How the Halal Product Scanner Works
Checking whether a packaged food product is halal traditionally means reading the ingredients list and recognising potentially problematic E-numbers — a slow process, especially while shopping. Our Halal Product Scanner automates this by combining three things: your phone or computer's camera, a global open product database, and our curated Halal/Haram/Mashbooh additive database.
When you scan a barcode, the scanner reads the number, sends it to the Open Food Facts database (a free, community-maintained database covering millions of products worldwide), retrieves the listed ingredients and additives, and instantly cross-references any E-numbers against our halal classification database — giving you a clear verdict in seconds.
How to Use the Scanner — Step by Step
- Tap "Start Scanning" and allow camera access when prompted by your browser
- Hold your camera steady over the product's barcode (usually on the back or side of packaging)
- Wait for detection — this typically takes 1-3 seconds once the barcode is in focus
- Review the verdict — Halal, Haram, or Mashbooh, along with the specific additives detected
- Check the full ingredients by expanding the details section if you want more information
If your camera cannot read the barcode (poor lighting, damaged packaging, or camera permission issues), you can manually type the barcode number — usually printed beneath the barcode lines — into the manual entry field instead.
Why Product Coverage Varies
Our scanner relies on Open Food Facts, a community-contributed, crowd-sourced product database covering millions of products globally. This means:
- Popular international brands are very well covered, especially in Europe, North America, and increasingly the Gulf region
- Regional or local brands may have limited or no data, especially in some Asian and African markets
- Newer products may not yet be added by the community
- Data accuracy depends on contributors — while generally reliable, always cross-check critical decisions with official halal certification
If a product isn't found, you can manually search any E-number you spot on the ingredients list using our Halal E-Number Checker tool instead.
What the Scanner Checks
| Check | Source |
|---|---|
| Product name & brand | Open Food Facts database |
| Listed E-numbers / additives | Open Food Facts database |
| Halal/Haram/Mashbooh status per additive | QuantixTools E-number database |
| Full ingredients list | Open Food Facts database |
| Product packaging photo | Open Food Facts database (if available) |
Important Limitations to Understand
While our scanner is a powerful convenience tool, it has important limitations every user should understand:
- Not a substitute for certification: A "likely halal" result means no flagged haram or doubtful additives were detected — it does not mean the product carries official halal certification
- Mashbooh additives need verification: If an additive like E471 is detected, the product is marked Mashbooh because the true source cannot be confirmed without checking for certification logos directly on the packaging
- Cross-contamination not detected: The scanner cannot detect whether a product was manufactured on shared equipment with non-halal products
- Database may be outdated: Manufacturers sometimes reformulate products; the database may not always reflect the very latest ingredient list
- Regional variations: The same product may have different formulations in different countries
Privacy & How Your Data Is Used
We do not store any barcode you scan or any product data. Each scan sends a real-time request directly to the Open Food Facts public database and our own additive database. No personal data, scan history, or location is collected or saved on our servers.
Key Takeaways
- The scanner uses your camera and a free product database to check halal status instantly
- Results are based on detected E-numbers, not official certification
- Mashbooh results require manual verification via halal certification logos
- Coverage is strongest for popular global brands
- You can always fall back to manual barcode entry or the E-number search tool
Powered by the Open Food Facts open database and our curated E-number classification list. For binding halal certification questions, consult official certification bodies (JAKIM, ESMA, HFA, IFANCA).