Getting BPJPH halal certification in Indonesia is no longer optional for most food, beverage, cosmetic, and consumer goods companies — Indonesia's Mandatory Halal Law (JPH Law) deadlines are in effect from October 2024 through 2026. But what does it actually cost?
This guide breaks down every fee you will encounter — government registration fees, LPH audit charges, consultant costs, and the hidden extras that catch companies off guard. We also compare Path A (standard audit) against Path B (MRA fast-track) so you can choose the most cost-efficient route for your business.
⚡ Quick Answer: Total halal certification costs in Indonesia typically range from USD 1,200 to USD 5,000 per certificate, depending on the path, product category, number of SKUs, and whether you use a consultant. Path B is 30–50% cheaper when available.
1. Cost Overview: What You Are Paying For
Halal certification in Indonesia involves three distinct cost layers. Understanding each one helps you avoid surprises and negotiate effectively with service providers.
🏛️ Government Fee
- Paid to BPJPH via SIHALAL
- Non-refundable
- Set by Government Regulation
- Varies by product category
🔬 LPH Audit Fee
- Paid to your chosen LPH
- Covers document review + site audit
- Varies by LPH and product type
- Not required for Path B
🤝 Consultant Fee
- Document preparation
- SIHALAL portal management
- LPH liaison & audit support
- Saves significant time
There are also indirect costs — document translation, labelling redesign, ingredient traceability setup, and internal staff time. We cover all of these below.
2. BPJPH Government Registration Fees
The BPJPH registration fee is set by Government Regulation (Peraturan Pemerintah) and is paid through the SIHALAL portal at the time of application submission. As of 2026, fees are structured by product category and business size.
| Product Category | Approx. Fee (IDR) | Approx. Fee (USD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Food & Beverage (simple) | IDR 300,000 – 600,000 | USD 18 – 38 | Per certificate application |
| Food & Beverage (complex / multi-ingredient) | IDR 600,000 – 1,200,000 | USD 38 – 75 | Includes sauces, ready meals, confectionery |
| Cosmetics & Personal Care | IDR 800,000 – 1,500,000 | USD 50 – 94 | Higher due to ingredient complexity |
| Pharmaceuticals & Supplements | IDR 1,200,000 – 2,500,000 | USD 75 – 156 | May require additional technical review |
| Household / Chemical Products | IDR 500,000 – 1,000,000 | USD 31 – 63 | Cleaning products, detergents |
| Restaurant / Food Service | IDR 300,000 – 800,000 | USD 18 – 50 | Per outlet / location |
💡 Micro and Small Enterprises (UMKM): Businesses registered as Micro or Small Enterprises (Usaha Mikro Kecil — UMK) under Indonesian law are entitled to free halal certification through a subsidised BPJPH scheme. This applies only to products manufactured in Indonesia. Foreign companies and importers do not qualify.
The government fee is just the starting point. For most overseas companies, the LPH audit fee and consultant charges represent the majority of total spend.
3. LPH Halal Audit Fees (Path A)
Under Path A — Standard LPH Audit, your products are assessed by an accredited Lembaga Pemeriksa Halal (LPH). The LPH conducts a document review and, where required, an on-site facility audit before issuing a fatwa recommendation to BPJPH.
LPH fees are set independently by each certifying body and are not regulated by BPJPH. This means prices vary and are negotiable, especially for large volumes or multi-year agreements.
| LPH / Certifier | Document Review Fee | On-Site Audit Fee | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| LPPOM MUI | USD 300 – 800 | USD 600 – 1,800 | F&B, cosmetics — longest established LPH |
| Sucofindo Halal | USD 250 – 700 | USD 500 – 1,500 | Industrial & chemical products |
| Surveyor Indonesia | USD 250 – 650 | USD 450 – 1,400 | Manufacturing, agro-processing |
| BPJPH-appointed LPH (regional) | USD 150 – 400 | USD 300 – 900 | Domestic SMEs; slower processing |
For overseas manufacturing facilities, the on-site audit fee often includes international travel and accommodation for the audit team, which can add USD 1,500–3,000 on top of the base audit fee, depending on location.
On-Site Audit: When Is It Required?
Not all Path A applications require an on-site facility visit. An on-site audit is typically required when:
- The product involves animal-derived ingredients (meat, gelatin, dairy)
- The manufacturing process has a high risk of cross-contamination
- The facility has not previously been audited by a BPJPH-recognised body
- The LPH cannot verify production practices from documents alone
Simple food, beverage, or cosmetic products with fully documented plant-based or synthetic ingredient supply chains often qualify for desktop review only, significantly reducing cost.
4. Path A vs Path B — Cost Comparison
For companies whose manufacturing country has a bilateral Mutual Recognition Agreement (MRA) with BPJPH, Path B offers a substantially lower-cost route to Indonesian halal certification.
| Cost Component | Path A (Standard) | Path B (MRA Fast-Track) |
|---|---|---|
| BPJPH Government Fee | IDR 300K – 2M+ | IDR 300K – 2M+ |
| LPH Audit Fee (document review) | USD 250 – 800 | Not required |
| On-Site Facility Audit | USD 500 – 2,500 (+ travel) | Not required |
| Foreign Halal Certificate (existing) | Not applicable | Existing cost (already paid) |
| MRA Certificate Legalisation | Not applicable | USD 100 – 400 |
| Consultant / Agent Fee | USD 500 – 1,500 | USD 400 – 1,000 |
| Total Estimated Range | USD 1,500 – 5,000+ | USD 800 – 2,500 |
| Typical Timeline | 3 – 6 months | 20 – 43 working days |
✅ Path B Savings: Companies eligible for Path B typically save USD 700–2,500 per certificate compared to Path A, and receive their certificate 2–4 months faster. If your country has an MRA agreement with BPJPH, Path B should be your first consideration.
Countries with confirmed BPJPH bilateral MRA agreements as of 2026 include Malaysia (JAKIM), UAE (ESMA), Saudi Arabia (SASO), Japan (JHFA), South Korea (KMF), Australia (AFIC), and several others. Contact us for a full current list.
5. Total Cost Estimates by Product Category
The table below shows indicative total cost ranges (government fee + LPH audit + consultant) for a single certificate application covering 1–5 SKUs in the same product line, using Path A:
| Product Type | Path A Total (USD) | Path B Total (USD) | Key Cost Driver |
|---|---|---|---|
| Packaged snacks / confectionery | USD 1,200 – 2,500 | USD 700 – 1,500 | Ingredient traceability |
| Beverages (non-alcoholic) | USD 1,200 – 2,200 | USD 700 – 1,400 | Flavouring source verification |
| Meat, poultry & seafood | USD 2,500 – 6,000 | USD 1,200 – 3,000 | On-site slaughter audit required |
| Sauces, condiments, ready meals | USD 1,500 – 3,000 | USD 900 – 1,800 | Multi-ingredient complexity |
| Cosmetics & personal care | USD 1,800 – 4,000 | USD 1,000 – 2,200 | Ingredient origin documentation |
| Supplements & nutraceuticals | USD 2,000 – 4,500 | USD 1,100 – 2,500 | Pharma-grade documentation |
| Household cleaning products | USD 1,200 – 2,500 | USD 700 – 1,500 | Chemical ingredient sourcing |
| Restaurant / F&B outlet | USD 800 – 2,000 | Not applicable | Per-outlet, kitchen audit required |
📦 Volume Discounts: If you have 10+ products or multiple product lines, LPHs and consultants typically offer bundle pricing. A single engagement covering 3 product categories may cost 30–40% less than three separate applications. Always ask for a bundle quote.
6. Hidden Costs: What Catches Companies Off Guard
The most common cause of budget overruns in halal certification projects is under-estimated indirect costs. Here is what to plan for beyond the headline fees:
Document Translation
All supporting documents submitted to BPJPH must be in Bahasa Indonesia or accompanied by a certified Indonesian translation. For companies with extensive ingredient specifications, supplier certificates, and SOP manuals, translation costs can be significant.
- Professional certified translation: IDR 100,000–250,000 per page (approx. USD 6–16)
- A typical dossier of 30–50 pages: USD 200–800 in translation alone
- Technical/scientific documents are priced at the higher end
Ingredient & Supply Chain Documentation
The LPH will require certificates of origin and halal status for every ingredient, including processing aids. If your suppliers have not previously provided halal documentation, obtaining these certificates — or substituting ingredients — takes time and may add cost.
- Budget 2–4 weeks and USD 200–600 for supply chain documentation
- Some ingredients may require third-party laboratory testing (USD 200–500 per test)
SIHALAL Account Setup & Portal Navigation
The SIHALAL portal requires a registered Indonesian business entity or a designated local representative to submit applications. If you do not have an Indonesian entity, you will need a local agent or consultant to manage the submission — this is typically included in standard consultant fees.
Halal Label Redesign
Once certified, your product must display the official BPJPH halal logo with certificate number on primary packaging. If your packaging was designed before applying, a redesign is almost always required.
- Packaging design update: USD 200–1,500 depending on complexity
- Printing plate changes: varies by manufacturer
- Plan 4–8 weeks for design, approval, and print production lead time
Annual Certificate Maintenance
BPJPH halal certificates are valid for 4 years but require an annual Halal Assurance System (HAS) review. The annual maintenance fee varies by LPH but is typically:
- Annual HAS review: USD 150–500 per year
- Surveillance audit (if required): USD 300–800
⚠️ Failure to maintain HAS compliance can lead to certificate suspension. Budget for annual maintenance costs from year one — they are mandatory, not optional.
Internal Staff Time
Even with a consultant managing the process, your team will need to provide documentation, answer technical queries, and coordinate with manufacturing. Realistically, budget 40–80 hours of internal staff time for a straightforward application, more for complex products.
7. Government Subsidies for Indonesian SMEs
BPJPH operates a Free Halal Certification Programme (Sertifikasi Halal Gratis — SEHATI) targeting Micro and Small Enterprises (UMK). Under this scheme, eligible Indonesian businesses can obtain halal certification at zero cost, with the government covering both the registration fee and the LPH audit fee.
Who Qualifies for SEHATI?
- Registered as UMK (Usaha Mikro Kecil) under Indonesian law
- Annual revenue below IDR 4.8 billion (Micro) or IDR 15 billion (Small)
- Products manufactured within Indonesia
- First-time applicants or renewals without violations
Foreign companies, importers, and medium-to-large enterprises do not qualify for SEHATI and must pay full commercial rates.
8. How to Reduce Your Halal Certification Costs
💡 Top 7 Cost-Reduction Strategies
- Use Path B if eligible — saves USD 700–2,500 and 2–4 months vs. Path A
- Group SKUs under one certificate — same facility + same ingredient base = single application
- Prepare documentation before engaging an LPH — reduces billable hours significantly
- Choose a domestic Indonesian LPH — eliminates international travel costs for auditors
- Select ingredients with existing halal certs — reduces supply chain documentation burden
- Bundle multi-year agreements with LPHs — negotiate annual maintenance into initial contract
- Engage a consultant for complex categories — avoids costly rejection and resubmission fees
Grouping Multiple SKUs
One of the most effective cost-reduction strategies is certificate grouping. BPJPH allows multiple products to be covered under a single halal certificate if they share:
- The same production facility (same address)
- The same production process and equipment
- A common ingredient base with only minor variations (e.g., different flavours)
A product line of 10 flavoured snacks from the same factory may qualify as a single certificate application rather than 10 separate ones — reducing government fees and LPH charges dramatically.
Desktop Review vs On-Site Audit
Push for a desktop review where possible. Submit your documentation package in complete, organised form — complete Technical Data Sheets (TDS), Material Safety Data Sheets (MSDS), ingredient source declarations, flow charts, and facility layout diagrams. An LPH that receives a well-organised dossier is more likely to approve desktop review, avoiding the cost of an on-site visit.
9. Renewal Costs — Year 4 and Beyond
BPJPH halal certificates have a 4-year validity period. Renewal requires:
| Renewal Component | Estimated Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| BPJPH renewal registration fee | Same as initial application fee | Paid via SIHALAL |
| LPH renewal audit | 50–70% of initial audit fee | Existing facility already known |
| Updated ingredient / supplier documentation | USD 100 – 400 | If suppliers have changed |
| Consultant renewal support | USD 300 – 800 | Optional but recommended |
| Total Renewal Estimate | 60–80% of initial cost | Renewal is faster and cheaper |
Renewal applications must be submitted at least 3 months before certificate expiry. Late renewal results in a gap in certification status, which can disrupt sales in the Indonesian market. Set a renewal reminder for 6 months before expiry to allow adequate preparation time.
10. Building Your Halal Certification Budget
Use this framework to build a realistic budget for your halal certification project:
For a Single Product Line (1–5 SKUs), Path A
- BPJPH government fee: USD 20–100
- LPH document review: USD 300–800
- LPH on-site audit (if required): USD 500–2,500
- Consultant fee: USD 500–1,200
- Document translation: USD 150–600
- Labelling redesign: USD 200–800
- Contingency (20%): USD 330–1,200
- Total: USD 2,000–7,200
For a Single Product Line (1–5 SKUs), Path B
- BPJPH government fee: USD 20–100
- MRA certificate legalisation: USD 100–400
- Consultant fee: USD 400–1,000
- Document translation: USD 100–400
- Labelling redesign: USD 200–800
- Contingency (20%): USD 165–540
- Total: USD 985–3,240
📋 Annual Maintenance Budget: After obtaining your certificate, budget USD 200–600 per year for HAS monitoring, annual LPH surveillance, and any SIHALAL portal maintenance. Include this in your ongoing market entry cost model for Indonesia.
11. Frequently Asked Questions
How much does BPJPH halal certification cost in Indonesia in 2026?
Total costs typically range from USD 1,200 to USD 5,000 for most product categories using Path A, or USD 800 to USD 2,500 using Path B (MRA fast-track, where eligible). Government registration fees alone are modest (USD 18–156), but LPH audit fees and consultant charges make up the bulk of the investment.
Is there a government fee for halal certification in Indonesia?
Yes. BPJPH charges a non-refundable registration fee paid through the SIHALAL portal. Fees are regulated by Government Regulation and range from approximately IDR 300,000 to IDR 2,500,000 depending on product category and application type.
What is cheaper — Path A or Path B?
Path B (MRA fast-track) is generally 30–50% cheaper than Path A and 2–4 months faster, because it eliminates the full LPH audit requirement. However, Path B is only available if your manufacturing country has a valid bilateral MRA agreement with BPJPH. Check if you qualify for Path B →
Do I need to pay separately for each product SKU?
Not necessarily. BPJPH allows grouping of multiple SKUs under a single certificate where products share the same production facility, ingredient base, and manufacturing process. Strategic SKU grouping is one of the most effective ways to reduce certification costs for companies with large product portfolios.
What are the hidden costs of halal certification?
The most common hidden costs are: certified document translation into Bahasa Indonesia, ingredient supply chain documentation, product laboratory testing, halal label redesign, SIHALAL portal management, and annual HAS maintenance fees. Budget an additional 20–30% on top of quoted fees to cover these.
12. Next Steps
Now that you understand the cost landscape, the most important next step is a free eligibility assessment. We review your product category, manufacturing location, existing certifications, and ingredient profile to recommend the most cost-efficient path — and provide a specific budget estimate for your situation.
Most assessments are completed within 24 hours. There is no obligation to proceed, and no payment is required at this stage.
✅ Free Cost Estimate: Submit your details via the form below and receive a personalised halal certification cost estimate for your product portfolio, including path recommendation and timeline, within 24 hours.