Seven Seas fish oil and cod liver oil bottles and capsules

Is Seven Seas Halal? Liquid vs Softgel vs Gelatine Free (2026)

6 min read

You’re checking Seven Seas fish oil, and the answer depends entirely on which product is in front of you. This is a brand where the packaging format — liquid, standard capsule, or “Gelatine Free” capsule — determines the verdict more than anything else on the label.

The direct verdict: liquid and Gelatine Free products are halal-compatible. Standard softgel capsules are Mushbooh — bovine gelatin, source undisclosed.

Three Products, Three Answers

Liquid cod liver oil — no capsule shell at all, just fish oil taken by spoon. Nothing to check beyond the oil itself, which is straightforwardly halal; fish require no zabiha slaughter.

Gelatine Free capsules (including High Strength Pure Cod Liver Oil) — the shell is built from modified starch, glycerol, carrageenan, and disodium phosphate. No gelatine, animal or otherwise. This is a genuinely different formulation from the standard range, not just a marketing label — the ingredient panel backs it up.

Standard softgel capsules (Omega-3 Max Strength, One-A-Day Pure Cod Liver Oil, and most of the mainstream range) — the shell is bovine gelatin. Confirmed consistently across UK retailer listings. Beef gelatin is halal by consensus when the animal was zabiha-slaughtered — but Seven Seas, owned by Procter & Gamble, doesn’t publish that information, and there’s no halal certification to fill the gap.

Correcting a Claim You Might Have Seen

Some lower-quality sites claim Seven Seas capsules use fish gelatin. This isn’t supported by any verified source. Every manufacturer and retailer ingredient listing checked confirms bovine gelatin in the standard range — there is no fish-gelatin Seven Seas product currently sold. If you’ve read otherwise, that claim doesn’t hold up against the actual ingredient panels.

How to Choose

If you want a Seven Seas product without the gelatine question at all, two options exist within the brand’s own range:

  1. Liquid cod liver oil — the simplest, oldest format
  2. Gelatine Free capsules — same fish oil, a capsule format without the animal-sourcing ambiguity

If you’re already holding a standard softgel and want to keep it, there’s no way to resolve the sourcing question from the label alone — it comes down to whether you accept unconfirmed bovine gelatin as Mushbooh-acceptable or require certification.

Summary

QuestionAnswer
Is liquid Seven Seas halal?Yes — no capsule, no gelatine question
Is Gelatine Free halal?Yes — starch/carrageenan shell, no animal gelatine
Is standard softgel halal?Mushbooh — bovine gelatin, source undisclosed
Does it contain pork?No — confirmed bovine, not porcine
Is any Seven Seas product halal-certified?No

Look up gelatine and other additives in the E-codes database.

To scan a full ingredient list for halal status in seconds, use the ingredient scanner.

How we reached this verdict

We checked the following Tier-1 sources before publishing this verdict:

  • Manufacturer statements: Seven Seas’ official UK product pages and multiple independent retailer ingredient listings (British Essentials, Amazon UK), cross-checked for consistency across the liquid, Gelatine Free, and standard softgel lines.
  • Halal certification bodies (HMC, HFA, JAKIM, MUI): no certified-establishment listing exists for any Seven Seas product.
  • Sunni fatwa scholarship across the four madhabs:
    • Hanafi-leaning bodies: IslamQA Hanafi, Darul Iftaa Birmingham, AskImam.org, Daruliftaa.com (Mufti Taqi Usmani), Wifaqul Ulama, Darul Iftaa New York.
    • Shafi’i / Maliki-leaning bodies: NU (Nahdlatul Ulama, Indonesia), Dar al-Ifta al-Misriyyah (Egypt), e-fatwa.com (UAE), al-Azhar.
    • Hanbali / Saudi-Salafi-leaning bodies: Saudi Permanent Committee for Scholarly Research, IslamQA Saudi.

Madhab note

The four Sunni madhabs broadly converge on the rules applied in this guide:

  • Fish oil itself — Halal across all four madhabs; fish require no zabiha slaughter.
  • Beef gelatin from a zabiha-slaughtered animal — Halal by consensus.
  • Beef gelatin from an unconfirmed source — treated as a red flag requiring verification across all four madhabs; the cautious default in the absence of certification is Mushbooh rather than an assumed pass.
  • Non-gelatine capsule shells (starch, carrageenan) — Halal across all four madhabs; no animal-tissue question applies.

If your madhab differs on a specific ruling, the relevant section above flags the school-specific position. For binding rulings on borderline products, consult a competent scholar in your tradition.


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