بِسْمِ ٱللَّهِ ٱلرَّحْمَـٰنِ ٱلرَّحِيمِ
Fulfil your obligation with confidence. Calculate your Zakat accurately based on authentic Islamic rulings.
Calculate NowAnswer each step to determine your Zakat obligation
Zakat is obligatory if you are a Muslim and your wealth has been at or above the Nisab threshold for one full lunar year (Hawl ≈ 354 days).
Include all cash in hand, bank balances, and any money owed to you that you expect to receive.
Include all gold and silver you own — jewellery, coins, bars, etc. Enter either the weight in grams or the current market value.
Include the current market value of stocks, crypto assets, and any merchandise you hold for trade/resale.
Deduct any debts you owe and bills that are immediately due. These reduce your net zakatable wealth.
The third pillar of Islam
Zakat is an obligatory act of charity that purifies your wealth. It is one of the five pillars of Islam and requires Muslims to give 2.5% of their qualifying wealth to those in need each year.
Nisab is the minimum threshold of wealth a Muslim must possess before Zakat becomes obligatory. It is based on the value of 87.48g of gold or 612.36g of silver. Most scholars recommend using the silver standard.
Hawl refers to one full lunar year (~354 days). You must have held wealth at or above the Nisab threshold for one entire Hawl before Zakat becomes due on it.
Your personal home, car, clothing, household furniture, and tools of your trade are not subject to Zakat. Only wealth held for savings, investment, or trade is zakatable.
Zakat is due when: (1) you are Muslim, (2) the wealth type is zakatable, (3) you have full ownership, (4) it reaches the Nisab, and (5) one Hawl has passed.
Zakat is distributed to eight categories of recipients mentioned in the Quran (9:60), including the poor, the needy, those in debt, and travellers in need.