MAll Things Muslims

Islamic Food Guide · MUIS Standard

Halal
Checker.

Check E-numbers and food additives — classified as halal, doubtful or haram based on MUIS, JAKIM, MUI and IFANCA rulings.

Common additives to check

About this checker

Primary source: MUIS Food Additive Listing 5 (Islamic Religious Council of Singapore, 13 Sep 2016), cross-referenced with rulings from JAKIM (Malaysia), MUI (Indonesia), and IFANCA (USA). Haram entries are those forbidden across the majority of major halal bodies. Doubtfulentries depend on the manufacturer's source — verify with a certified halal authority or look for a recognised logo (MUIS, JAKIM, MUI, IFANCA) on the product.

Reading a label

Food additives are grouped into functional families — preservatives (E200–E299), antioxidants (E300–E399), emulsifiers and stabilisers (E400–E499), acidity regulators (E500–E599), flavour enhancers (E600–E699) and more. The letter E confirms a European safety assessment; it says nothing about the source.

An emulsifier like E471 can come from palm oil (halal), from industrial glycerol (halal), or from rendered animal fat — which may be pork (haram) or non-zabihah beef (haram for most scholars). This is why a product is best judged by its halal certification mark, not just its ingredient list. Certification audits the supply chain, not just the final formula.

Three statuses

Halal

Clearly permissible — plant-derived, mineral or synthetic from halal processes.

Doubtful

Source-dependent. Avoid unless a trusted halal mark resolves the doubt.

Haram

Derived from prohibited sources — pork, blood, or improperly slaughtered animal.

Worth memorising

  • E120

    Cochineal / Carmine

    Red dye from crushed cochineal insects. Debated — most councils allow, some avoid.

  • E441

    Gelatine

    Source matters — pork (haram), non-zabihah beef (haram), fish or plant (halal).

  • E471

    Mono-/diglycerides

    Doubtful unless certified — can be animal, plant or synthetic.

  • E542

    Bone phosphate

    Doubtful — animal bone origin unless stated otherwise.

  • E631

    Disodium inosinate

    Commonly from sardines (halal) or pork (haram) — avoid uncertified sources.

  • E920

    L-cysteine

    Dough conditioner — can come from hair/feathers (haram for some scholars) or synthesis (halal).

Frequently Asked

What is an E-number?+
E-numbers are codes used within the European Union (and widely adopted worldwide) to label food additives that have been assessed and approved for use. The E prefix means the additive has passed safety evaluation — it does not indicate the source. An E-number can be produced from halal, doubtful or haram sources depending on the manufacturer, which is why the halal status of many additives depends on context.
Is E471 halal?+
E471 (mono- and diglycerides of fatty acids) is a common emulsifier found in bread, margarine, ice cream and chocolate. It can be derived from plant fats (fully halal), synthetic glycerol (halal), or animal fats — including pork (haram). Since the source is rarely disclosed on the label, E471 is classified as doubtful (syubhah) unless the product carries a recognised halal certification.
Is gelatine halal?+
Gelatine is derived from animal bones, hides and connective tissue. Pork-sourced gelatine is haram. Cow gelatine is halal only if the animal was slaughtered according to Islamic rites — otherwise many scholars still class it as haram or at least doubtful. Fish gelatine is halal. Plant-based alternatives (agar-agar, pectin, carrageenan) are fully halal. Always look for halal certification or a clear 'fish gelatine' / 'plant-based' label.
Is alcohol in food haram?+
Pure drinking alcohol (khamr) is unambiguously haram. For small quantities used in food processing — extraction, flavour carriers, denatured industrial alcohol — scholarly views differ. Most contemporary Southeast Asian councils (MUIS, JAKIM) permit trace alcohol below a cooking-evaporated threshold when the end product does not intoxicate. Anything where alcohol remains in the final product, or whose production purpose is intoxication, is avoided.
What does 'mashbooh' or 'syubhah' mean?+
Mashbooh (Arabic) and syubhah (the Malay/Indonesian form) both describe a 'doubtful' status — neither clearly halal nor clearly haram. The Prophet ﷺ advised avoiding doubtful matters as a protection for one's faith. In the checker, yellow-marked additives are syubhah and should be avoided unless the product carries a recognised halal certification that resolves the ambiguity.
Who are the major halal certifiers?+
Singapore: MUIS (Majlis Ugama Islam Singapura). Malaysia: JAKIM (Jabatan Kemajuan Islam Malaysia). Indonesia: MUI (Majelis Ulama Indonesia) via the BPJPH agency. North America: IFANCA (Islamic Food and Nutrition Council of America). UAE: Emirates Authority for Standardization and Metrology (ESMA). These bodies audit supply chains, not just ingredients — the same E-number may be halal from one certified factory and doubtful from another uncertified one.
Why do E-numbers differ between halal authorities?+
Different authorities use different thresholds for trace-alcohol evaporation, istihala (transformation) of unlawful origin materials, and cross-contamination. Most additives are consistent — clearly halal or clearly haram — but a small number of borderline cases (like some E471 variants) may be certified halal in one country and considered doubtful in another. The checker aggregates the common ruling.
Is this a substitute for halal certification?+
No. The checker is an awareness tool — it tells you what an additive is and what the typical halal status is. For reliable sourcing, look for certification from a recognised halal authority on the package. When in doubt, choose clearly certified products.

Classifications aggregate the common ruling from MUIS (Singapore), JAKIM (Malaysia), MUI (Indonesia) and IFANCA (North America). Always verify with the halal authority relevant to your country, and trust certification marks on packaging over ingredient-list inference.

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