Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Why Halal Certification for Cosmetics Is Now a Legal Requirement
- Which Cosmetic Products Are Covered
- Key Institutions: BPJPH, LPH, and MUI
- Documents and Preparation for Foreign Applicants
- Step-by-Step Halal Certification Process
- Halal and BPOM: Two Separate but Parallel Obligations
- Common Challenges for Foreign Cosmetic Companies
- Conclusion
For foreign companies planning to export cosmetic products to Indonesia, halal certification is no longer a commercial differentiator — it is a legal obligation. Under Indonesia’s Halal Product Assurance Law (Law No. 33/2014, as amended by Government Regulation No. 42/2024), cosmetics and personal care products are included in the mandatory halal certification framework, with a compliance deadline of no later than 17 October 2026.
For imported cosmetics specifically, this deadline means foreign manufacturers must act now. The certification process involves overseas production facility coordination, ingredient-level halal review, Indonesian regulatory registration, and local representative involvement — all of which require significant lead time to complete properly.
This article explains how halal certification for cosmetics works in Indonesia for foreign companies, what documents are required, how the process is structured, and what to watch out for when planning your market entry. For a broader overview of cosmetic regulatory compliance in Indonesia, refer to Cosmetic Registration Indonesia.
1. Introduction
Indonesia is the world’s largest Muslim-majority country, with over 230 million Muslim consumers. For cosmetic brands — whether skincare, colour cosmetics, haircare, or personal care — this means that halal compliance is not only an ethical consideration but a legal market-entry requirement. Consumers, retailers, and regulators alike expect cosmetic products to comply with halal standards before they are circulated in the Indonesian market.
The regulatory body responsible for halal certification in Indonesia is BPJPH (Badan Penyelenggara Jaminan Produk Halal), the Halal Product Assurance Organizing Agency under the Ministry of Religious Affairs. BPJPH administers the entire certification framework, operates the official SIHALAL application portal, and is the only body in Indonesia authorized to issue official Indonesian halal certificates.
Key Point: Foreign cosmetic companies cannot rely on an overseas halal certificate to legally market their products as halal in Indonesia. All imported cosmetic products must be registered through BPJPH’s SIHALAL system before they can carry the official Indonesian Halal logo on their packaging.
2. Why Halal Certification for Cosmetics Is Now a Legal Requirement
Indonesia’s shift from a voluntary to a mandatory halal framework applies directly to cosmetics and personal care products. Under the current regulatory timeline, all cosmetic products — domestic and imported — must be halal certified or labeled as non-halal where applicable. For imported cosmetics, the mandatory deadline is no later than 17 October 2026.
Non-compliance carries significant consequences. Products without valid halal certification or proper non-halal labeling can be subject to administrative penalties, product recalls, and suspension from the Indonesian market. For foreign brands, this risk extends directly to distributor relationships and commercial import operations.
| Product Category | Who Is Covered | Key Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Cosmetics & Personal Care (Domestic) | All domestic manufacturers | No later than 17 October 2026 |
| Cosmetics & Personal Care (Imported) | Foreign manufacturers & exporters | No later than 17 October 2026 |
| Skincare (Serum, Moisturizer, Cleanser) | All businesses including importers | No later than 17 October 2026 |
Important: The 2026 deadline does not mean preparation can wait. Cosmetic halal certification involves ingredient-level review, overseas facility audits, SJPH documentation, and multi-agency processing — all of which require six to twelve months or more for most foreign companies to complete from a standing start.
3. Which Cosmetic Products Are Covered
The halal certification obligation under BPJPH’s framework covers a wide range of cosmetic and personal care products. For foreign companies, understanding which product categories fall under mandatory halal certification is an essential first step before beginning the application process.
Cosmetic Categories Subject to Halal Certification
- Skincare products — serums, moisturizers, cleansers, toners, masks, eye creams
- Colour cosmetics — foundation, lipstick, eyeshadow, blush, concealer
- Haircare products — shampoo, conditioner, hair treatment, hair colouring
- Body care — body lotion, body wash, body scrub, deodorant
- Sun care products — sunscreen, sunblock, after-sun lotion
- Oral care — toothpaste, mouthwash (where classified as cosmetic)
Practical Note: Products that contain ingredients of animal origin — such as collagen, keratin, lanolin, carmine, or certain emulsifiers — require particularly careful ingredient-level halal review. The source and processing method of these ingredients will directly affect the halal audit outcome.
4. Key Institutions: BPJPH, LPH, and MUI
Foreign cosmetic companies regularly ask which regulatory body they should engage with first. In practice, three institutions play distinct and sequential roles during the halal certification process. Understanding what each one does prevents miscommunication and helps companies plan their timeline and budget more accurately.
| Institution | Role | What Foreign Companies Encounter |
|---|---|---|
| BPJPH | Regulatory authority; issues halal certificates; manages the SIHALAL portal | Application submission, document review, MRA recognition checks, certificate issuance |
| LPH | Accredited halal inspection body; conducts facility audits and ingredient verification | On-site audit at overseas production facility, ingredient traceability review, lab sampling |
| MUI | Issues halal fatwa (religious determination) based on LPH audit findings | Final religious endorsement enabling BPJPH to issue the Indonesian halal certificate |
In Practice: For cosmetics, the LPH audit is often the most complex stage for foreign companies. Cosmetic products frequently contain ingredients derived from animal sources, biotechnology, or synthetic compounds — all of which require detailed traceability documentation. Preparing ingredient dossiers in advance of the audit significantly reduces inspection time.
6. Documents and Preparation for Foreign Applicants
Document preparation is consistently the most time-consuming phase for foreign cosmetic companies approaching Indonesian halal certification. Cosmetics present unique documentation challenges because the ingredient complexity — particularly ingredients of biological, animal, or synthetic origin — requires detailed traceability records that many overseas manufacturers are not initially structured to provide.
Because foreign companies need a local Indonesian entity to register through SIHALAL, the Indonesian importer or representative must also be coordinated from the beginning. Preparing overseas documents before the Indonesian structure is confirmed frequently causes avoidable delays.
Core Documents Required
- Indonesian Business Identification Number (NIB) — held by the local Indonesian entity or authorized representative
- Complete product and ingredient list, including all raw materials, processing aids, and carrier substances
- Production process flowchart (PPH) covering all critical control points from raw material intake through packaging
- SJPH Manual (Sistem Jaminan Produk Halal) — written halal assurance system documentation covering sourcing, production, storage, and distribution controls
- Appointment of a Penyelia Halal (Internal Halal Supervisor) — a qualified Muslim employee responsible for halal oversight within the company
- Ingredient-level supporting documentation — halal certificates for animal-derived, biological, or complex synthetic ingredients where applicable
- Packaging and label review — including halal logo positioning, registration number placement, and Bahasa Indonesia label compliance
Important: For cosmetic products specifically, ingredient-level halal documentation is the most frequently incomplete element at the LPH audit stage. Ingredients such as collagen, glycerin, emulsifiers (E471, E472), fermentation-derived actives, and certain preservatives require clear source and processing documentation. Gaps in this area are the single most common cause of audit delays for foreign cosmetic brands.
7. Step-by-Step Halal Certification Process
The full halal certification pathway for foreign cosmetic companies follows a defined sequence. While BPJPH’s SIHALAL portal manages the application online, the actual timeline is determined by how thoroughly the company has prepared its documentation and ingredient traceability before submission.
Full Certification Pathway (SIHALAL Route)
- Step 1 — Internal Preparation: Prepare the SJPH manual, compile ingredient documentation with halal source evidence, produce process flowcharts, and coordinate with the Indonesian representative to obtain the NIB
- Step 2 — Account Registration: The local Indonesian representative creates an account on SIHALAL (sihalal.halal.go.id) and completes the company and product profile
- Step 3 — Application Submission: Upload all required documents including the product list, ingredient data, PPH flowchart, SJPH manual, and supporting ingredient certificates
- Step 4 — BPJPH Document Verification: BPJPH reviews completeness and accuracy of submitted documents, typically within one business day, and forwards the application to an accredited LPH
- Step 5 — LPH Inspection and Audit: An accredited LPH conducts on-site inspection of the overseas production facility, covering raw material traceability, production processes, cleaning controls, halal segregation, and ingredient documentation. Laboratory sampling may be conducted. Inspection is generally completed within 15 business days
- Step 6 — MUI Halal Determination: The LPH submits its audit report to MUI’s Halal Fatwa Committee. MUI issues the Ketetapan Halal (Halal Determination) within approximately three business days following the inspection
- Step 7 — Certificate Issuance: BPJPH issues the Indonesian Halal Certificate, typically within one working day of MUI’s determination
- Step 8 — Post-Certification: Display the Halal Indonesia logo and registration number on all product packaging. Maintain the SJPH system. Report any changes in ingredients, suppliers, or production processes to BPJPH promptly
Practical Note: Under Government Regulation No. 42/2024, Indonesian halal certificates now carry permanent (indefinite) validity — provided there are no changes to ingredients, suppliers, or production processes. If any material changes occur, businesses must update their certification rather than wait for a renewal cycle.
8. Halal and BPOM: Two Separate but Parallel Obligations
A point of frequent confusion for foreign cosmetic companies is the relationship between BPOM notification and BPJPH halal certification. These are two completely separate regulatory requirements, managed by different government agencies through different portals and processes. A product can hold a valid BPOM notification number without yet having halal certification — and vice versa.
Both are mandatory for cosmetic products imported into Indonesia. Running these two compliance tracks sequentially — completing BPOM notification first, then beginning halal certification — is one of the most common planning mistakes made by foreign cosmetic brands, and it frequently results in launch delays of six months or more.
| Compliance Track | Regulatory Body | Output | Portal |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cosmetic Notification | BPOM | NA number (Notifikasi Kosmetika) | notifkos.pom.go.id |
| Halal Certification | BPJPH | Indonesian Halal Certificate + logo | sihalal.halal.go.id |
Related Reading:
→ Cosmetic Registration Indonesia — Full Regulatory Guide
9. Common Challenges for Foreign Cosmetic Companies
Foreign cosmetic companies consistently encounter a predictable set of challenges when approaching Indonesian halal certification. Most of these challenges are not caused by the product itself — they stem from structural gaps in ingredient documentation, Indonesian representative readiness, and insufficient understanding of what the SJPH system requires for cosmetic manufacturing contexts.
Most Frequently Reported Pain Points
- Animal-derived ingredient documentation gaps: Collagen, lanolin, keratin, carmine, certain glycerin and emulsifier sources require clear halal-origin certificates from suppliers. Many overseas suppliers do not routinely provide this documentation, requiring targeted outreach
- No recognized overseas certification body: The foreign manufacturer’s halal certification body may not have an MRA with BPJPH, requiring full re-certification rather than the faster SHLN route
- Weak or cosmetic-inappropriate SJPH manual: SJPH manuals prepared without cosmetic-specific operational context are commonly found to be insufficient during LPH audit — particularly around cleaning validation, shared equipment, and cross-contamination controls
- Shared production with non-halal products: Cosmetic factories that produce both halal and non-halal formulations — particularly those containing alcohol — must demonstrate robust segregation practices with documented evidence
- Running BPOM and halal tracks sequentially: Beginning halal certification only after BPOM notification is complete significantly extends the total time to commercial launch
- Labeling misalignment between BPOM and BPJPH requirements: The BPOM cosmetic notification number, halal logo, and Indonesian-language label requirements must all be reconciled on a single label design — a process that requires early cross-agency label planning
- Late Indonesian representative engagement: Beginning halal preparation before confirming the Indonesian entity and NIB creates a last-minute bottleneck that delays the entire SIHALAL application
In Practice: Foreign cosmetic companies that approach Indonesian halal certification as an ingredient-compliance and supply-chain project — not just a form-filing exercise — consistently experience smoother and faster outcomes. Starting preparation twelve months or more before the intended commercial launch date is a reasonable planning assumption for most brands applying through the full SIHALAL route.
10. Conclusion
Halal certification for cosmetics in Indonesia is a structured, ingredient-intensive regulatory process that requires early planning and close coordination between the overseas manufacturer, the Indonesian representative, and the relevant regulatory bodies. The right route — SHLN or full SIHALAL certification — depends on whether the overseas certification body is recognized by BPJPH through an MRA.
Regardless of route, no foreign cosmetic product can be marketed as halal in Indonesia without a valid Indonesian registration number and the official Halal Indonesia logo on its packaging. The mandatory deadline for imported cosmetics is no later than 17 October 2026 — but in practice, most foreign cosmetic brands need to begin preparation well in advance to meet that deadline without disruption to their market-entry and distribution plans.
For the complete regulatory picture covering BPOM notification, labeling, and import readiness alongside halal certification, refer to Cosmetic Registration Indonesia.
Frequently Asked Questions
Need Help with Halal Certification for Your Cosmetic Products in Indonesia?
If you are a foreign cosmetic brand planning to export skincare, colour cosmetics, haircare, or personal care products to Indonesia, INSIGHTOF Consulting Indonesia can help you assess the right certification route, prepare ingredient documentation, coordinate LPH audit readiness, and align halal certification with BPOM notification and import planning.
Contact our team today to discuss your product category, ingredient profile, existing halal certification status, and the practical steps required for compliant cosmetic market entry in Indonesia.




