Why Halal Is Now Strategic
GCC (Gulf) and ASEAN Muslim-majority markets together represent one of the fastest-growing export blocks for Korean food brands. In most of these markets, halal certification is not a marketing badge — it is a customs and shelf-placement gate.
The Practical Playbook
1. Scope the product: identify ingredients, processing aids, and cross-contamination risks.
2. Pick the right body: JAKIM (Malaysia), MUI (Indonesia), and ESMA (UAE) are the most widely recognized. Requirements differ.
3. Audit the facility: shared lines with non-halal products are the #1 failure point.
4. Budget realistically: first-time certification typically runs several thousand USD and 2–4 months.
5. Plan the relabel: halal-market SKUs usually need distinct labels, lot codes, and language variants.
Where Channel Partners Come In
Experienced channel partners reduce certification risk materially — they know which bodies each retailer accepts, and which labels sell. MARTMART specifically filters channel partners by halal-market experience when the brief requires it.
Bottom Line
Halal certification is not a tax on Korean brands. It is an investment that unlocks two of the three fastest-growing export regions. The playbook is boring, which is exactly why it works.