CICOT halal certification
The Central Islamic Council of Thailand (CICOT) is the country's only government-recognized halal certification body.
Overview
The Central Islamic Council of Thailand (CICOT) is the country's only government-recognized halal certification body. A CICOT seal — a green diamond with Arabic script around 'halal' — is what distinguishes a venue that has passed a real audit from one that simply self-declares 'muslim-friendly'. Understanding the difference matters: CICOT-certified products are recognized by Malaysia's JAKIM and Indonesia's MUI under bilateral agreements, while self-declared 'muslim-friendly' labels carry no equivalent guarantee.
What CICOT audits
Certification covers the full supply chain — ingredient sourcing, supplier halal status, transportation, storage conditions, kitchen layout (separation from non-halal), staff handling protocols, and even cleaning agents. Restaurants are audited annually; manufacturers more frequently. Each certificate has a unique ID and an expiry date and is verifiable on halal.or.th.
CICOT vs. self-declared 'muslim-friendly'
A 'muslim-friendly' label is marketing language. It can mean anything from 'we have a vegetarian menu' to 'we use halal chicken from a halal supplier'. CICOT means 'we passed an audit by a state-recognized authority within the last 12-24 months'. In Thailand both labels exist side by side; only one is legally substantiated.
International recognition
Through bilateral MoUs, CICOT certification is accepted by Malaysia's JAKIM, Indonesia's MUI, Singapore's MUIS, and several GCC authorities. This means a CICOT-certified restaurant in Bangkok is considered halal-compliant by official bodies in those countries — important for tourists and for Thai food exports.
Why some good halal places skip certification
Annual audit fees + the documentation burden mean some small family-run halal restaurants — especially in muslim-majority areas like Pattani or Krabi — don't bother with the certificate. The food can still be entirely halal. Our Trust Score blends the official certificate signal with cross-source community verification (Reddit threads, Naver blogs, Pantip discussions) precisely to surface these places.
Key takeaways
- Green diamond + Arabic 'halal' = the real certificate; verify cert ID on halal.or.th
- CICOT is recognized internationally (JAKIM / MUI / MUIS / GCC)
- 'Muslim-friendly' alone is a marketing label, not an audit
- Uncertified family-run halal places can still be legitimate — check cross-source signals
§References
- [1]Central Islamic Council of ThailandOfficial body
- [2]JAKIM Malaysia halal recognition listGovernment of Malaysia
- [3]BPJPH Indonesia MUI certification bodyGovernment of Indonesia
§See also
- 🌙 Ramadan in Thailand— What changes during the holy month
- 🍽 Iftar buffets in Bangkok— Top hotel & restaurant iftar tables
- 🛫 Prayer rooms at Thai airports— Suvarnabhumi · Don Mueang · Phuket · Krabi
- 🤝 Muslim travel etiquette in Thailand— What to expect, what to ask, what to bring
- 📚 All wiki entries— browse the index