Halal labeling laws in the United States are protective, not punitive. They exist to ensure honesty in the marketplace and to safeguard consumer trust. Far from signaling hostility toward halal products, these laws acknowledge halal as a legitimate and protected part of American commercial and religious life – Image HalalFocus.com

  

Halal Labeling Laws in the US 

By Aslam Abdullah
CA

 

In recent months, rumors have circulated on social media suggesting that the United States is moving toward banning halal food and products. These claims have generated understandable concern among Muslim communities. A careful review of US law, however, reveals a very different reality. There is no federal or state ban on halal products in the United States.

What does exist in several states are halal labeling and consumer-protection laws—designed not to prohibit halal food, but to protect consumers from fraud and misrepresentation.

Halal labeling laws are a subset of truth-in-advertising and food-fraud statutes. They apply only when a business chooses to market a product as “halal.” If a product is not labeled or advertised as halal, these laws do not apply at all. The core principle behind these statutes is simple: If a seller claims something is halal, that claim must be honest, verifiable, and transparent. These laws are comparable to regulations governing labels such as “organic,” “kosher,” or “non-GMO.” They do not regulate religious belief or practice. They regulate commercial claims.

States with halal labeling or consumer-protection laws

As of the mid-2020s, halal labeling or halal-related consumer-protection provisions are commonly identified in approximately ten states, though enforcement and scope vary. The most frequently cited include:

  • New York – One of the most detailed halal food disclosure laws, requiring sellers to identify the basis for halal claims and certification.
  • New Jersey – Similar consumer-protection provisions focused on preventing misleading halal representation.
  • Illinois – Early adopter of halal fraud statutes tied to general food labeling laws.
  • Texas – Enforces halal claims through consumer-protection and deceptive-trade practices laws.
  • California – Applies halal labeling standards under broader food labeling and fraud regulations.
  • Michigan – Home to a large Muslim population, with halal labeling protections integrated into consumer law.
  • Minnesota – Includes halal within truth-in-labeling frameworks.
  • Virginia – Recognizes halal claims under consumer-fraud statutes.
  • Washington – Strengthened food labeling enforcement that includes religious food claims.
  • Arizona – References halal within broader anti-fraud statutes, though enforcement varies.

It is important to note that these laws differ in detail, and some states rely on general fraud statutes rather than standalone halal legislation. But none of them prohibit halal food. This law requires honesty when food is advertised as halal, protects consumers from false claims, allows civil or administrative penalties for deliberate misrepresentation, and increases transparency about certification or standards used. In fact, these laws often exist because consumers asked for protection against fraudulent use of the halal label.

Halal food represents a rapidly growing market in the United States. With growth comes risk of abuse. Without regulation, unscrupulous sellers can exploit religious trust by labeling products as halal without meeting accepted standards. Halal labeling laws respond to this problem in the same way kosher food laws emerged decades earlier—to protect religious consumers, not restrict them.

At the federal level, the United States does not have a centralized halal certification authority. Halal certification is voluntary and provided by private organizations. Federal agencies such as the FDA and USDA intervene only when there is evidence of false or misleading labeling, not because food is halal.

Halal labeling laws in the United States are protective, not punitive. They exist to ensure honesty in the marketplace and to safeguard consumer trust. Far from signaling hostility toward halal products, these laws acknowledge halal as a legitimate and protected part of American commercial and religious life.

(Dr Aslam Abdullah is the resident scholar at Islamicity.org, the largest internet portal on Islam. He has served as Director of the Islamic Society of Nevada and Masjid Ibrahim, Las Vegas. Dr Abdullah has also been the Editor-in-Chief of the Minaret Magazine since 1989. He was an associate editor of The Arabia in the 1980s. He also served as vice chairman of the Muslim Public Affairs Council. Not only that, but he is involved in interfaith dialogue and has represented Muslims in several interfaith conferences. He has published several books and more than 1,000 articles and papers in magazines worldwide. Originally from India, he is based in Southern California and has appeared on several TV and Radio shows.)