Korean food labels can be difficult for Muslim shoppers because the risky word may be small, shortened, or hidden inside a sauce, broth, flavor powder, or additive. The safer habit is to check a short list of Korean words before buying snacks, ramen, sauces, or convenience-store food.
This guide does not decide halal status for every product. It gives you label words that should make you pause, ask, or verify the package with a more reliable source.

Important: Before Korea is not a halal certification body. This page helps readers check information that may appear on packages or official sources, such as ingredients, halal marks, BPOM/BPJPH references, importer stickers, and product variants. Always make your final decision from the latest package and official source available to you.
Last checked: May 28, 2026.
Start with the package in your hand
If a Korean label contains clear pork or alcohol terms, do not ignore them. If a label contains gelatin, emulsifier, shortening, broth, extract, or flavor base, treat it as a re-check signal because the source may matter.
Pork-related words
| Korean | Romanization | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 돼지고기 | dwaeji gogi | pork |
| 돈육 | donyuk | pork meat |
| 돈골 | don-gol | pork bone |
| 돼지기름 | dwaeji gireum | pork fat |
| 라드 | radeu | lard |
| 햄 | haem | ham |
| 베이컨 | beikeon | bacon |
| 족발 | jokbal | pork feet |
Alcohol-related words
| Korean | Romanization | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 술 | sul | alcohol drink |
| 주정 | jujeong | ethanol/alcohol |
| 알코올 | alko-ol | alcohol |
| 미림 | mirim | cooking wine |
| 맛술 | matsul | cooking wine |
| 청주 | cheongju | rice wine |
| 소주 | soju | Korean distilled alcohol |
| 와인 | wain | wine |
Words that need re-check
Some words are not always automatically haram by themselves, but they should make you check the source, certifier, or package version.
| Korean | Why to re-check |
|---|---|
| 젤라틴 | Gelatin source may matter. |
| 콜라겐 | Animal source may matter. |
| 유화제 | Emulsifier source may matter. |
| 쇼트닝 | Fat source may matter. |
| 육수 | Meat or seafood broth; source matters. |
| 추출물 | Extract; check what was extracted. |
| 소스 | Sauce can contain alcohol, broth, or animal ingredients. |
How to use this list in a store
- Take a clear photo of the ingredient label.
- Look first for pork and alcohol words.
- Then look for gelatin, emulsifier, shortening, broth, and extract words.
- Use a translation app, but do not rely on translation alone for safety-sensitive choices.
- If the label is unclear, choose a product with clearer halal evidence.
What this list cannot do
A word list cannot replace certification or package-specific evidence. It also cannot tell whether every additive is plant-based, animal-based, or synthetic. Use it as a warning tool, not as a certification tool.
Official links to check
Use these official links when the next step matters. This guide explains what to watch for, but app downloads, eligibility, prices, routes, policies, labels, and service rules can change.
- BPJPH official site: Use this for Indonesia halal certification authority context and current notices.
- BPOM product check: Use this to check Indonesian processed-food registration when a BPOM number is visible.
- MFDS English site: Use this for Korea food, medicine, cosmetics, and safety authority context.

FAQ
Can I decide halal status only from Korean words?
No. Words help you notice risk, but final decisions need package evidence, certification, or official source checks.
Is gelatin always from pork in Korea?
Not always. The source must be checked. If the source is unclear, treat it as a re-check signal.
Should I use a translation app?
Yes, but translation apps can miss context. For allergies, religion, or safety, use translation plus package evidence.