Which condiments are halal in Australia?
Sauces, dressings, spreads, and seasonings tracked across Australian retailers.
We've indexed 2,236 condiments in the Australian aisle. Of these, 281 carry a third-party halal certificate, 79 are brand-declared halal, and 22 have an ingredient-analysed halal-suitable verdict. The remaining 1,854 are sourced from open product data and awaiting halal review. Across 600 brands, including MasterFoods, Maggi, and Heinz. Most listings are stocked at Coles, Woolworths, Aldi, IGA, or specialist Muslim grocers — each product page shows the retailers we have confirmed it at.
Certified condiments on this page are audited by HCAA, Australian Halal Authority and Advisers, and National Halal Accreditation Services Australia and 1 other certifier. Condiment halal status hinges on alcohol (wine in some pasta sauces, mirin in Asian sauces), animal-derived emulsifiers (E471), and rennet in cheese-based dressings. Plain mustards, vinegar (excluding wine vinegar — disputed), and most tomato sauces are halal by default.

Masterfoods All Purpose Seasoning 65G

Chicken Salt Blend

Cinnamon Sugar

Tomato Sauce Hidden Veg

Masterfoods Carbonara Recipe Base 170G

Garlic Steak Spice Blend

Garlic & Herb Salt Blend

Master Food Australian Mustard

Tonkatsu Sauce

Tomato Sauce

Teriyaki

Tandoori

Sweet Soy Sauce

Stir Through Sauce

Sriracha Hot Chilli Sås

Sriracha Green Chilli Sauce

Spice Kitchen Spicy Tikka

Soy Sauce Ramen

Sauce Satay

Sauce Rouleaux De Printemps

Roast Onion Gravy

Roadhouse Steak Sauce

Rendu Meal

Red Pepper Paste (Fermented Hot)
Top brands
Halal certifiers in this category
How we list halal products
Certifier-backed
Products with an active halal certificate from an Australian or internationally-recognised body — including HCA, ICCV, AFIC, HFSAA, MUI, and JAKIM — at the time of listing. Each product page links to the certifier and lists the certificate where we have evidence.
Brand-declared
Products whose manufacturer has confirmed halal compliance in writing — a public FAQ statement, a direct email reply, or a published ingredient sourcing document — without third-party certification. We keep the source of every brand declaration on file.
Community-corrected
Anyone can flag a product on its detail page if a label change, recipe update, or supplier shift breaks halal compliance. We review every report and update the listing once we can confirm the evidence.
What people ask about halal condiments
Plain answers to the questions we get from the community. If yours isn't here, every product page has space for a direct question to the listing.