eggs, I suggest you do on purpose what I did accidentally: stop eating them and see how you feel.

If you feel better, try eating them very well cooked, like in baked goods and hard-boiled eggs. Try liquid eggs. Find really fresh eggs and see if those are OK. Try brown eggs. Try white eggs. Try eggs from pastured chickens that eat grubs all day. See what happens.

Just make sure you give it enough time between so that you know for sure what is affecting you. It takes me about two days to recover after eating eggs that don't agree with me, so if you're testing, you should probably give yourself three days to see if the symptoms go away.

Good luck!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

636 Comments

  1. I'm lying doubled over in pain after eating home made scrambled eggs! If I eat McDonald's eggs I'm fine! I went camping two weeks ago and ate eggs cooked on a BBQ 2 mornings in a row and was fine!
    I think you've hit the nail on the head! It must be the age of the eggs! I think I'm just going to avoid them completely. Ugh I feel soooo sick right now :(

    1. Sounds VERY similar to my experience. I've never had a problem with McDonald's. My local bagel place? Can't eat the eggs!

  2. I do believe this iOS my problem as well . I’m not sure of when it really started but I do remember about 1 1/2 yes who I had eggs and then went out to do my shopping and within a few hrs I started feeling nauseous and thought something more serious was happening. I had to pull into the nearest parking lot because I thought I was going to be sick. It didn’t happen of course, but I started to feel even worse with cramping and bloating, I just tried to lay back in my vehicle seat and wished it would pass and after about an hour of misery I had to call my hubby to come get me and take me to the hospital, the pain was so bad! The doc ruled it as food poisoning..
    About 6 mo the later, same thing happened, it was then that I realized I had eggs for breakfast again that day so told the doc, they put me on morphine for the pain, it was comparable to childbirth if not worse . At the hospital I sit in a chair hooked up to a drip and they gave me a second shot of morphine until the doc could talk to me. I had recently been diagnosed with IBS a few months prior so they ruled it as such and sent me on my way.
    I have since been scared to eat eggs and when I do it is hit or miss, realized it must be whether they are store bought or fresh farm eggs..had store bought eggs a few times this week and only today they bothered me . Now I lay here in bed feeling nauseous, thankfully not in agony with cramping pains but still sucks. I feel like this is sucking he life out of me feeling like throw regularly when I do try to eat eggs because I love them so much..time to decide whether they are worth it or not...

    1. Oh that's terrible! I hope you can find a solution. No food is worth that pain! Is there some place where you can get really fresh eggs to test the theory out?

  3. I have most of the same experience. Luckily for me I have only one symptom - diarrhea. I don't have any other food sensitivities and my only allergy is mild hay fever. I have been worrying that I am developing an allergy to eggs, but I know that I have no problems with fresh local eggs and am even able to eat certain brands from certain stores. I have considered the age question but was also thinking that the chicken feed might also be a source of the trouble. The more I think of it, the more the age of the eggs makes sense to me. I'm going to use the info in this article to look at my own situation more carefully. Thank you.

  4. Omg and I thought I was the only one who has been having upset stomach to eggs...thanks for sharing yal!! At first I thought it was dairy period!! But I eat nothing but cereal now..special k with banana's and mix two different kinds of special k...they all are very good...with a lil honey too...I so want an omelet... But won't dare... So thanks for the tips...
    Sheila Bob

  5. So happy I found this article. Exactly my problem. I'll be getting some fresh eggs now to try! Unbelievable how sick I've been getting!

  6. Some recent news from a friend told me that after YEARS of eating eggs, she met with her doctor to find that the albimum ( egg white) coats the inside of your gut. This albimum cam block the bodies ability to absorb essential nutrients and be absorbed into the lining of the intestine and affect the stomach causing inflamation, bloating, diarrhea, chills and back pain.
    I can agree that fresher eggs help with the problem. I would say that knowing is the first step.

    1. Oh wow OK...thanks for info...I hear different things...one person says the yoke is what messes with your stomach..but this sounds so much better...I just don't eat eggs no more..lol thanks

  7. Hi, thanks for writing this article. I am impressed by the experimentation that you conducted, and i think it would be worthwhile to buy the fresh eggs and see how old they get before you get sick. Would be a nice addendum to the article. But anyways, eggs make me sick too, but i cant quite pin it down. For instance, i can eat eggs in things...like cookies or crusts or whatever else they're mixed into. But scrambled eggs make me SO sick - like i had been kicked in the gut and totally entirely disgusting (nausea). I feel like its the egg white? I dont know. Anyways...im stoned and rambling. Bye!

    1. Sounds like you're in exactly the same situation I am: if they're cooked well enough, they don't bother you.

  8. I love that you tried them in cookie recipe! I noticed this for me as well! I can eat them in recipes and hard boiled but the fired eggs I love will hit me after a few hours and it is very unpleasant. I'll have to start marking our chickens eggs for when we bring them in and make sure they are only the most fresh ones. :)

  9. Thanks for this post.. I used to eat eggs daily. Hard boiled eggs mostly every morning. Then about a year ago became so ill.. vomiting stomach cramps. I thought maybe it was a bad egg and kinda avoided them. If I get a scrambled egg occasionally I seem to be ok. This morning decided to have boiled egg and back again. Nausea.. stomach cramps. Makes sense about the age of the egg.. I was also worried about wheat allergy too. Thanks for the post.. Makes a lot of sense.. To my knowledge I don't have a Sulfur allergy..

  10. Hi just read this article after eating an egg and ur making me feel sick so I googled it and it makes so much sense to me!! I've always suspected the same - sometimes - like 6 or 7 out of ten eggs will make me feel a little ill. Especially scrambled but sometimes just an egg and bacon sandwich. BUT if I ever eat a fresh farm egg (eg at my dads farm) no problem at all. Thank you glad to hear I'm not alone. My mum said even as a small child eggs made me a bit sick, maybe this was (and still is) why!! Thank you x

  11. I've had the same problem for years. Try cage free organic brown eggs.ie Egglands best..it took me years to figure out cheaper eggs caused the problem .good luck.

    1. I just tried cage free and these have made me sick! Never was bothered before with regular eggs. Weird, huh!

      1. I ate eggland's cage free vegetarian eggs and had severe intestinal reaction. not a problem with the other cage free. i think it may be the hen's diet.

  12. Late to the party but...I found this post after searching for a reason for my husband's nausea. It seems to happen every time I make scrambled eggs. The difference for us is that we only eat freshly laid eggs from my sister's ducks and he still can't handle it. After reading through this article and the subsequent comments I'm wondering if it's related to his allergy to sulfa drugs. Is it possible that sulfur is the real culprit here?
    Thanks so much for sharing this info. At least I think we're finally on the right track.

  13. Egg issues here as well....... Not that I eat them a lot..... it's just that when I do it's roulette whether I get stomach anguish or not....... to me it's not worth it, I'm just staying away from them. I don't want to have a grumbling stomach for two days just because I wanted to eat an egg......NO THNX !!
    Plenty of things I can live without during my lifetime, and an EGG is one of them.
    I was wondering if you could store your eggs in water (so no air can get to them)? I don't see how that could hurt to store them in water...... that would surely keep them airtight. Just a thought. Best to all.......

    1. I think the problem there would be that the shells are porous (that's how air gets in and makes older eggs float), so I'm guessing the water would get in as well.

  14. I have avoided eggs for a long time because they made me vomit. Deviled eggs and hard boil eggs in a salad with vinegarette dressing were no problem. I made and an ate an omelette and had no problem. I made another omelette from the same carton and ate two bites and had to run to the bathroom to puke. I looked at the "best if used by" date on the carton an saw that it was a few days past the date. I often wondered why I why sometimes I'd get sick and sometimes I didn't. I will try eating only the freshest eggs to see if this will make a difference.

  15. This is awesome, I recently discovered that if I eat brown eggs they don't bother my stomach and at the farmers market they cost less than the ones at the store. For some reason white eggs give me gas, I know there is no difference but still. The gas smells and tastes awful, but the brown ones don't do that and no one knows why.