Zakat on Trading Capital & Profits
How zakat (the obligatory annual charity) applies to your trading account. Scholarly opinions, the calculation methods, and a practical calculator.
The basics
Zakat is an obligatory annual payment of 2.5% on wealth held above the nisab (the minimum threshold) for one lunar year (hawl). It applies to cash, gold, silver, business inventory, and tradeable assets — including trading capital.
The nisab is benchmarked to the value of either 85 grams of gold or 595 grams of silver. Most scholars today use the silver benchmark for personal zakat because it sets a lower threshold and benefits more recipients. Check the current value at the time you calculate.
How zakat applies to a trading account
Account capital
Money sitting in your trading account is cash from a zakat perspective. If it has been there (combined with your other cash holdings) for a full lunar year above the nisab, it is zakatable at 2.5% of the closing balance on your hawl date.
Open positions (unrealized P&L)
Two scholarly positions exist:
- Conservative view: include the current mark-to-market value of all open positions in the zakatable base. If you are long 5 lot EUR/USD currently showing $1,200 unrealized profit, that $1,200 is part of your zakat base.
- Realization view: only realized profits sitting in cash form are zakatable. Unrealized P&L is theoretical and could disappear.
The conservative view is more widely advised, especially because it treats trading wealth consistently with how zakat treats other tradeable assets like business inventory.
Cashback / rebates received
Cashback diperoleh through ShaFX (or similar IB programs) becomes part of your cash holdings. Track it like any other income. If it sits in your account or external wallet for a year and you are above nisab, it is zakatable at 2.5%.
Trading losses
Realized losses reduce your zakatable wealth (because they reduce your cash). Unrealized losses are not "deductible" — they exist only as mark-to-market on positions you still hold.
The hawl problem in active trading
Hawl is the requirement that wealth must be held for a full lunar year above nisab to become zakatable. For passive holdings (savings account, gold), this is simple — you just check whether the balance has been above nisab continuously.
For active trading, the balance fluctuates daily. The common scholarly resolution: as long as your aggregate trading + cash wealth remained above nisab across the lunar year, the full balance on your hawl date is zakatable. You don't restart the hawl clock every time individual positions close.
Pick a hawl date (commonly the first day of Ramadan, or a personal annual anniversary) and recalculate every year on that date. Many traders use Ramadan because it simplifies the timing and aligns with the heightened spiritual focus on giving.
Interactive zakat calculator
Who can receive your zakat
The Qur'an (Surah At-Tawbah 9:60) specifies the eight categories of zakat recipients: the poor (fuqara), the needy (masakeen), zakat collectors, those whose hearts are to be reconciled, captives, those in debt, those in the path of Allah, and travelers in need. Modern interpretation extends these categories to refugee aid, debt relief charities, Islamic schools serving the underprivileged, and similar.
Reputable organizations that process zakat with documented compliance (Islamic Relief, Penny Appeal, Zakat Foundation, etc.) are options. Local mosques and trusted scholars in your community can also direct zakat to verified recipients in your area.
Practical workflow for active traders
- Pick your hawl date — beginning of Ramadan is common.
- Each year on that date, screenshot your trading account balance, your unrealized P&L total, and your cashback holdings.
- Add your other cash, savings, and gold/silver holdings.
- Verify the total is above the current nisab (look up the value of 595g silver in your currency on that date).
- Calculate 2.5% and pay within the year.
- Keep a record. Trading accounts and audit trails matter — both for spiritual accountability and tax reporting depending on your jurisdiction.
Final note
Zakat is one of the five pillars of Islam. The mathematics is straightforward; the discipline of doing it consistently is what matters. Calculate annually, pay before the next hawl, keep a clean record. If your trading wealth is large enough that zakat becomes complex, work with a scholar who specializes in Islamic finance — the cost is trivial compared to the spiritual weight of getting it right.