Is Stimorol Halal? — HalalCodeCheck Brand Guide

Is Stimorol Halal?

⚠️ Mushbooh

Stimorol carries no halal certification and Mondelez makes no halal statement for it; the filled Splash/Sensations flavours contain gelatine of undisclosed origin and Jamiat-Ul-Ulama of Mauritius has ruled multiple Stimorol flavours impermissible. Plain variants (Original, Fresh Mint) are gelatine-free but use an undisclosed gum base — Mushbooh overall, with the filled variants best avoided entirely.

Country

Denmark

Product Types

Chewing gum, Sugar-free gum

Halal Certification

No halal certification on any Stimorol SKU. No public halal statement from Mondelez. A Sunni fatwa body (Jamiat-Ul-Ulama, Mauritius) lists several flavours as not halal.

Next Step

Verify the exact product

Stimorol may be questionable in some cases, so the safest path is to confirm the specific product and ingredient list.

Safer alternatives

Offer clean, halal-friendly substitutes while uncertain readers are still in decision mode.

Is Stimorol Halal?

The problem with Stimorol starts inside the filled pellets. The Splash / Sensations flavours (Strawberry Lime, Peach-Mango and similar) list gelatine on Dutch retail labels — with no source declared. Undisclosed gelatine in a European product line with no halal programme behind it has to be treated as impermissible. On top of that, Jamiat-Ul-Ulama of Mauritius — a recognised Sunni fatwa body — investigated Stimorol and ruled a list of flavours not halal, including Spearmint, Strawberry, Taste Twist and the Sensations range.

The plain variants (Original, Fresh Mint) are gelatine-free: maltitol, sorbitol, aspartame, gum base, colours. But “gum base” is a legally protected composite that can include stearates and glycerine of animal origin, and Mondelez — which owns Stimorol, effectively Trident’s European sister brand — publishes no halal statement for it. E470a (salts of fatty acids) in Fresh Mint is likewise undisclosed at source.

That combination — no certification, manufacturer silence, one fatwa body ruling against specific flavours, gelatine in the filled range — lands Stimorol at Mushbooh overall, with the filled Splash/Sensations variants firmly in the avoid column.

Key E-Codes in Stimorol Products

E-codeNameStatusNotes
E441GelatineHaram (as used here)In filled Splash/Sensations pellets; source undisclosed
E470Salts of Fatty AcidsMushboohIn Fresh Mint; plant or animal origin not declared
E171Titanium DioxideHalalMineral whitener; halal but banned in the EU as a food additive since 2022 — older stock may still list it

Which Stimorol Variants Should You Avoid?

  • Splash / Sensations filled gums — gelatine, undisclosed source — avoid.
  • Flavours named in the Mauritius fatwa (Spearmint, Berry Party, Strawberry, Taste Twist) — ruled not halal after that body’s own inquiry — avoid.
  • Original, Fresh Mint — gelatine-free but undisclosed gum base — Mushbooh; certified halal gums are the cleaner swap.

Summary

FactorDetails
Halal certificationNone
GelatineIn filled Splash/Sensations variants, source undisclosed
Gum baseComposition undisclosed (industry norm)
Fatwa positionJamiat-Ul-Ulama Mauritius: multiple flavours not halal
VerdictMushbooh (filled variants: avoid)

How we reached this verdict

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

  • Halal certification bodies (HMC, HFA, JAKIM, MUI, GCC): no Stimorol certification found in any market.
  • Manufacturer statements: no public halal statement from Mondelez for Stimorol; Dutch retail ingredient labels (Albert Heijn) are the primary ingredient source and show gelatine in the filled range.
  • Sunni fatwa scholarship: Jamiat-Ul-Ulama of Mauritius ruled several Stimorol flavours impermissible after direct research — the only Tier-1 fatwa-body position found on this brand.

Madhab note

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

  • Undisclosed-source gelatine — impermissible by default in the Hanafi mainstream; the other schools reach the same practical outcome by precaution.
  • Gum base and E470 of undisclosed origin — source-ambiguous; a vegetarian-suitability declaration would satisfy the mainstream rule, but none exists for Stimorol.

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