Calculation of Zakāt


Zakāt
is a form of alms-giving treated as a religious tax and/or religious obligation in Islam for all Muslims who meet the necessary criteria of wealth, and one of the Five Pillars of Islam. Beneficiaries of zakat include zakat collectors, poor Muslims, new converts to Islam, Islamic clergy.
Zakat is prescribed to cleanse the individual's wealth, heart, and baser characteristics in general, and to replace them with virtues.
Zakat is based on income and the type and value of one's assets/possessions above a minimum amount known as nisab.
The Quran does not provide specific guidelines on which types of wealth are taxable under the zakat, nor how much is to be donated, and Islamic scholars differ on how much nisab is and other aspects of zakat.
However, the amount of zakat paid on capital assets and stock-in-trade and jewelry is customarily 2.5%. Zakat is also payable on agricultural goods, precious metals, minerals, and livestock at a rate varying between 2.5 and 20 percent, depending on the type of goods.
Income from business, salaries and other means are traditionally exempt.

Doctrine

While the Quran talks about the importance of zakat and gives general guidance on who should receive it, it does not specify which types of wealth are "zakatable", nor how much is to be given in zakat.
While some kinds of stores of wealth are mentioned in hadith in regards to zakat, many others are not. Consequently, noted scholar of fiqh Yusuf al-Qaradawi emphasizes the importance in zakat regulation of the use of ijma', and qiyas . An example of use of ijma is the rule that zakah is "obligatory on golden assets at the same rate as it is on silver", despite the fact that only silver had zakat ordered upon it by a hadith of Muhammad. Zakat regulations on silver and gold are also an example of qiyas as both metals are being "used in several countries as measures and store of value", and so are analogous.
According to Mohammad Najatuallah Siddiqui, the ulema are "unanimous in regarding the rates of Zakat as permanently fixed by Islamic law", but "a number" of recent writers, "mostly economists, argue in favour of making these rates amendable to modification".

Gold and silver

Al-Qaradawi quotes Imam Al-Shafi‘i in his Al Risalah about zakah on gold: "The Prophet of God ordered zakah on silver currency and Muslims after him collected zakah on gold. They were either depending on a saying of the Prophet that never reached our times or applying analogy because of the similarities between gold and silver as money, since both were used in several countries as measures and store of value."
Jewellery and precious metals — such as gold and silver — come under Zakat even if they are used merely for decorative purposes.

Farm produce

According to al-Qardawi, the grains and fruits mentioned in hadith on zakah are limited to wheat, rye, date and raisin. However,
the majority of scholars applied zakah on different kinds of grains and fruits by analogy to those grains and fruits mentioned by the Prophet, l instead of restricting zakah to the items stated in the sayings.... By the same token we apply analogy on silk, milk and other animal products because they are similar to honey, which is mentioned in the Traditions.... It is reported that 'Umar used analogy with respect to zakah when he ordered zakah on horses after he realized that they had become high in value, saying, "Should we only take one sheep out of every forty sheep and leave horses with nothing?" 'Umar was followed in that respect by Abu Hanifah13.

The classic fiqh nisab for dates or grain is five wasq, so that no zakat is due if the amount of dates or grain possessed is less than that. Zakah is payable on the gross yield of land for each crop.

Livestock

"Zakāt" on Livestock or cattle, Al-An'am زكاة الأنعام According to Fiqh az-Zakat by al-Qaradawi and other traditional handbooks of zakat fiqh zakat on livestock such as sheep, cows and camels should be paid in-kind according to a detailed schedule.

Scripture and livestock

and how God created them is mentioned in the Quran in Surat Al-An'am, and Surat An-Nahl.
Flocks and feeding the poor are mentioned in Surat Al-Hajj.
Livestock and how they will punish sinners who have not paid zakat when they reach Jahannam is mentioned in Hadith:
Narrated Abu Dhar: Once I went to him and he said, "By Allah in Whose Hands my life is, whoever had camels or cows or sheep and did not pay their Zakat, those animals will be brought on the Day of Resurrection far bigger and fatter than before and they will tread him under their hooves, and will butt him with their horns, and : When the last does its turn, the first will start again, and this punishment will go on till Allah has finished the judgments amongst the people."

Camels

If the number of camels exceeds 120, for each 40 more there is one she-camel two to three years old, and for each 50 additional there is one she-camel three to four years old.
Number ownedZakat
1-40
5-91 Goat or sheep
10-142 Goat or sheep
15-193 Goat or sheep
20-244 Goat or sheep
25-351 One-year-old she-camel
36-451 Two-year-old she-camel
46-601 Three-year-old she-camel
61-75Four-year-old she-camel
76-902 Two-year-old she-camel
91-1202 Three-year-old she-camel
121-1293 three-year-old she-camels
130-1392 Two-year-old she-camel + Three-year-old she-camel
140-1491 Two-year-old she-camel + 2 Three-year-old she-camel
150-1593 Three-year-old she-camel
160-1694 Two-year-old she-camel
170-1791 Three-year-old she-camel +3 Two-year-old she-camel
180-1892 Three-year-old she-camel +2 Two-year-old she-camel
190-1993 Three-year-old she-camel +1 Two-year-old she-camel
200-2094 Three-year-old she-camel or 5 Two-year-old she-camel

Cows, and buffaloes">African Buffalo">buffaloes (Domestic and not wild)

According to al-Qaradawi there are no prescribed nisab limits in ahadith for cows:
There is no correct saying that provides us with the nisab and rates of zakah on cows as we have seen on camels. This may be because cows were rare in the area of Hijaz ; it may be also because cows are close in size and value to camels, so the Prophet did not determine their rates on the assumption of their obvious similarity. But the fact that there is no correct saying on the issue left the jurists with varying views on the determination of nisab and rates.

However, the "reputed position upheld by the four schools of jurisprudence" is that nisab is "30 cows", and so that for 30 cows, a "one-year old
cow is due", and for 40 to 59 cows a two years old cow is due, and so on.
Number ownedZakat
1-290
30-391- One-year-old Bull-Calf
40-591- Two-year-old Cow-Calf
60-692- One-year-old calf
70-791- Two-year-old Cow-Calf + 1- One-year-old Bull-Calf
80-892- Two-year-old Cow-Calf
90-993- One-year-old Cow-Calf
100-1091- Two-year-old Cow-Calf + 2- One-year-old Bull-Calf
110-1192- Two-year-old Cow-Calf + 2- One-year-old Bull-Calf
120-1293- Two-year-old Cow-Calf or 4- One-year-old Bull-Calf
-

[Sheep] and [goats]

There is no zakat on sheep and goats until their number reaches forty.
.
Number ownedZakat
1-390
40-1201- Goat or sheep
121-2002- Goat or sheep
201-2993- Goat or sheep
300-3994- Goat or sheep
400-4995- Goat or sheep

Contemporary practice

As of 2010, Zakat was mandatory by state law and collected by the state in six Muslim majority countries: Libya, Malaysia, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, and Yemen, according to researcher Russell Powell.
There were government-run but voluntary Zakat contribution programs in Bahrain, Bangladesh, Egypt, Indonesia, Iran, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, and the United Arab Emirates.
The states where zakat is compulsory differ in their definition of what assets are "zakatable"—eligible for contributing zakat. A 1995 study by Fouad Abdullah al-Omar found many differences.

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