Are M&M's halal?
M&M's contain no gelatin, but the colourful shell is coated with shellac (E904), an insect-derived glazing agent, and some flavours have historically used carmine (E120). With no halal certification on most packs, M&M's are best treated as doubtful unless the specific pack is certified.
The good news first: standard M&M's β milk chocolate, peanut, crispy β do not contain gelatin or any pork product. The chocolate, sugar, milk and most colourings are not in themselves problematic, so the everyday assumption that βM&M's must contain gelatin like other sweetsβ is simply wrong.
The real question is the glossy candy shell. To get that hard, shiny coat, Mars uses glazing agents β typically carnauba wax (a plant wax, halal) and shellac (E904). Shellac is a resin secreted by the lac insect and harvested from tree branches. Scholars differ on it: many permit it as a purified resin rather than insect flesh, while others avoid it because of residual insect matter and the alcohol sometimes used as its solvent. That genuine difference is the main reason M&M's land in the doubtful column rather than clearly halal.
A second, smaller concern is colour. Most M&M's colours are synthetic dyes, but red shades in confectionery can come from carmine (E120), a pigment made from crushed cochineal insects, which is itself disputed. Mars's recipes vary by country and change over time, so a colour that is synthetic in one market may not be in another.
Finally, the brand carries no halal certification in most Western markets, and Mars's own consumer guidance generally describes M&M's as not certified or recommended as halal. So unless you are holding a pack with a recognised halal logo, the honest verdict is mashbΕ«h: probably free of pork, but reliant on insect-derived shellac and uncertified. If you follow the view that shellac is permissible you may be comfortable; if you avoid insect derivatives, you would treat them as off-limits.
What to check on the label
- Look for βglazing agentβ, βshellacβ or βE904β on the pack β present on most M&M's.
- Red/pink varieties: check for βcarmineβ, βcochinealβ or βE120β.
- A recognised halal-certification logo overrides the above β halal.
- Carnauba wax (E903) on its own is a plant wax and halal.
- Recipes differ by country β verify the pack from your own market, not a photo from elsewhere.
A note on schools of thought
The decisive issue is shellac (E904). One body of scholarship treats it as a pure resin β a secretion, like honey or beeswax, not the insect itself β and therefore permissible after purification. Another, often more cautious of insect derivatives, advises avoiding it, especially where alcohol-based solvents are involved. There is no single binding ruling, so practising Muslims reasonably reach different conclusions on M&M's depending on which position they follow.
Read our complete guide: how to tell if food is halal