3rd Pillar of Islam
Calculate your annual Zakat — nisab check, gold & silver, savings, investments, and business goods. Based on 2.5% of net zakatable wealth held for one lunar year (hawl).
Singapore Dollar · All amounts in S$
Nisab standard
Most scholars recommend silver nisab — more inclusive and results in more people paying Zakat.
⚡ Pre-filled with April 2026 estimates — verify against today's spot price.
Nisab threshold
S$833.00
Only include debts payable within the current lunar year. Long-term debts (mortgages) are generally not deducted in full — consult a scholar.
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Enter your assets above
Your Zakat will be calculated in real time
Singapore (MUIS)
MUIS uses the silver nisab (595g) as the standard for Zakat on savings in Singapore. At current silver prices, this is approximately S$833.00. Zakat can be paid directly through Mosque, SingPass, or the MUIS Zakat portal.
MUIS recommends paying Zakat al-Mal (wealth zakat) during Ramadan though it is valid anytime after one lunar year (hawl) has passed. Zakat Fitrah (per person, paid before Eid al-Fitr prayer) is a separate obligation — MUIS announces the annual rate each Ramadan.
Important notes
Hawl: Zakat is only obligatory on wealth held for a complete Islamic lunar year.
Primary home, personal vehicle, furniture, and business equipment are not zakatable.
For gold jewellery worn regularly, scholars differ — consult a local scholar.
This calculator provides an estimate. For complex situations, seek a qualified Islamic scholar or MUIS.
About Zakat
Zakat is the third pillar of Islam — an annual, obligatory charity of 2.5% on net wealth held above the Nisab threshold for a full lunar year. It is not a tax or a donation. It is a right that Allah has placed in the wealth of the rich for the poor, and the paying of it is a fundamental act of worship.
The Qur'an pairs Zakat with prayer throughout its revelations — what is standing in prayer without purifying one's wealth, and what is purified wealth without standing before Allah? Paying Zakat annually keeps wealth in circulation, reduces inequality, and serves as an annual audit of where our money has been during the year.
How the calculation works
Check Nisab
Compare your total zakatable wealth to the value of 85g of gold or 595g of silver (whichever is lower, usually silver). Below this threshold, no Zakat is due this year.
Confirm the hawl
Zakat is only due once a full lunar year (354 days) has passed on wealth that was at or above Nisab the entire time. Track your Zakat anniversary — many people set theirs to the 1st of Ramadan or their first year at Nisab.
Sum your zakatable assets
Cash, gold & silver, business stock, investment shares, money owed to you. Value everything at its market price on your Zakat anniversary.
Subtract eligible debts
Short-term debts due within the coming year. Long-term debts (mortgage) follow the scholarly view you follow — most deduct only one year's worth.
Multiply by 2.5%
The resulting 2.5% is your Zakat obligation. Divide by 12 if you'd like a monthly figure; many people prefer a single annual payment during Ramadan.
Distribute to an eligible recipient
Pay to one of the eight Qur'anic categories — usually via your national Zakat authority or a trusted charity with a Zakat-specific fund.
Quick reference
Gold jewellery worn regularly
Still zakatable — value it at current scrap-gold price on your Zakat anniversary.
Primary home
Not zakatable. Personal-use property is exempt.
Investment property
The building itself is exempt, but rental income held at year-end is zakatable as cash.
CPF / 401(k) / pension
Zakatable on the portion you can freely withdraw today.
Cryptocurrency
Zakatable — treat it like cash or investment. Use market value on your Zakat day.
Business inventory
Zakatable at wholesale/market resale value, not at purchase cost.
This calculator follows the mainstream majority-scholar position on annual Zakat al-Mal. For complex estates, trusts, or cross-border businesses, consult your local Zakat authority or a qualified scholar.