Halal Labeling — Government Regulation 42/2024
Background
Indonesia has one of the world's largest Muslim populations, and the government has implemented a comprehensive Halal Product Assurance framework. Government Regulation (PP) No. 42 of 2024 introduced a phased mandatory Halal labeling and certification timeline for medical devices — one of the most significant recent regulatory developments for device manufacturers.
Phased Compliance Deadlines
| Device Class | Halal Compliance Deadline |
|---|---|
| Class A (Low Risk) | 17 October 2026 |
| Class B (Low to Moderate Risk) | 17 October 2029 |
| Class C (Moderate to High Risk) | 17 October 2034 |
| Class D (High Risk) and Biological Products | ~2039 (TBC by subsequent regulation) |
If you have Class A devices on the Indonesian market (or plan to register them), the October 2026 deadline is approaching rapidly. Begin your Halal assessment now.
What Halal Compliance Requires
Option 1: Obtain Halal Certification The device and its supply chain undergo Halal audit and certification by a recognised Indonesian Halal certification body (under the Halal Product Assurance Organising Agency, BPJPH). The certified device may carry the official Halal logo (MUI halal logo or BPJPH-issued logo).
Option 2: Non-Halal Declaration If the device contains materials derived from sources that are not Halal under Islamic law (e.g. porcine-derived materials, certain animal-derived biologicals), full certification may not be achievable. GR 42/2024 requires that such devices:
- Display a specific non-halal icon or text on the label
- This allows Muslim users and healthcare institutions to make informed decisions
- The device is not prohibited — transparency is the requirement, not exclusion
Assessing Your Devices
Manufacturers should conduct a Halal material assessment for each device, examining:
- Are any materials derived from animal sources?
- If so, what species? (Porcine derivatives are the most common concern)
- Are any alcohol-based substances used in the device or packaging?
- Are any materials derived from microbial fermentation using non-Halal substrates?
A complete Bill of Materials (BoM) with material origins is the starting point for this assessment.
Practical Preparation Steps
- Compile Bill of Materials for all Indonesian-registered devices
- Identify any animal-derived materials and their species/source
- Assess feasibility of reformulation (where applicable and practical)
- Engage an Indonesian BPJPH-recognised Halal certification body
- Begin supply chain documentation for Halal certification audit
- If non-Halal materials cannot be replaced, design the required non-Halal declaration label elements
Impact on Existing NIEs
If Halal labeling changes are made to an already-registered device, this constitutes a label change. Depending on the extent of the change, a change notification (Perubahan) or, in significant cases, a dossier update may be required through Regalkes. Plan label changes and regulatory submissions in parallel with Halal certification activities.