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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.
The halal pet food market is one of the less obvious but genuinely growing segments within the broader halal industry. Its emergence is driven by a convergence of factors: rising pet ownership in Muslim-majority countries, increasing consumer awareness of what goes into pet food, and a theological debate about whether Muslims are obligated to feed their pets halal food.
The commercial opportunity is real. The global pet food market is valued at over USD 100 billion annually. Even a small halal-certified share of that market — concentrated in OIC countries and Muslim diaspora communities in Western markets — represents a significant addressable segment for manufacturers willing to pursue halal certification for their pet food lines.
Historically, pet ownership — particularly of dogs — has been lower in Muslim-majority societies due to religious interpretations around impurity. However, pet ownership patterns are changing across the Muslim world. Cat ownership has always been culturally accepted in Islamic tradition (the Prophet Muhammad is recorded to have had great affection for cats). In Gulf states, Turkey, Malaysia, and urban Indonesia, cat ownership has risen substantially alongside urbanisation and middle-class growth. Small dogs and other companion animals are increasingly common in Gulf cities.
This shift in pet ownership is creating demand for premium pet food products — and halal-certified options specifically. Pet owners who maintain halal households are increasingly concerned about the provenance of the meat used in pet food, particularly in products containing pork derivatives (common in conventional pet food) or non-halal slaughtered meat.
Halal certification for pet food follows similar principles to food certification, with the primary concern being the source and slaughter method of animal proteins used in the product. The key challenges for manufacturers are:
Ingredient sourcing: Most conventional pet food uses rendered animal by-products from multiple species, including pork. Halal-certified pet food must exclude pork and ensure all animal proteins come from halal-slaughtered animals. This requires dedicated supply chains and supplier audits.
Processing line segregation: Facilities that produce both conventional and halal pet food must demonstrate adequate segregation or changeover cleaning to prevent cross-contamination.
Certification body availability: Not all halal certification bodies have developed specific schemes for pet food. JAKIM in Malaysia has issued guidance on halal pet food certification. MUI in Indonesia and ESMA in the UAE have also addressed pet food within their broader halal certification frameworks.
The most developed halal pet food markets currently are Malaysia and the UAE. In Malaysia, JAKIM-certified halal pet food is available in major pet specialty retailers and increasingly in hypermarkets. The UAE has seen a small but growing number of imported halal-certified pet food products from Europe and Australia.
For export-oriented manufacturers, the GCC pet food market is attractive due to high per-capita spending and a concentration of premium pet owners in urban centres. E-commerce is also an important channel — halal pet food purchases are frequently made online by Muslim consumers in Western countries who cannot find suitable products in local stores.
Manufacturers already producing halal-certified meat ingredients or operating halal-certified food production facilities are well positioned to extend into halal pet food with relatively modest incremental investment. The main requirements are ingredient reformulation (removing pork derivatives), halal certification for the pet food product line, and appropriate labelling for target markets.
For manufacturers entering the halal pet food market, JAKIM certification is the most credible market entry credential for Southeast Asian markets. For the GCC, ESMA-recognised certification bodies are the appropriate route.
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