Addressing Muslim Women’s Concerns: Why Are Halal Beauty Clinics Increasingly Needed?
As aesthetic treatments become part of everyday self-care for many Indonesian Muslim women, a simple question is increasingly shaping where they choose to go: is this treatment halal? That question is quietly giving rise to a new category in Indonesia’s beauty industry — the halal beauty clinic.
- Introduction: A Question Beyond Skin Deep
- Can Aesthetic Services Really Be Halal?
- The Three Pillars of Halal Aesthetic Practice
- What the Regulation Actually Covers
- The Rise of the Halal Beauty Clinic
- Beyond Marketing: What Sharia-Compliant Clinics Actually Offer
- Why It Matters to Cosmetic Brands and Product Suppliers
- Frequently Asked Questions
01Introduction: A Question Beyond Skin Deep
Walk into a busy beauty clinic on any given weekend and the scene feels familiar: the soft scent of skincare products, posters advertising facials, peels, Botox, fillers, and the latest aesthetic technology. Young mothers, students, and working professionals alike come in search of the same thing — better skin, renewed confidence, a moment of self-care.
Yet a new question has started to surface more often in these waiting rooms: is this treatment halal? For many Muslim consumers, self-care is not only about appearance. It is also about knowing that everything used on and in the body has been sourced and processed in a way that is permissible under Islamic law. That concern is precisely what has given rise to the halal beauty clinic concept — modern aesthetic services delivered in a way that remains consistent with sharia values.
Beauty, in this framing, is not only about visibly good skin. It is also about the inner peace of knowing a procedure was performed correctly — ethically, medically, and religiously.
02Can Aesthetic Services Really Be Halal?
According to Rina Maulidiyah, a Halal Auditor at LPPOM (Lembaga Pemeriksa Halal – Halal Inspection Agency), aesthetic services can, in principle, be carried out in a fully halal manner. She points to three conditions that determine whether a treatment qualifies.
| Pillar | What It Requires |
|---|---|
| 1. Ingredients | All materials used — pre- and post-treatment skincare, topical medications, supporting care products, and injectables such as Botox and dermal fillers — must be free from haram and najis (impure) elements. |
| 2. Medical Safety | Procedures must be carried out by competent medical personnel using sterile equipment, without causing harm. Sharia places strong emphasis on avoiding harm, making safety non-negotiable. |
| 3. Purpose & Proportionality | Aesthetic procedures are permissible only within reasonable limits — to maintain health or improve skin condition, rather than to excessively alter one’s God-given features. |
03The Three Pillars in Practice
These three conditions are not abstract. They translate directly into how a clinic sources its products, trains its staff, and designs its treatment protocols — which is exactly where the concept of a “halal beauty clinic” starts to take practical shape.
- Ingredients: Use of BPJPH halal-certified skincare, topical products, and transparently sourced injectable materials where possible.
- Medical Safety: Licensed practitioners, sterile procedure rooms, adherence to standard clinical safety protocols.
- Purpose & Proportionality: Treatments framed around skin health and confidence rather than extreme or excessive alteration.
04What the Regulation Actually Covers
The Indonesian government, through the Halal Product Assurance Agency (BPJPH), has introduced mandatory halal certification for products and services circulating in Indonesia, as stipulated in Government Regulation (PP) No. 42 of 2024. This raises an obvious question for the beauty industry: does this mean beauty clinics themselves must be halal-certified?
Not yet, at least not directly. Aesthetic services and beauty clinics as businesses are not currently required to hold halal certification. What is mandatory is the cosmetic products used within those services — a requirement that becomes fully effective on 17 October 2026.
Halal certification is mandatory for cosmetic products starting 17 October 2026. It is not (yet) a legal requirement for the aesthetic service or clinic itself. Clinics that brand themselves as “halal” or “sharia-compliant” today are doing so voluntarily, as a value proposition rather than a regulatory obligation.
05The Rise of the Halal Beauty Clinic
Even without a legal mandate covering clinics directly, an interesting trend has emerged on social media: more and more beauty clinics are positioning themselves as halal or sharia-compliant. Some emphasize the use of BPJPH halal-certified products. Others adopt taglines such as #CantikSesuaiSyariah (“Beautiful According to Sharia”). Others ensure that female patients are treated exclusively by female medical staff.
According to Rina, these efforts go beyond marketing. They reflect a genuine commitment to offering aesthetic services that are safe, modern, and aligned with Islamic values — a combined promise that is becoming a meaningful differentiator in a crowded aesthetic clinic market.
06Beyond Marketing: What Sharia-Compliant Clinics Actually Offer
Clinics that commit seriously to the halal beauty concept typically go further than product sourcing alone. Common practices include:
- Use of halal-certified products across the treatment journey, not only the final application
- Avoiding procedures that excessively alter natural features
- Private treatment rooms and physical interactions kept within sharia-compliant boundaries
- More personal, unhurried consultations so patients feel comfortable discussing sensitive concerns
- Female medical staff serving female patients as standard practice, not an optional request
For many Muslim women, being treated by female medical staff is a meaningful factor in their emotional comfort. It allows them to feel at ease knowing they are cared for by someone who understands their needs — both medically and spiritually.
Taken together, these practices show that a halal beauty clinic is not simply a label attached to an existing service. It represents a more comprehensive commitment — combining medical safety, emotional comfort, and adherence to sharia values into a single patient experience.
07Why It Matters to Cosmetic Brands and Product Suppliers
This shift carries direct implications for the cosmetic and aesthetic supply chain. As clinics increasingly build their positioning around halal values, the products they choose to stock — from skincare used in treatment rooms to injectable and topical formulations — come under closer scrutiny from both the clinic and the patient.
With halal certification becoming mandatory for cosmetic products by 17 October 2026, brands that supply clinics, spas, and pharmacies have a clear window to align their product certification with this growing demand, rather than treating it as a late-stage compliance task.
Halal beauty clinics have the potential to become a new standard in Indonesia’s aesthetic industry — where beauty is measured not only by visible results, but by the confidence that every step of the process is safe, high-quality, and aligned with faith.
08Frequently Asked Questions
Not directly. Under current regulation, halal certification is mandatory for cosmetic products (effective 17 October 2026), not for the aesthetic service or clinic as a business. Clinics that market themselves as “halal” or “sharia-compliant” are doing so voluntarily.
According to LPPOM’s halal auditors, injectable materials fall under the same ingredient scrutiny as any other product used in treatment — they must be free from haram and najis elements, in addition to meeting medical safety and proportionality requirements.
The general principle is that treatments should aim to maintain health or improve skin condition within reasonable limits, rather than substantially altering one’s God-given features.
Many Muslim women report greater emotional and spiritual comfort when treated by female medical staff, particularly for procedures involving physical contact or sensitive areas.
Preparing Your Cosmetic Products for Indonesia’s Halal Deadline?
As halal beauty clinics grow in demand, the cosmetic and aesthetic products behind them need to keep pace with Indonesia’s mandatory halal certification deadline of 17 October 2026. INSIGHTOF Consulting Indonesia (ICI) helps local and international brands navigate BPJPH halal certification alongside BPOM registration.
Adapted from reporting by LPH LPPOM (halalmui.org), “Addressing Muslim Women’s Concerns, Why Are Halal Beauty Clinics Increasingly Needed?”, published 3 February 2026, based on remarks by Rina Maulidiyah, Halal Auditor at LPPOM.




