Zakat Calculator 2026

Calculate your Zakat with our free, private step-by-step calculator. Choose your school of thought and gold or silver nisab, calculate across key assets, and download a PDF summary, no login required.

Zakat Calculator 2026 – Calculate Your Zakat Step by Step
Let’s Calculate Your Zakat

We’ll walk you through each type of wealth step by step. Most people finish in under 2 minutes.

This adjusts how jewelry and debts are handled. Not sure? Hanafi is the most widely followed and most conservative approach.
The nisab is the minimum wealth threshold for zakat to be obligatory.
💡 Most scholars recommend the silver standard, as it allows more people to fulfill this obligation.
Enter a custom nisab value
$

Leave blank to use the selected standard value above.

Loading live gold & silver prices…

Step 1 of 4 — Cash & Savings
Cash & Savings

Include all cash and money you’ve had for one lunar year (approximately 354 days, since ).

Checking accounts, savings accounts, cash at home
$
Hajj savings, emergency fund, down payment savings, etc.
$
Personal loans to family/friends that you expect to be repaid
$
CDs, money market accounts, etc.
$
Step Subtotal$0
Step 2 of 4 — Gold & Silver
Gold & Silver

Do you own any gold or silver? This includes jewelry, coins, bars, decorative items, or silverware.

No worries — moving on!
Jewelry (worn or stored), gold coins, gold bars. Current market value.
$
Silver jewelry, silver coins, silverware. Current market value.
$

Not sure of the value? Current gold price is approximately $86/gram; silver is approximately $0.95/gram.

Step Subtotal $0
Step 3 of 4 — Investments & Business
Investments & Business Assets

Do you have any investments or business assets? This includes stocks, retirement accounts, cryptocurrency, business inventory, or rental income.

No worries — moving on!
Current market value of all investment accounts
$
Use the current cash value minus any early withdrawal penalties and taxes
$
Value of goods held for sale, at current market value
$
Cash in business accounts plus money owed to your business
$
Net rental income received, not the property value itself
$
Current market value of all crypto holdings
$
Step Subtotal$0
Step 4 of 4 — Debts & Liabilities
Debts & Liabilities

These amounts will be deducted from your total assets. Only include debts that are due within the next 12 months.

Borrowed money, credit card balances, personal loans due
$
Rent, utilities, taxes, or other bills currently due
$
Only the next 12 months of payments — not the full loan balance
$
Total Deductions−$0
Review Your Zakat Calculation

Double-check your numbers before we calculate. Click any value to edit it.

This calculator is a tool to help estimate your zakat obligation. For complex financial situations, consult a qualified Islamic scholar. Zakat calculation is a personal religious obligation and this tool should be used as guidance only.

How to Calculate Zakat in 2026

Zakat is one of the Five Pillars of Islam and is an obligatory form of charity that supports those in need. The standard zakat rate is 2.5% of your net zakatable wealth, calculated once a full lunar year (hawl) has passed since your wealth exceeded the nisab threshold.

The above calculator walks you through each category of zakatable assets (cash, gold and silver, investments, business assets) and then subtracts your qualifying debts to arrive at your net zakatable wealth.

What Is Nisab?

The nisab is the minimum amount of wealth you must possess before zakat becomes obligatory. It’s based on one of two precious metal standards: the gold nisab (equivalent to 87.48 grams of gold) or the silver nisab (equivalent to 612.36 grams of silver). Because the silver nisab sets a lower threshold, more people qualify and most scholars recommend using it as the more cautious and inclusive approach. The calculator above pulls the current price of both silver and gold for today.

Schools of Thought and Zakat

The four major schools of Islamic jurisprudence (madhabs) agree on the core principles of zakat but differ on specific rulings (mostly around jewelry and debt). The Hanafi school takes the most conservative position, including all gold and silver jewelry in zakatable wealth and allowing debt deductions. The Shafi’i school exempts jewelry in regular personal use and generally does not allow debt deductions. The Maliki and Hanbali schools also exempt worn jewelry but allow debt deductions similar to the Hanafi position. This calculator adjusts its calculations based on your selected school. There isn’t a “right” school of thought it all depends on what school you follow!

What Assets Are Subject to Zakat?

Zakat applies to wealth that is productive or has the potential for growth. This includes cash and bank savings, gold and silver (including jewelry, depending on your school of thought), stocks, mutual funds, and other investments, business inventory/merchandise, rental income, and cryptocurrency. Items that are primarily for personal use like your primary home, cars, clothing, and furniture are generally exempt.

Zakat on Cash and Savings

All cash you hold is subject to zakat. This includes money you’ve set aside for a specific purpose (like a future home purchase or emergency fund) and personal loans you’ve made to others that you expect to be repaid.

Zakat on Gold and Silver

Gold and silver are zakatable in all forms (bars, coins, or jewelry). Whether jewelry you wear regularly is exempt depends on which school of thought you follow (see above for more detail). The Hanafi school includes all jewelry. The Shafi’i, Maliki, and Hanbali schools generally exempt jewelry that is in regular personal use, though jewelry held as an investment or kept in storage is always zakatable.

Zakat on Investments

The current market value of your stocks, mutual funds, ETFs, and similar investments is subject to zakat. For retirement accounts like 401(k)s and IRAs, most scholars advise using the current accessible value or the amount you could withdraw today after accounting for any early withdrawal penalties and taxes (10% penalty on ROTH-IRA early withdrawals and for 401K/IRA it’s a 10% penalty plus income tax federal and state at your rate).

Debts and Zakat

Whether and how debts reduce your zakat calculation depends on your school of thought. The Hanafi, Maliki, and Hanbali schools allow you to deduct debts that are due within the next 12 months including mortgage payments, student loan installments, credit card balances, and bills currently due. The Shafi’i school generally does not allow debt deductions. This calculator adjusts automatically based on your selected school.

FAQs About Zakat

When is zakat due?

Zakat is due once a full lunar year (hawl) has passed since your wealth first exceeded the nisab threshold. Many Muslims choose to calculate and pay their zakat during Ramadan for increased spiritual reward, but the obligation is tied to your personal hawl date, not the Islamic calendar. The lunar new year is 354 days long. The calculator will calculate the lunar new year for you during that step.

What is the zakat rate?

The standard zakat rate is 2.5% (or 1/40th) of your net zakatable wealth that exceeds the nisab threshold. This rate applies uniformly across all categories of zakatable assets.

Is zakat on income or savings?

Zakat is calculated on accumulated savings and wealth, not on income directly. It is assessed on the total wealth you hold at the time your zakat is due.

Do I pay zakat on my house or car?

No. Personal use items like your primary home, your car, clothing, and furniture are not subject to zakat. However, investment properties (like a rental property) are zakatable. A vacation home is not zakatable if you are only using it for personal use.

What if I can’t afford to pay zakat?

If your net wealth is below the nisab threshold, you are not obligated to pay zakat. Zakat exists to help redistribute wealth from those who have it to those who need it most. Which is philosophically very similar to the mechanism of GiveDirectly.

Can I pay zakat in installments?

Yes, many scholars allow paying zakat in installments, especially if paying the full amount at once would cause financial hardship.

Who can receive zakat?

The Quran specifies eight categories of zakat recipients (Surah At-Tawbah, 9:60): the poor (al-fuqara), the needy (al-masakin), zakat administrators, those whose hearts are to be reconciled, those in bondage, those in debt, those serving in God’s cause, and wayfarers. Organizations like GiveDirectly channel zakat directly to people living in extreme poverty among the clearest recipients under Islamic law.

What’s the difference between zakat and sadaqah?

Zakat is obligatory charity with specific rules it must be 2.5% of your net zakatable wealth, calculated annually, and given to eligible recipients. Sadaqah is voluntary charity with no fixed amount, no specific timing, and no restrictions on who can receive it. Both are highly valued in Islam!