Clear, source-backed guidance to help you make an informed choice.
Partly — many Häagen-Dazs products sold in Singapore are halal-certified, but some flavours contain alcohol (e.g. Baileys, Rum Raisin) and are not. Check the specific tub or item's packaging for the halal mark, and verify on MUIS HalalSG.
Partly — many Häagen-Dazs products sold in Singapore are halal-certified, but some flavours contain alcohol (e.g. Baileys, Rum Raisin) and are not. Check the specific tub or item's packaging for the halal mark, and verify on MUIS HalalSG.
Only specific outlets or products — not the whole brand. Check the answer above for the covered scope, and confirm the exact outlet or product on the MUIS HalalSG register before buying.
No. MUIS certification is issued per premises or per product line. An uncertified outlet of the same brand may use different ingredients, suppliers or kitchens.
Search for Häagen-Dazs on the official MUIS HalalSG register at halal.muis.gov.sg, or look for a valid MUIS halal certificate displayed at the outlet. A “no pork, no lard” sign is self-declared and is not the same as MUIS halal certification.
Some brands hold MUIS halal certification for specific outlets, product lines or manufacturing facilities — but not for the whole chain. Buying from a certified outlet, or a product carrying the halal mark, is covered; the rest of the brand is not.
This is the status that most rewards double-checking: the same brand name can be halal-certified in one mall and uncertified in the next. Match the exact outlet or product against the MUIS HalalSG register before you buy.