ICNA Relief and Helping Hand for Relief and Development (HHRD) are both well-established Muslim charities in the United States, but they operate on different models. ICNA Relief is built around domestic programs — food pantries, homeless shelters, refugee resettlement, and mental health services, almost entirely inside the U.S. HHRD's primary focus is international disaster relief and development, with a strong presence in South Asia, the Middle East, and Africa. If you're deciding between the two, the right answer depends on where you want your money to land.
Both are listed in HalalWallet's U.S. charity directory. For guidance on how to evaluate charities before giving, see how to compare Muslim charities before you give.
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Quick comparison: ICNA Relief vs. HHRD
ICNA Relief USA: part of ICNA (Islamic Circle of North America), primarily domestic U.S. programs, food pantries in 20+ cities, homeless shelters, refugee services, mental health counseling, some international relief. HHRD: founded 1999, Hanover Park Illinois, primarily international, strong in Pakistan/South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East, disaster response and development programs, also does U.S. relief work.
About ICNA Relief USA
ICNA Relief is the humanitarian wing of the Islamic Circle of North America, one of the oldest Muslim organizations in the country. ICNA itself has been operating since 1971, and ICNA Relief runs its social services programs. The focus is domestic: food pantries, homeless shelters, domestic violence support, refugee resettlement assistance, and mental health counseling.
ICNA Relief runs food pantries in more than 20 cities across the U.S. and serves hundreds of thousands of meals annually. Its homeless shelter network includes facilities in several major cities. The mental health program — offering counseling from Muslim therapists — is one of the more distinctive services any Muslim charity in America runs. ICNA Relief does have some international disaster response programs, but domestic programs are the core of what it does.
Full profile: ICNA Relief USA
About Helping Hand for Relief and Development (HHRD)
HHRD was founded in 1999 and is based in Hanover Park, Illinois. It operates globally, with particularly strong programs in Pakistan, Somalia, Yemen, Syria, and other active crisis regions. Its focus areas include emergency disaster relief, food security, clean water access, education, and orphan care.
HHRD has developed a reputation for fast disaster response, particularly in South Asia. After floods, earthquakes, and conflicts, HHRD typically deploys quickly in regions where it has existing infrastructure. It also runs longer-term development programs, not just emergency response. In the U.S., HHRD participates in domestic relief efforts during major natural disasters, but most of its operational capacity sits internationally.
Full profile: Helping Hand for Relief and Development
Programs: what each charity actually does
ICNA Relief's programs are almost entirely inside the United States. Food pantries serving Muslims and non-Muslims in cities like New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Houston, and Atlanta. Homeless shelters. Refugee resettlement support. Domestic violence safe houses. Mental health counseling. If you want your donation to directly help people in American cities, ICNA Relief is among the best-positioned Muslim charities to do that.
HHRD's programs are primarily international. Emergency relief packs (food, medicine, hygiene supplies) deployed to crisis zones. Water wells and sanitation projects in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. Orphan sponsorship. Education programs. HHRD's reach extends to regions like Kashmir, Bangladesh, Somalia, and Palestine. Its American operations are limited by comparison. If you're giving for international impact, HHRD is the stronger vehicle.
Financial transparency and ratings
ICNA Relief files Form 990 annually as part of the broader ICNA organization structure. Financial data is available for review. Its organizational transparency benefits from ICNA's long institutional history and the accountability that comes with running a large domestic services network — there are direct stakeholders (people using the food pantries and shelters) who provide a built-in accountability mechanism.
HHRD has a Charity Navigator listing and files 990s. Its financial data shows a strong programs expense ratio, meaning most funds go to programs rather than overhead. Third-party review history is somewhat shorter than larger charities, but the financials are available and the organization has been operating consistently since 1999. HalalWallet transparency score for HHRD: 2/3. See more in the best Muslim charities for emergency relief.
Zakat compliance
Both organizations accept zakat and work with populations that qualify under Islamic jurisprudence — the poor, the needy, those in debt, and stranded travelers. ICNA Relief's domestic focus means its zakat recipients are often American Muslims or low-income U.S. residents, which is valid for zakat. HHRD's international programs reach populations in clear humanitarian need, also valid.
Neither organization provides the level of explicit shariah distribution documentation that Zakat Foundation of America does. If formal documentation of zakat eligibility categories matters to you, that distinction is worth noting. If you're comfortable relying on the general principle that both organizations distribute to the needy, either is appropriate for your zakat. For a deeper look at the rules, see the zakat resource hub.
Where each charity operates
ICNA Relief: primarily the United States, with food pantries and shelters in 20+ cities. Concentrated presence in New York, New Jersey, Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles, Atlanta, and other cities with large Muslim populations. Some international programs, but the U.S. is the operational core.
HHRD: global operations with particular depth in Pakistan, Somalia, Yemen, Syria, Palestine, Bangladesh, and other crisis-affected regions. Has done U.S. domestic relief work but this is not the core focus. If the region you care about most is South Asia or the Middle East, HHRD has stronger infrastructure there than ICNA Relief.
Who each charity is best for
ICNA Relief is best for donors who want their zakat and sadaqah to help American Muslims and low-income U.S. residents directly, or who want to support a domestic services organization with a track record of community-level impact. It's also a strong choice for donors in cities where ICNA Relief operates and can see the local programs firsthand.
HHRD is best for donors focused on international disaster relief, particularly in South Asia, the Middle East, or East Africa. Donors with family ties to Pakistan or other regions where HHRD operates will find its geographic focus especially relevant. It's also a good choice for quick disaster response giving when a major crisis hits.
Bottom line
ICNA Relief and HHRD do different things well. ICNA Relief is the stronger domestic charity — it's doing on-the-ground social services for American Muslims in a way few other Muslim organizations do at scale. HHRD is the stronger international disaster response vehicle, with deeper infrastructure in South Asia and the Middle East than ICNA Relief. Give to ICNA Relief if domestic need is your priority. Give to HHRD if you want fast international response capacity. Both are valid for zakat, both are appropriately transparent, and both belong in the conversation about where U.S. Muslim donors should direct their giving. Browse both alongside all other reviewed charities at HalalWallet's charity directory.
Frequently asked questions
Is ICNA Relief a good charity? Yes. ICNA Relief has a strong track record in domestic social services, including food pantries, shelters, and refugee support. It's part of ICNA, one of the oldest Muslim organizations in the U.S., which provides organizational accountability.
What does HHRD stand for? HHRD stands for Helping Hand for Relief and Development. It was founded in 1999 and is headquartered in Hanover Park, Illinois.
Can I give zakat to ICNA Relief for domestic recipients? Yes. American Muslims and other U.S. residents who are poor or in need qualify as zakat recipients under standard Islamic jurisprudence. ICNA Relief's domestic programs serve these populations.
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Does HHRD respond to disasters quickly? HHRD has built a reputation for relatively fast disaster response, particularly in South Asia and the Middle East where it has existing infrastructure. For major crises in those regions, HHRD is typically among the first Muslim charities to deploy.
Is ICNA Relief the same as ICNA? ICNA Relief is the humanitarian services division of ICNA (Islamic Circle of North America). They share organizational structure but ICNA Relief focuses specifically on social services and relief work, while ICNA encompasses a broader range of religious, educational, and community programs.
