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Indonesia mandatory halal certification: the October 2026 deadline for food exporters
If you export food, beverages, or meat and poultry products to Indonesia, mandatory halal certification for imports closes on October 17, 2026. Indonesia's halal authority, BPJPH, has stated there will be no further postponement. Here is who it covers, why meat exporters feel it hardest, and the certification timeline you are actually working against.
What the law requires, and who it covers
Under Indonesia's Halal Product Assurance Law, products entering, circulating, and traded within Indonesia must carry halal certification. The rollout has been phased: food, beverages, and slaughter products and services were already required domestically from October 2024. The phase now closing is imports of the same categories, food, beverages, and slaughter products and services, by October 17, 2026.
BPJPH (Badan Penyelenggara Jaminan Produk Halal), under the Ministry of Religious Affairs, administers certification and, from October 18, 2026, active market supervision and enforcement.
Why meat and poultry exporters feel this hardest
Slaughter products and services are named explicitly in scope, and halal status is a supply-chain claim, not a label you add at the end: it depends on the slaughter method, and on keeping halal product segregated from non-halal product at every step after. A meat or poultry exporter without certification effectively cannot clear product into the Indonesian market once enforcement begins.
The deadline: October 17, 2026, and BPJPH says no further extensions
The import deadline has already moved once from an earlier date. BPJPH's leadership has since stated publicly that October 17, 2026 is an absolute requirement with no further postponement, and that active enforcement starts the following day. Treat that as the current, firm position, and confirm it against BPJPH's own announcements before you plan around it, since Indonesian food-safety and halal regulation has a history of phased timelines.
The certification path and the timeline you actually have
Exporters from countries without a mutual recognition arrangement (MRA) with Indonesia go through "Path A" certification, which typically takes three to six months. Starting the process now leaves a workable but tight runway to the deadline; starting in the second half of 2026 makes it very unlikely you clear in time.
Getting ready
Halal status has to survive contact with everything else you handle: the same product line, the same cold store, the same truck. Fernable's meat workspace carries halal as a lot-lane flag from the kill through to every cut lot the breakdown produces, and refuses to let a halal-flagged lot commingle with a non-halal one in a reservation or a pack run, so the segregation evidence a certifier or an importer asks for is a record, not a reconstruction.
This guide summarises the requirement for orientation and is not certification or legal advice. Confirm the current requirements and your certification path directly with BPJPH, an accredited halal certification body, or your Indonesian importer before you rely on them.
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