Paying zakat used to mean finding a trustworthy person in your community to distribute it, or handing cash to your local mosque and hoping the process was handled correctly. Most Muslims in America today have a simpler option: giving zakat online, directly to a vetted U.S. nonprofit, in under 10 minutes.
The practical part is straightforward. Calculate what you owe, choose an organization that accepts and properly distributes zakat, and complete the payment. The questions most people get stuck on are which organizations qualify and how to verify they're using zakat funds correctly.
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Step 1: Calculate your zakat
Before you give anything, you need to know how much you owe. Zakat is 2.5% of your total eligible wealth held above the nisab threshold for one full lunar year. Eligible wealth includes cash, savings, gold, silver, stocks, and business inventory. It excludes your home, car, furniture, and personal items you use.
The nisab is set by either the gold standard (roughly 85 grams of gold) or the silver standard (595 grams of silver). In practice, these produce very different thresholds, and scholars differ on which to use. For current nisab values in U.S. dollars, check our zakat nisab guide for 2026 — we update it as gold and silver prices change.
If your assets are spread across savings accounts, investments, and mixed assets, our guide to calculating zakat on mixed assets walks through the math category by category.
Step 2: Understand who can receive zakat
Zakat is not a general donation. Islamic law specifies 8 categories of eligible recipients (asnaf): the poor, the needy, zakat collectors, new Muslims, those in debt, travelers in need, those working in the cause of God, and those in bondage. When you give to an organization, that organization must be distributing to one or more of these categories to count as valid zakat.
Most established U.S. Muslim nonprofits are explicitly set up to receive and distribute zakat to eligible recipients. They typically have a Shariah advisor or scholar who certifies their zakat handling. Look for this on their website before giving.
Step 3: Choose an organization
Several well-established U.S.-based Muslim nonprofits accept online zakat. Here are the main ones:
Islamic Relief USA is one of the largest Muslim humanitarian organizations in the country. They have a dedicated zakat fund and are transparent about how distributions work. You can designate your giving to specific causes or leave it undesignated for general zakat use.
Zakat Foundation of America focuses specifically on zakat collection and distribution. Their name reflects their purpose — the entire organization is built around properly managing zakat funds, both domestically and globally.
ICNA Relief USA operates domestically with food banks, shelters, and disaster relief across the U.S. A meaningful portion of the people they serve are eligible zakat recipients.
Helping Hand for Relief and Development (HHRD), Life for Relief and Development, and Penny Appeal USA are all active in international relief and accept zakat. See HalalWallet's full charity directory for profiles on each.
Step 4: Complete your payment online
Every major Muslim nonprofit listed above accepts online payment by credit card, debit card, or ACH bank transfer. When you get to the donation form, look for a dropdown or checkbox that says "Zakat" specifically — select it so your gift is designated correctly and distributed from the right fund.
Some organizations let you set up recurring giving, which is useful if you want to spread payments throughout the year. Scholars differ on whether recurring monthly zakat is valid (since zakat is technically owed as a lump sum once the full lunar year has passed), so if you use this option, confirm the total adds up to your full zakat amount.
You'll receive a receipt by email. Keep it for your records — contributions to 501(c)(3) organizations are tax-deductible, though zakat and tax deductions are separate concepts and one doesn't replace the other.
Can you split zakat across multiple organizations?
Yes. You can divide your zakat between multiple charities as long as each one is giving to eligible recipients. There's no scholarly requirement to give it all in one place. Some Muslims prefer to concentrate their giving so the impact is more meaningful; others spread it across domestic and international causes.
What about platforms like LaunchGood?
LaunchGood is a crowdfunding platform used heavily by the Muslim community for individual campaigns, community projects, and organizational fundraising. You can find campaigns there that accept zakat, but you'd need to verify each campaign's zakat eligibility on your own. For structured zakat giving, sticking with established nonprofits that have clear zakat policies is simpler.
Giving zakat locally vs. internationally
There's a scholarly opinion that zakat is preferred to be given locally, to those in your immediate community. The Hanafi school especially emphasizes this. Other schools are more permissive about international giving. In practice, many American Muslims give a portion locally (through mosque-based funds or ICNA Relief) and a portion internationally (through Islamic Relief or Zakat Foundation).
Either approach is valid. If your local community has genuine zakat-eligible recipients, that's worth considering in your giving plan. Our complete guide to zakat resources for U.S. Muslims covers more on the local vs. international question.
What to watch out for
A few things to check before you give. First, confirm the organization is a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit — this is easy to verify and gives you confidence the organization has met basic accountability standards. Second, look for a Shariah supervisor or Islamic scholar on their zakat page. Third, verify they're actually distributing to eligible recipients, not just funding general charitable programs.
If you're giving to a newer or smaller organization and aren't sure about their zakat policies, email them and ask directly. Any reputable organization will be able to tell you who oversees their zakat distribution and how funds are used.
Bottom line
Giving zakat online is legitimate, convenient, and well-supported by the established U.S. Muslim nonprofit sector. Calculate your amount, designate it as zakat when you give, and choose an organization that's transparent about how they handle those funds. The whole process takes less time than the calculation.
Frequently asked questions
Is it valid to give zakat online? Yes. The method of transfer doesn't affect the validity of zakat. What matters is that the funds reach an eligible recipient through a qualified channel. Online giving through a reputable zakat-accepting nonprofit fulfills this requirement.
Do I need to say a niyyah (intention) when giving online? Yes, intention matters in Islamic practice. Before completing your online payment, make the intention in your heart that this is your zakat for the year. You don't need to say it aloud.
Can I give zakat to any charity? No. The charity must distribute to one of the 8 eligible categories of zakat recipients. General charities that serve all populations regardless of need or religion may not qualify. Stick to organizations that explicitly accept and distribute zakat.
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Is zakat tax-deductible in the USA? Donations to registered 501(c)(3) nonprofits are generally tax-deductible. Most major Muslim charities qualify. However, the tax deduction is separate from your religious obligation — fulfilling your zakat duty and claiming a deduction are two different things that happen to overlap.
What if I don't know the exact amount I owe? Estimate carefully and err on the side of giving slightly more rather than less. If you're genuinely unsure how to calculate, our zakat calculation guide walks through the major asset categories step by step.
