That’s another viral clickbait-style warning, not a real rule.
Seeing cracks inside a watermelon does not automatically mean you should stop eating it immediately.
🍉 What those cracks actually are
Most commonly, they are caused by normal growth issues, not danger:
1. Internal “hollow heart” or splitting
- Happens when the watermelon grows unevenly
- Often due to rapid growth, watering changes, or temperature shifts
- Creates cracks or gaps inside the flesh
👉 Usually safe to eat
2. Over-ripening
- Flesh may start breaking down internally
- Texture becomes soft, grainy, or watery
👉 Still not automatically dangerous, but quality is poor
3. Natural stress during growth
- Sudden rain or irrigation changes
- Causes internal splitting while fruit is forming
❌ When you SHOULD throw it away
Cracks alone are not the problem. Look for real spoilage signs:
- Rotten or sour smell
- Slimy texture
- Visible mold (green, black, or white)
- Fermentation (bubbling or alcoholic smell)
If these are present → discard it.
🧠 Key truth
Cracks inside watermelon are usually a farming/quality issue, not a safety hazard.
🧾 Bottom line
- ✔ Cracks alone = usually harmless
- ❌ Bad smell, mold, or sliminess = unsafe
- 🚫 Viral warnings often exaggerate normal food variations
If you want, I can show you simple ways to pick a perfect watermelon before buying so you avoid this completely.