Zakat is not a guess


Salam Reader,

Most of us pay our Zakat in Ramadan. And with these last few nights upon us, many of us are thinking about it right now.

There is no formal obligation to pay your Zakat al-Mal during Ramadan.

Everyone’s Zakat anniversary is different, determined by when your wealth first reached the nisab threshold. Technically, your Zakat could be due in Rajab or Dhul Hijjah or any other month of the year.

But most Muslims gravitate toward Ramadan anyway.

Ramadan is the month when good deeds carry multiplied reward. The Prophet ﷺ was described as the most generous of people, and he was at his most generous during Ramadan. Fasting and zakat have always moved together; both were made obligatory in the same Hijri year.

But many of us treat these two obligations differently.

Fasting is an exact practice. We know the exact minute Suhoor is. We know the exact minute Iftar is. Nobody says, “I’ll just stop eating at some point during the evening.”

Zakat does not always receive the same precision.

We know it is 2.5%. We know it matters. But when it comes to the specifics, things get unclear quickly. Do you follow the gold or silver nisab threshold? How do you calculate Zakat on investments, business assets, money you’ve lent others? What counts as a deduction? There are real scholarly differences of opinion on these questions.

Many people tell me, “I give more in sadaqah than I owe in Zakat anyway.”

But Zakat is not the same as sadaqah. It is a precise obligation.

The money, once owed, belongs to someone else. When we distribute our Zakat, we do so with intention. We cannot fulfill a precise obligation with a guess.

If you have not worked through your Zakat this Ramadan, now is the time.

The calculator on ZakatView is free, and it walks you through every question, from nisab to deductions, and helps you arrive at a number you can have clarity on, insha'Allah.

Calculate Your Zakat: ZakatView.co

And if you want to give beyond what you owe, that is beautiful. Scholars have long recommended giving a little extra as a precaution and an act of piety. But start with the number. Know what you owe first, and let everything after that be sadaqah with intention.

May Allah accept your fasting, your Zakat, and every good deed you offer in these final nights.

When you're ready, here's how I can help:

Hit reply any time! I read every email.

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