Halal Ricerca di mercato

L’Islam è la seconda religione più diffusa al mondo, dopo il Cristianesimo.
Ci sono circa 1,9 miliardi di follower sparsi in tutto il mondo. Di conseguenza, con così tante persone, si prevede che influenzerà la domanda di prodotti consumabili e non consumabili.
Similmente al Kosher, i musulmani seguono rigide leggi sull'Islam alimentare. Sono preferiti cibi e bevande halal e ai devoti è vietato consumare Haram o è vietato. Halal è un termine comunemente associato a cibi e bevande consentiti dalla legge islamica. Tuttavia, il concetto di halal si estende oltre il semplice cibo per includere prodotti e servizi che aderiscono ai principi islamici, come abbigliamento, cosmetici, prodotti farmaceutici e servizi finanziari.
Il mercato globale halal è cresciuto rapidamente negli ultimi anni, spinto dalla crescente domanda da parte della popolazione musulmana e dalla crescente consapevolezza tra i non musulmani sui benefici etici e sanitari dei prodotti halal.
Il mercato è diventato sempre più competitivo, con molti marchi e aziende importanti che competono per attingere al redditizio mercato halal. Qui è dove si svolge una ricerca di mercato, esploreremo le tendenze, le opportunità e le sfide nel mercato halal e forniremo approfondimenti sul comportamento dei consumatori e sulle preferenze delle popolazioni musulmane e non musulmane verso prodotti e servizi halal
Halal Market Research: How Leading Food Brands Capture the Global Muslim Consumer Opportunity
Halal market research is reshaping how multinational food and beverage companies approach a consumer base of nearly two billion people. The opportunity extends far beyond meat certification. It spans confectionery, dairy, infant nutrition, personal care, pharmaceuticals, and quick-service restaurant formats across Southeast Asia, the Gulf, North Africa, Sub-Saharan markets, and growing Muslim populations in Europe and North America.
The brands winning shelf space in Riyadh, Jakarta, Istanbul, and Kuala Lumpur share a common discipline. They treat halal as a category strategy, not a compliance line item. They invest in primary research that distinguishes religious observance from cultural preference, and they segment Muslim consumers with the same rigor applied to any premium category.
The Halal Consumer Is Not a Monolith: Segmentation Drives Halal Market Research Value
The category management optimization mistake most often made by global brands is treating “halal” as a single shopper profile. Observance intensity, income tier, generational cohort, and national food culture create dramatically different baskets. A young professional in Dubai sourcing premium organic halal poultry shares almost nothing with a multigenerational household in Hyderabad cooking from scratch six days a week.
SIS International’s central location tests and in-home ethnographic studies across Saudi Arabia, Turkey, the UAE, Egypt, and India have consistently shown that meal occasion structure, not religious certification alone, drives processed food adoption. In KSA households, dinner anchors daily preparation while breakfast and lunch resist out-of-home purchase. In urban India, dinner is the meal most often sourced outside the home. In Turkey, foreign cuisine penetration remains low despite high category awareness. These patterns determine where private label competitive threats emerge and where premium positioning holds.
Hedonic scaling and JAR (just-about-right) analysis applied to halal-certified product reformulations frequently reveal a sensory gap that certification alone cannot close. A halal-certified frozen entrée that scores acceptably in Jakarta may underperform in Cairo on salt, spice intensity, and texture. Penalty analysis quantifies the trade-off, and descriptive analysis panel calibration localizes the flavor profile to the regional palate.
Certification Is the Floor, Not the Ceiling, of Halal Market Research
Standards bodies including JAKIM in Malaysia, MUI in Indonesia, ESMA in the UAE, SFDA in Saudi Arabia, and GSO across the GCC operate with meaningful technical differences. A product certified for the Malaysian market does not automatically clear in Indonesia, and Gulf cross-recognition continues to evolve. Brands such as Nestlé, Unilever, Cargill, BRF, and Saffron Road have built dedicated halal supply chain segregation rather than treat certification as a paperwork exercise.
The strategic question is not whether to certify. It is which SKUs in the portfolio justify dedicated halal production lines, which markets reward visible certification on pack, and which consumer segments treat halal as a baseline expectation versus a premium signal. Concept-product fit testing and clean label consumer perception studies separate these segments cleanly.
What Halal Market Research Reveals About Premiumization and Clean Label
The fastest-growing halal subcategories sit at the intersection of religious observance and broader wellness trends. Plant-based protein, functional ingredients, organic certification, and transparent sourcing carry disproportionate weight with younger Muslim consumers in metropolitan markets. The halal consumer in Kuala Lumpur or Dubai expects the same ingredient transparency a Whole Foods shopper expects in Brooklyn.
Based on SIS International’s proprietary ricerca across Gulf and Southeast Asian metro markets, the willingness to pay premium for halal products tied to verified provenance and clean label claims is substantially higher among urban dual-income households than legacy halal pricing benchmarks suggest. This redraws the trade spend optimization calculation for brands accustomed to competing primarily on shelf price.
Geographic Prioritization: Where Halal Market Research Pays Back Fastest

Not every halal market rewards investment equally. The table below summarizes structural characteristics that shape entry sequencing.
| Mercato | Structural Characteristic | Strategic Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Indonesia | Mandatory halal certification under BPJPH expansion | Compliance cost is table stakes; differentiation moves to brand and sensory |
| Arabia Saudita | High home-cooking frequency, low foreign cuisine preference | Localized flavor systems outperform direct portfolio transplants |
| Malaysia | JAKIM as global certification reference | Hub for export-oriented halal manufacturing |
| Tacchino | Strong domestic food culture, low imported cuisine adoption | Local partnership and reformulation outperform pure import models |
| UAE | Premium expatriate-influenced segments | Premium and clean label positioning command genuine price elasticity |
| India | Large Muslim population with regional culinary fragmentation | Sub-national segmentation essential; out-of-home dinner occasion underserved |
Source: SIS International Research
The SIS Halal Opportunity Framework

Effective halal market research integrates four layers. Each is independently necessary and jointly sufficient for category decisions.
- Observance segmentation: quantitative U&A studies that distinguish strict, moderate, and cultural observance and link each to category baskets.
- Sensory localization: CLT design with QDA panel calibration to close the flavor gap between certified formulations and regional taste expectations.
- Certification economics: SKU-level analysis of segregated supply chain cost against incremental margin and channel access.
- Channel and occasion mapping: shopper journey analytics across modern trade, traditional trade, and digital grocery to identify where halal claims convert and where they are assumed.
Brands that operate all four layers in sequence consistently outperform those that lead with certification and treat consumer insight as a downstream activity. SIS International has applied this framework across confectionery, dairy, frozen meals, and processed protein launches in MENA, Southeast Asia, and South Asia using a combination of B2B expert interviews with category buyers, consumer ethnographic research, and structured taste testing.
Where Halal Market Research Goes Next

Three movements warrant continuous monitoring. First, halal e-commerce platforms in Indonesia, Malaysia, and the GCC are restructuring assortment economics and challenging traditional modern-trade gatekeepers. Second, halal certification is extending into adjacent categories including cosmetics, nutraceuticals, and pet food, opening incremental adjacencies for diversified consumer goods companies. Third, younger Muslim consumers in Western markets are pushing mainstream retailers to integrate halal assortments alongside organic and plant-based sets rather than segregate them.
The companies positioned to capture this growth are running halal market research as a continuous intelligence function rather than a one-time entry study. They are calibrating sensory panels in-region, refreshing observance segmentation as generational cohorts shift, and tracking certification body developments quarterly.
Key Questions

Q1: What does halal market research actually measure beyond certification?
A1: It measures observance intensity, sensory acceptance, occasion-based consumption, willingness to pay for clean label and provenance claims, and channel-specific purchase drivers across distinct Muslim consumer segments.
Q2: Which halal markets offer the strongest near-term growth for global food brands?
A2: Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Malaysia, and Turkey lead on a blend of population scale, premium willingness to pay, and certification infrastructure. India offers the largest underserved out-of-home dinner occasion.
Q3: How does halal consumer behavior differ across countries?
A3: Home cooking frequency, foreign cuisine acceptance, and out-of-home meal sourcing vary sharply. Saudi households cook nearly all meals at home, Indian urban households source dinner outside frequently, and Turkish consumers show low foreign cuisine adoption.
Q4: What methodologies are most effective for halal product testing?
A4: Central location tests with QDA panel calibration, in-home ethnographic research, JAR scaling with penalty analysis, and concept-product fit testing localized to regional palates produce the most reliable launch decisions.
Q5: Is halal certification sufficient to compete in Muslim-majority markets?
A5: No. Certification is a baseline requirement. Sensory localization, occasion-based positioning, and clean label credibility determine which certified brands win shelf and repeat purchase.
A proposito di SIS Internazionale
SIS Internazionale offre ricerca quantitativa, qualitativa e strategica. Forniamo dati, strumenti, strategie, report e approfondimenti per il processo decisionale. Conduciamo anche interviste, sondaggi, focus group e altri metodi e approcci di ricerca di mercato. Contattaci per il tuo prossimo progetto di ricerca di mercato.

