Picking up a bag of gummy bears in Australia should be simple. It is not. Most mainstream gummy and jelly sweets in Australian supermarkets contain pork-derived gelatine — including several brands that look completely innocent on the shelf. With around 800,000 Muslims in Australia, this matters.
This guide covers every major gummy sweet brand available in Australia in 2026, ranked from fully certified halal to confirmed Haram, so you can shop with confidence.
Why Gelatine Is the Key Issue
Nearly every chewy or gummy sweet gets its texture from E441 — gelatine. Gelatine is a protein extracted from animal connective tissue. The problem: it is most cheaply and commonly produced from pork.
Pork-derived gelatine is Haram. Beef gelatine is halal only if the animal was slaughtered according to Islamic requirements. Fish gelatine is generally considered halal.
When a brand lists “gelatine” on the label without specifying the source, you cannot assume it is halal. You need to see a certification from a recognised body — in Australia, that is primarily AFIC (Australian Federation of Islamic Councils).
Two other additives to watch for in colourful sweets:
- E120 (carmine) — a red dye made from crushed beetles. Classified as Haram by most Islamic scholars. Found in some red and pink sweets.
- E471 (mono- and diglycerides of fatty acids) — can be animal or plant-derived. Classified as Mushbooh (uncertain) unless the source is confirmed.
For a deeper look at gummy sweets in general, see our guide on are gummy bears halal?
Brand-by-Brand Breakdown
Natural Confectionery Company (NCC) — Halal Certified
Status: Halal (AFIC certified)
NCC is the single best mainstream option for Australian Muslims buying gummy sweets. The brand holds AFIC halal certification, meaning the gelatine used meets Islamic dietary requirements and the certification is audited by a recognised body.
You will find NCC at most Woolworths and Coles stores — it is one of the top-selling confectionery brands in the country. The range includes Party Animals, Snakes Alive, Sour Worms, and a wide variety of bags and share packs.
If you are shopping at a mainstream supermarket and need halal gummies, NCC is the go-to.
Bebeto — Halal Certified
Status: Halal (Turkish halal certification)
Bebeto is a Turkish brand with halal certification and a wide range of gummy sweets, fizzy belts, and marshmallows. Bebeto uses bovine (beef) gelatine from halal-certified sources.
Availability in Australia is patchy — you are most likely to find Bebeto at halal grocery stores, some Coles stores in areas with large Muslim communities, and through online halal sweet retailers.
The range is extensive and the sweets are genuinely good — if you have a Bebeto stockist nearby, it is worth stocking up.
SweetZone — Halal Certified
Status: Halal (UK halal certification)
SweetZone is a UK brand that is halal-certified and well-regarded in Muslim communities. In Australia it is primarily stocked at halal grocery shops rather than mainstream supermarkets.
If you are looking for pick-and-mix style variety or halal sweets for an event, SweetZone products are a reliable choice where available. For more options like this, see our best halal gummy sweets online 2026 guide.
Allen’s Lollies (Nestlé Australia) — Not Halal Certified
Status: Mushbooh / Not Recommended
Allen’s is an Australian institution — but it does not hold halal certification. Nestlé Australia has not certified Allen’s products with AFIC or any other recognised halal body for the Australian market.
Most Allen’s products contain gelatine with no confirmed halal source. Until Nestlé Australia obtains formal certification, Allen’s lollies should be treated as Mushbooh (uncertain) at best, and avoided if you require certified halal sweets.
Haribo (Australia) — Haram
Status: Haram — pork gelatine confirmed
Haribo is one of the most recognised gummy sweet brands in the world, but the product sold in Australia is imported from Germany and uses pork-derived gelatine. There is no halal version of standard Haribo available in Australian mainstream retail.
Haribo is Haram. This is not ambiguous — pork gelatine is explicitly listed in their ingredient formulation for the European market product that reaches Australian shelves.
Maynards Bassetts (Mondelez) — Not Halal Certified
Status: Mushbooh / Not Recommended
Maynards Bassetts products sold in Australia are not halal-certified. The brand is owned by Mondelez and, like Allen’s, does not carry AFIC or equivalent certification for the Australian market. Treat as Mushbooh.
Coles Own-Brand Confectionery — Check Label
Status: Mushbooh — check individually
Coles own-brand jelly and gummy sweets vary by product line. Some may be produced by NCC or another certified manufacturer; others may not be. Always check the label for a halal certification logo rather than assuming. For more supermarket guidance, see our halal shopping at Coles Australia guide.
Quick Reference Table
| Brand | Halal Status | Certifier | Availability |
|---|---|---|---|
| Natural Confectionery Co (NCC) | Halal | AFIC | Woolworths, Coles |
| Bebeto | Halal | Turkish cert | Halal grocers, some Coles |
| SweetZone | Halal | UK halal cert | Halal grocers |
| Allen’s Lollies | Mushbooh | None | Woolworths, Coles |
| Coles Own-Brand | Mushbooh | Check label | Coles |
| Maynards Bassetts | Mushbooh | None | Woolworths, Coles |
| Haribo | Haram | N/A — pork gelatine | Woolworths, Coles, IGA |
E-Codes to Watch on Gummy Sweet Labels
When buying any gummy or jelly sweet — even from a brand not listed here — scan the ingredients list for these codes:
- E441 (Gelatine) — must be from a halal-certified bovine or fish source. Pork gelatine is Haram. No source listed = Mushbooh.
- E120 (Carmine / Cochineal) — beetle-derived red dye. Haram.
- E471 (Mono- and diglycerides) — fatty acid derivatives. Mushbooh unless plant or certified halal animal source confirmed.
FAQ
Is NCC the only halal gummy brand at Woolworths and Coles?
In most stores, yes. NCC is the primary AFIC-certified gummy brand stocked in mainstream Australian supermarkets. Bebeto appears in some Coles stores in higher-Muslim-density suburbs, but availability is not consistent nationwide.
Can I trust a product just because it says “no artificial colours”?
No. “No artificial colours” relates to synthetic dyes — it says nothing about gelatine source or halal certification. Always look for the AFIC certification logo or check the brand’s official halal status.
Are Sour Patch Kids halal in Australia?
Sour Patch Kids (Mondelez) are not halal-certified in Australia. The formulation for the Australian market should be independently verified before consuming.
What should I look for on the label?
Look for the AFIC halal logo, or another recognised certification mark. If you see “gelatine” listed with no certification and no source specified, treat the product as Mushbooh.
Summary
For Australian Muslims buying gummy sweets in 2026, the picture is clearer than in many other countries — but only because one brand stands out:
Natural Confectionery Company (NCC) is your default choice at Woolworths and Coles. It is AFIC-certified, widely available, and covers most gummy sweet occasions.
For variety, Bebeto and SweetZone are excellent halal-certified alternatives available at halal grocery stores.
Avoid Haribo — it uses pork gelatine and is Haram. Treat Allen’s, Maynards, and uncertified Coles own-brand products as Mushbooh until they obtain formal certification.
When in doubt, check the label for the AFIC logo and verify E441’s source. A little label-reading goes a long way.
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