What Is Zakat? A Complete Guide to Calculating Zakat

Updated March 2026 · 8 min read

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Zakat is one of the Five Pillars of Islam—an obligatory annual charitable payment that purifies a Muslim's wealth and supports those in need. It is not a voluntary donation; it is a religious duty for every Muslim whose net assets exceed a minimum threshold called the nisab.

Zakat in the Context of the Five Pillars

The Five Pillars of Islam are the foundational practices every Muslim is expected to observe:

  1. Shahada — Declaration of faith
  2. Salah — Five daily prayers
  3. Zakat — Obligatory almsgiving (2.5% of qualifying wealth)
  4. Sawm — Fasting during Ramadan
  5. Hajj — Pilgrimage to Makkah (once in a lifetime, if able)

Zakat is the third pillar, emphasizing that wealth is a trust from Allah and that a portion belongs to those less fortunate. The word "zakat" itself comes from the Arabic root meaning "to purify" and "to grow."

The Nisab Threshold

You are only required to pay zakat if your net zakatable assets (assets minus liabilities) meet or exceed the nisab—the minimum wealth threshold—for one full lunar year (hawl).

The nisab is defined in Islamic law as the value of either:

Because gold and silver prices fluctuate, the nisab value in dollars changes daily. As of early 2026:

Most scholars recommend using the silver nisab because it sets a lower threshold, meaning more people qualify to pay zakat, which benefits a larger number of recipients. Check the current nisab value with our nisab calculator.

The 2.5% Rate

Once your net zakatable assets exceed the nisab and you have held that wealth for one lunar year, you owe 2.5% (one-fortieth) of the total zakatable amount.

Zakat Due = Total Zakatable Assets × 0.025

For example, if your net zakatable assets total $50,000, your zakat is $50,000 × 0.025 = $1,250.

What Assets Are Zakatable?

Not all wealth is subject to zakat. The general principle is that zakat applies to productive or liquid wealth that has been held for a full year, not to personal-use items.

Zakatable (Include) Not Zakatable (Exclude)
Cash in bank accounts and on hand Primary residence (home you live in)
Gold and silver (bullion, coins, jewelry not regularly worn) Personal clothing and household furniture
Stocks, mutual funds, and investment accounts Personal vehicle used for transportation
Business inventory and merchandise Tools and equipment used for work
Rental income and investment property equity Debts owed to you that are unlikely to be repaid
Money owed to you (collectible debts) Retirement accounts (401k/IRA) — scholars differ; many say only on accessible portion
Cryptocurrency holdings Personal jewelry regularly worn (some scholars differ)

For gold specifically, use the zakat on gold calculator to determine the exact amount based on current gold prices and weight.

Step-by-Step: How to Calculate Your Zakat

  1. Set your zakat date. Choose a consistent date each lunar year (many use 1st Ramadan) to assess your wealth.
  2. Total your zakatable assets. Add up cash, savings, investments, gold/silver, business inventory, and collectible debts.
  3. Subtract your current liabilities. Deduct bills due within the month, outstanding debts, and other immediate financial obligations. Do not subtract long-term debts like a mortgage (only the current month's payment).
  4. Check the nisab. If your net zakatable wealth is below the nisab, you do not owe zakat this year.
  5. Multiply by 2.5%. If your net wealth meets or exceeds the nisab, your zakat is 2.5% of the total net zakatable amount.

Worked Example

Fatima calculates her zakat on 1st Ramadan. Her assets:

AssetAmount
Cash in savings account$15,000
Checking account$3,200
Stock portfolio$22,000
Gold jewelry (not regularly worn, 50g)$4,500
Money owed to her by a friend$2,000
Total Zakatable Assets$46,700

Liabilities due this month: $1,200 (rent) + $300 (credit card) = $1,500

Net zakatable wealth: $46,700 − $1,500 = $45,200

Nisab check: $45,200 > $625 (silver nisab) — zakat is due

Zakat owed: $45,200 × 2.5% = $1,130

When to Pay Zakat

Zakat vs. Zakat al-Fitr

Zakat al-Fitr (also called Fitrana) is a separate, smaller obligation paid at the end of Ramadan before the Eid prayer. Key differences:

Calculate your Fitrana with the Zakat al-Fitr calculator.

Who Receives Zakat?

The Quran specifies eight categories of eligible recipients (Surah At-Tawbah 9:60):

  1. Al-Fuqara — The poor
  2. Al-Masakin — The needy
  3. Amil Zakat — Zakat administrators
  4. Mu'allafat al-Quloob — Those whose hearts are to be reconciled
  5. Ar-Riqab — Those in bondage (freeing captives)
  6. Al-Gharimin — Those in debt
  7. Fi Sabilillah — In the cause of Allah
  8. Ibn as-Sabil — The stranded traveler

Key Takeaways

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Related tools: Zakat Calculator · Nisab Calculator · Zakat on Gold Calculator · Zakat al-Fitr Calculator