Online zakat calculator

Zakat Calculator

Calculate your annual Zakat on gold, silver, cash, savings, investments & business assets

Silver Standard (Nisab)
Gold Standard (Nisab)
Gold & Silver Holdings
Rs
Rs
Cash, Savings & Investments
Rs
Rs
Rs
Rs
Rs
Rs
Rs 0
Zakat Payable (2.5% of Zakatable Wealth)
Total Assets
Rs 0
Total Liabilities
Rs 0
Net Zakatable Wealth
Rs 0
Nisab Threshold
Rs 0

Use the Zakat calculator above to determine your annual Zakat obligation on gold, silver, cash, savings, investments, and business assets — instantly and accurately. Select your preferred currency from 13 supported options (Pakistani Rupee, US Dollar, British Pound, Euro, Saudi Riyal, UAE Dirham, Indian Rupee, Malaysian Ringgit, Bangladeshi Taka, Canadian Dollar, Australian Dollar, Kuwaiti Dinar, or Qatari Riyal), choose between Silver Standard (Nisab) and Gold Standard (Nisab), enter your gold/silver holdings with current market prices, then add your cash, bank balances, investments, business assets, and any debts you owe. The tool instantly delivers your total Zakatable wealth, the applicable Nisab threshold, and your exact Zakat payable (2.5%). Whether you’re a salaried professional, business owner, investor, or homemaker, this free online Zakat calculator ensures you fulfil one of the Five Pillars of Islam with confidence and precision.

Muslim person calculating annual Zakat on gold silver cash and investments using calculator

Below you will find a complete guide to using the Zakat calculator, an explanation of Nisab and how it’s determined, the assets included and excluded from Zakat, a worked example, common questions about Zakat, and trusted external resources from Islamic Relief, NZF, and Islamic Finance Guru.

How to Use the Zakat Calculator

The Zakat calculator is structured around the four major categories of zakatable wealth so you can capture everything in one place — gold & silver, cash & savings, investments & business assets, and liabilities.

  1. Select Currency: Choose your local currency from the dropdown. The 13 supported currencies are listed in the table below.
  2. Choose Nisab Standard: Tap Silver Standard (Nisab) (recommended by most scholars because it’s the lower threshold and benefits more recipients) or Gold Standard (Nisab) (used by some traditional Hanafi opinions for cash wealth).
  3. Enter Gold & Silver Holdings: Add the total grams of gold and silver you own, then enter the current local market price per gram for both. The calculator will compute the monetary value automatically. Check current prices from your local jeweller or sources like Gold Price India or Forex Live.
  4. Enter Cash, Savings & Investments: Fill in your Cash in Hand, Bank Account Balance, Stocks/Investments/Crypto, Business/Trade Assets, and Money Owed to You (any loans you’ve given that are likely to be repaid).
  5. Enter Debts & Liabilities: Add all immediate debts you owe — short‑term loans, unpaid bills, outstanding credit, etc. These reduce your zakatable wealth.
  6. Click “Calculate Zakat”: The Zakat calculator instantly shows your Total Assets, Total Liabilities, Net Zakatable Wealth, the applicable Nisab Threshold, and your Zakat Payable (2.5%).
  7. Click “Reset” to clear all fields and run a fresh calculation.

Supported Currencies in the Zakat Calculator

The Zakat calculator supports the following 13 currencies, covering the majority of the global Muslim community across South Asia, the Middle East, Southeast Asia, Europe, and the Americas:

SymbolCurrencyRegion
RsPakistani RupeePakistan
$US DollarUnited States, global
£British PoundUnited Kingdom
EuroEurozone
SARSaudi RiyalSaudi Arabia
AEDUAE DirhamUnited Arab Emirates
Indian RupeeIndia
RMMalaysian RinggitMalaysia
Bangladeshi TakaBangladesh
C$Canadian DollarCanada
A$Australian DollarAustralia
KWDKuwaiti DinarKuwait
QARQatari RiyalQatar
Pro Tip: Calculate your Zakat on the same Islamic (Hijri) date every year — many Muslims use the 1st of Ramadan or the last day of Ramadan as their personal “Zakat Day”. Setting a recurring date keeps your obligation consistent and easier to track.

What Is Zakat? — A Quick Overview

Zakat (الزكاة) is one of the Five Pillars of Islam, alongside Shahada (faith), Salah (prayer), Sawm (fasting in Ramadan), and Hajj (pilgrimage). It is a mandatory annual charity equal to 2.5% of an eligible Muslim’s surplus wealth held for one full lunar (Hijri) year above the Nisab threshold. The word Zakat literally means “purification” and “growth” — purifying one’s wealth and helping it grow through divine blessing.

Zakat is distributed to specific categories of recipients defined in the Quran (Surah At‑Tawbah 9:60), including the poor, the needy, debtors, travellers in distress, and those working to administer Zakat itself. Read more about the obligation and its categories on Islamic Relief Worldwide and the National Zakat Foundation.

Open Quran with prayer beads representing Islamic obligation of Zakat charity

Understanding Nisab — The Minimum Threshold

Nisab is the minimum amount of wealth a Muslim must own before Zakat becomes obligatory. The Prophet Muhammad ﷺ established two standards:

  • Silver Nisab: 612.36 grams of silver (or its monetary equivalent)
  • Gold Nisab: 87.48 grams of gold (or its monetary equivalent)

Because silver and gold prices fluctuate independently, the two Nisab values often differ significantly today. Most contemporary scholars — including the National Zakat Foundation (UK) and Islamic Relief — recommend the Silver Standard because it’s typically the lower threshold and ensures more Muslims qualify to pay Zakat, increasing charity flow to those in need.

Important: Nisab is based on current local gold and silver prices, which change daily. The Zakat calculator requires you to enter the current per‑gram price so the calculation reflects today’s actual market. Verify prices on the day you calculate.

The Zakat Formula

Zakat Payable = (Total Zakatable Assets − Total Liabilities) × 2.5%

Or in more detail:

Net Wealth = (Gold + Silver + Cash + Bank + Investments + Business + Loans Receivable) − Debts
If Net Wealth ≥ Nisab → Zakat = Net Wealth × 0.025

The 2.5% rate has been the standard rate of Zakat on monetary wealth since the time of the Prophet ﷺ — a remarkably small percentage that, when applied universally, has the power to eliminate poverty across the Muslim Ummah.

Worked Example — A Typical Family’s Zakat

Let’s calculate Zakat for a family using approximate values (replace with your current numbers and currency):

Asset / LiabilityAmount (Rs)
Gold: 50 grams × Rs 30,000/gRs 1,500,000
Silver: 100 grams × Rs 350/gRs 35,000
Cash in HandRs 50,000
Bank BalanceRs 400,000
Stocks / Mutual FundsRs 200,000
Money Owed to YouRs 25,000
Total AssetsRs 2,210,000
Short‑term Debts You Owe(Rs 50,000)
Net Zakatable WealthRs 2,160,000
Zakat Payable (2.5%)Rs 54,000

Total Assets

Rs 2,210,000

Total Liabilities

Rs 50,000

Net Wealth

Rs 2,160,000

Zakat Payable

Rs 54,000

Note on number formatting: The calculator displays values in international (Western) comma format — e.g., Rs 1,500,000 rather than the South Asian lakh format Rs 15,00,000. Both represent the same value (one and a half million).

Which Assets Are Zakatable?

✅ Assets That Count Toward Zakat

  • Gold & Silver — Jewellery, coins, bars, ornaments (regardless of personal use, according to most scholars)
  • Cash — At home, in your wallet, or in any form
  • Bank Accounts — Savings, current accounts, fixed deposits, and recurring deposits
  • Investments — Stocks, mutual funds, ETFs, Sukuk bonds, retirement accounts (where accessible)
  • Cryptocurrencies — Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other crypto assets at market value
  • Business Inventory — Stock held for resale, raw materials, finished goods
  • Money Owed to You — Loans you’ve given that are likely to be repaid
  • Pension Funds — Generally Zakatable on the accessible portion (rules vary by scholar)

❌ Assets That Are NOT Zakatable

  • Your primary residence (the house you live in)
  • Personal vehicles for daily use
  • Household furniture and appliances
  • Personal clothing
  • Tools used for your profession (e.g., a plumber’s tools, a surgeon’s instruments)
  • Land or property used personally (not for trade or rental)
Special note: Rental properties — the rental income is Zakatable as cash, but the property itself is generally not (it’s a productive asset like a tool, according to mainstream scholars). Always consult a qualified Islamic scholar for complex situations.

The 8 Categories of Zakat Recipients (Asnaf)

The Quran in Surah At‑Tawbah (9:60) specifies exactly 8 categories of people who can receive Zakat:

#CategoryDescription
1Al‑FuqaraThe poor — those who have very little
2Al‑MasakinThe needy — those who have nothing
3Al‑AmilinZakat administrators and collectors
4Mu’allafat al‑QulubNew Muslims and those whose hearts need reconciling
5Ar‑RiqabFreeing captives or those in bondage
6Al‑GhariminThose in debt and unable to repay
7Fi SabilillahIn the cause of Allah (broad interpretations include Islamic education, dawah)
8Ibn As‑SabilStranded travellers in need of assistance

Reputable Zakat organisations like Islamic Relief, National Zakat Foundation, Zakat Foundation of America, and Muslim Aid distribute funds to these eligible categories worldwide.

Common Questions on Zakatable Wealth

Gold coins and jewellery representing Zakatable assets in Islamic finance

Do I Pay Zakat on My Salary?

Salary itself isn’t Zakatable — but any savings from your salary that remain in your account for a full Hijri year and exceed Nisab become Zakatable.

What About Gold Jewellery I Wear Daily?

The majority of scholars (Hanafi, Hanbali, and most contemporary scholars) hold that gold jewellery is Zakatable regardless of whether it’s worn or stored. A minority (Maliki and Shafi’i) exempt jewellery used for personal adornment. Choose the position you follow.

What About a Mortgage or Long‑Term Loan?

Only the immediate annual portion of your mortgage payments counts as a deductible debt — not the entire outstanding mortgage. The full house loan principal is generally not deducted.

Do I Pay Zakat on Crypto?

Yes. The vast majority of contemporary Islamic finance scholars treat cryptocurrency as a Zakatable asset at its current market value. See Islamic Finance Guru’s analysis for a deeper look.

Do Children Pay Zakat?

Opinions vary. The Shafi’i and Maliki schools require Zakat on a child’s wealth (paid by the guardian); the Hanafi school does not require it until puberty.

Why Zakat Is So Powerful

  • Poverty Eradication: If the global Muslim community paid Zakat properly, it could eliminate poverty across the Muslim world many times over.
  • Wealth Circulation: Zakat prevents wealth from concentrating in few hands, keeping money flowing throughout the economy.
  • Spiritual Purification: Zakat purifies the soul from greed and the wealth from any spiritual impurity.
  • Community Solidarity: It builds bonds between the wealthy and the poor in the Muslim Ummah.
  • Divine Blessing (Barakah): Prophet Muhammad ﷺ taught that charity never decreases wealth — it brings increase and blessing.

Common Mistakes When Calculating Zakat

  1. Forgetting digital assets — Crypto, online bank balances, PayPal, mobile money — all are Zakatable.
  2. Using outdated gold/silver prices — Always check today’s local market rate.
  3. Deducting the entire mortgage — Only the annual portion counts as deductible debt.
  4. Skipping money others owe you — Recoverable loans you’ve given are Zakatable.
  5. Mixing Hijri and Gregorian years — Zakat is calculated on a lunar year (≈ 354 days, not 365).
  6. Not paying on jewellery — Most scholars require Zakat on gold jewellery even if worn.
  7. Ignoring business inventory — Stock in trade is fully Zakatable.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a Zakat calculator?

A Zakat calculator is a free online tool that computes your annual Zakat obligation based on gold, silver, cash, savings, investments, business assets, and any debts you owe. It applies the standard 2.5% rate to your net Zakatable wealth above the Nisab threshold.

Which currencies does the Zakat calculator support?

The calculator supports 13 currencies: Pakistani Rupee (Rs), US Dollar ($), British Pound (£), Euro (€), Saudi Riyal (SAR), UAE Dirham (AED), Indian Rupee (₹), Malaysian Ringgit (RM), Bangladeshi Taka (৳), Canadian Dollar (C$), Australian Dollar (A$), Kuwaiti Dinar (KWD), and Qatari Riyal (QAR).

What is the current Nisab value?

Nisab equals the value of 612.36 grams of silver (Silver Standard) or 87.48 grams of gold (Gold Standard) in your local currency. The exact amount changes daily with gold and silver market prices. Always use today’s local market rate.

Should I use Silver or Gold Nisab?

Most contemporary scholars and organisations recommend the Silver Standard because it’s the lower threshold, meaning more Muslims qualify and more Zakat reaches the needy. Some traditional Hanafi opinions accept the Gold Standard for cash wealth.

How much Zakat do I have to pay?

2.5% of your net Zakatable wealth (total assets minus immediate debts) if it exceeds the Nisab threshold and has been held for one full lunar year.

When should I calculate my Zakat?

Once every lunar year on the date your wealth first reached Nisab. Many Muslims choose Ramadan because the spiritual rewards of charity are multiplied during this blessed month.

Do I pay Zakat on my house and car?

No. Personal residence, daily‑use vehicle, household items, and professional tools are exempt. Only investment properties, rental income, and trade assets are Zakatable.

Is Zakat the same as Sadaqah?

No. Zakat is a mandatory annual obligation (one of the Five Pillars) with specific rules. Sadaqah is voluntary charity that can be given any time, in any amount, to anyone.

Does the calculator save my financial data?

No. All calculations happen locally in your browser. Your wealth, assets, and personal details are never stored, shared, or sent to any server. Your data stays completely private.

External Resources

  • Islamic Relief – Zakat Guide — Comprehensive guide to Zakat rules, calculation methods, and worldwide distribution from one of the largest Muslim charities.
  • National Zakat Foundation (NZF) — UK‑based scholarly authority on Zakat with detailed knowledge base, calculators, and Q&A archives.
  • Zakat Foundation of America — U.S. nonprofit collecting and distributing Zakat globally with detailed educational resources.
  • Islamic Finance Guru — In‑depth modern Islamic finance articles covering Zakat on crypto, pensions, investments, and stocks.
  • Zakat – Wikipedia — Comprehensive overview of Zakat history, jurisprudence, and modern practice across the Muslim world.
  • Muslim Aid – Zakat Resources — Practical guides and calculator resources for Muslims in the UK, Asia, and Africa.

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