How to Find Halal Food in European Countries: A Practical Guide

How to Find Halal Food in European Countries: A Practical Guide

By CHI Recruiting Team · 2025-05-18

A comprehensive guide for Muslim workers from South Asia on finding halal meat, restaurants, and grocery options across major European destinations.

Halal Food Is More Accessible Than You Think

One of the top concerns for Muslim workers moving to Europe is finding halal food. The good news is that Europe's growing Muslim population — estimated at over 25 million — has created strong demand for halal products. In most major European cities and even many smaller towns, halal options are readily available if you know where to look.

Countries with the Best Halal Access

Where to Find Halal Food

Halal Butchers and Shops

Most European cities with any Muslim population will have dedicated halal butcher shops. Use Google Maps and search for "halal butcher" or "halal market" near your location. Apps like HalalTrip, Zabihah, and Halal Navi also provide directories of halal establishments.

Supermarket Options

Major European supermarkets increasingly stock halal-certified products:

Turkish and Middle Eastern Markets

These are your best friends in Europe. Turkish supermarket chains like Tanger Markt, Istanbul Supermarkt, or Marwa carry halal meat, South Asian spices, and familiar food brands. They are found in most German, Dutch, Belgian, and Austrian cities.

Cooking at Home

If your worker accommodation has a shared kitchen, cooking your own meals is the most reliable way to ensure your food is halal. Stock up on staples from halal shops: chicken, lamb, rice, lentils, and spices. Many workers organize group cooking sessions on weekends, which is also great for fighting homesickness.

Dining Out Safely

When eating at non-halal restaurants, look for seafood or vegetarian options as safe alternatives. Many European restaurants now label halal items on their menus. When in doubt, ask the staff directly.

Contact us to learn about halal food availability in your specific destination country.

What this guide covers

This guide focuses on How to Find Halal Food in European Countries: A Practical Guide. A comprehensive guide for Muslim workers from South Asia on finding halal meat, restaurants, and grocery options across major European destinations. The sections below translate that framing into concrete steps, common mistakes from workers who walked this path before you, and a checklist you can run through in one sitting before deciding on next moves.

Why this matters now

Relocation is the part of the process where well-prepared workers thrive and unprepared ones lose money. The blocks below cover what to plan before flight, what to handle in the first 7 days on the ground, and the financial mistakes most newcomers make in month one.

The Europe-wide context

Across our placement network — currently 13 European countries spanning from Denmark in the north to Albania and Montenegro on the Adriatic — the underlying pattern for international blue-collar workers is consistent: 12-month entry contracts, accommodation typically included, salaries from €1,500 to €4,300/month depending on country and sector, with renewal and residency milestones aligned to a 5-year arc.

What varies most across countries is processing speed (Poland and Serbia among the fastest at 4-6 weeks; Italy and Vietnam-origin applications among the slowest at 12-16), cost of living (Bulgaria and Albania among the lowest; Denmark and France among the highest), and the path to permanent residency (clear and well-supported in Germany, Denmark, Czech Republic; less defined in non-EU destinations like Turkey).

Step-by-step breakdown

  1. Step 1. Two weeks before departure: confirm passport validity (18+ months recommended), print all documents in duplicate, pack a 7-day clothing kit appropriate to the destination season.
  2. Step 2. Day of arrival: keep cash to cover 7 days, transit pass, charged phone with destination SIM ready, and the employer or recruiter's emergency contact saved.
  3. Step 3. Days 1-3: register at the local residency office, open a bank account (most employers require an IBAN before first paycheck), set up healthcare registration where applicable.
  4. Step 4. Days 4-14: apply for tax number, local mobile contract, residency card. Forward your home-country mail to a trusted contact who can scan and send.
  5. Step 5. Days 15-30: build local reference points — a doctor, a grocery store, a transport route, a community centre. The first 30 days set the next 12 months' rhythm.

Common pitfalls and how to avoid them

Frequently asked questions

How quickly can I bring my family?

Family reunification typically requires 12-24 months of continuous employment plus proof of housing capacity. Some countries (Denmark, Germany) move faster than others (Italy, France) on processing.

What about driving — can I use my home-country license?

In the EU, most non-EU licenses are valid for 6 months from arrival, after which you need an EU license. Many workers do not need a car (employer-provided shuttle or public transport handle the commute), but plan ahead if your role requires driving.

Will my employer pick me up at the airport?

Many partner employers do — especially for first-time international workers — and CHI Recruiting confirms this in advance. If not, the recruiter provides written instructions for the airport-to-accommodation transfer (train, taxi, prepaid bus).

How much money should I bring on day one?

Cash equivalent to €500-800 for the first 14 days (transit, food, basic SIM). More than €10,000 must be declared at EU borders. Most expenses can be paid by card once your local bank account opens (typically within the first 7 days).

Do I need to bring my own bedding/cookware?

Most employer-provided accommodation comes furnished with bed, bedding, basic kitchen, washing machine. Personal items (toiletries, prayer mat, small electronics with EU plug adapter) are worth packing.

Action checklist

Resources to bookmark

Glossary of terms you will see

Related guides

Looking for a specific role aligned with this guide? Browse open positions at CHI Recruiting — every job page lists the country-specific salary, contract length, and onboarding details so you can match this guide to live opportunities. Reference: BLOG-FINDING-HALAL-FOOD-EUROP.

Read the live article: https://chirecruiting.com/blog/finding-halal-food-european-countries-guide