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You cut open a watermelon and saw cracks? Stop eating it immediately! Here’s what it means!

That headline is exaggerated and misleading.

A cracked-looking watermelon doesn’t automatically mean it’s unsafe.

Watermelon can sometimes show internal cracks or “hollow heart” for a few harmless reasons:

Common harmless causes

  • Rapid growth: The fruit grows faster than its internal structure can keep up.
  • Temperature changes: Hot and cold swings during growth affect texture.
  • Pollination issues: Can lead to irregular internal patterns or gaps.
  • Variety differences: Some types naturally have more internal variation.

These cracks are often called “hollow heart” and are mostly a quality issue, not a safety issue.

When you should avoid eating it

Only be cautious if you notice:

  • Sour or fermented smell
  • Slimy texture
  • Mold (white, green, or black fuzzy patches)
  • Off taste (fermentation-like or alcoholic flavor)

Those signs suggest spoilage or bacterial growth, not just “cracks.”

Bottom line

Internal cracking alone ≠ danger. It’s usually a cosmetic or texture issue caused during growth, not something that makes the fruit toxic.

If you want, I can also tell you how to pick a good watermelon so you avoid these surprises in the first place.

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