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Editorial note: Market figures cited in this article are estimates based on publicly available industry reports and may vary by source. HalalExpo.com aims to present the most current data available but readers should verify figures for business decisions. Sources include the State of the Global Islamic Economy Report, DinarStandard, and national halal authority publications.
Most E-numbers are halal, but a small group are haram or doubtful (mashbooh). The four E-numbers Muslim consumers must avoid are E120 (carmine, insect-derived), E441 (animal gelatine), E542 (bone phosphate), and E904 (shellac). E471 (mono- and diglycerides) is mashbooh — halal only if plant-sourced or halal-certified.
E-numbers are codes assigned by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) to approved food additives. This guide provides a comprehensive breakdown of common E-numbers by category, their halal status, and what to look for when reading ingredient labels.

E-numbers are standardised codes for food additives approved for use in the European Union and many other countries. They cover a wide range of functions including:
Under Islamic law, an additive is haram if it is derived from pork or pork by-products, contains alcohol above trace levels, comes from an animal not slaughtered according to Islamic rites, or contains blood or blood by-products. Many E-numbers can come from both animal and plant sources depending on the manufacturer, which is why source verification — not just the E-number itself — is critical for halal certification.
E441 (Gelatine) is the most critical to watch. It appears in gummy sweets, marshmallows, yoghurts, pharmaceutical capsules, and wine fining agents. Unless the label specifies halal gelatine, fish gelatine, or vegetarian, assume it is pork-derived.
E120 (Cochineal/Carmine) is derived from crushed scale insects. Most Islamic scholars consider this haram. It is widely used in red and pink food colouring, yoghurts, juices, and cosmetics.
E542 (Bone phosphate) comes from animal bones — status depends on the source animal and slaughter method.
Sorbic acid (E200), potassium sorbate (E202), benzoic acid (E210), sodium benzoate (E211), and sulphites (E220–E228) are all synthetic or mineral-derived and generally halal.
Ascorbic acid / Vitamin C (E300), tocopherols / Vitamin E (E306–E309), citric acid (E330), and tartaric acid (E334) are plant-derived or synthetic and generally halal.
Curcumin / turmeric (E100), riboflavin (E101), tartrazine (E102), sunset yellow (E110), the azo dyes (E122–E129), beta-carotene (E160a), and chlorophylls (E140) are synthetic or plant-derived and generally halal.
Glutamic acid (E620) and MSG (E621) are generally halal — produced through microbial fermentation. See our dedicated guide: Is MSG Halal?
Some flavourings use alcohol as a carrier or solvent. Most halal certifiers accept trace alcohol from non-khamr fermentation below 0.5% in the final product, but this varies by certifying body. E1510 (Ethanol) listed as an additive in some products is generally accepted in trace amounts as a carrier by major certifiers including JAKIM and ESMA.
Your certifying body will require a full ingredient and additive list with source declarations, supplier specification sheets for any animal-derived additives, halal certificates from additive suppliers for E-numbers with animal sourcing, and documentation that no cross-contamination occurs during production.
The most commonly flagged additives during halal audits are E471, E441, E120, E481, and E482. Having plant-based or synthetic alternatives ready significantly streamlines the certification process.
| Status | Key E-Numbers |
|---|---|
| Always haram / strongly avoid | E441 (pork gelatine), E120 (cochineal), E542 (bone phosphate from pork) |
| Source-dependent — verify with manufacturer | E471, E472a–f, E473, E481, E482, E627, E631, E635 |
| Generally halal | E200–E228, E300–E309, E330, E102, E110, E140, E160a, E621 |
Understanding E-numbers is a valuable skill for Muslim consumers and an operational necessity for halal food producers. The key principle is not the number itself, but its source. When in doubt, look for recognised halal certification — it is the only way to be certain that every ingredient and additive in a product meets Islamic dietary standards.
For food businesses looking to enter Muslim-majority markets, investing in halal certification not only removes consumer uncertainty but opens doors to a global market worth over USD 2 trillion annually. Browse our directory of halal certifiers to find the right partner for your market.
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