After Jumu'ah, a collection goes around for the mosque's new HVAC system. You put in $50. That donation is Lillah — but most people in the congregation couldn't tell you what makes it Lillah rather than Sadaqah, or why it doesn't count toward their Zakat. These distinctions matter in Islamic giving, and they're less complicated than they sound.
Lillah means "for Allah" in Arabic. In Islamic fiqh, it refers to voluntary charity given specifically to Islamic institutions: mosques, madrasas, Islamic schools, orphanages under Islamic management, and Islamic relief organizations operating institutional programs. Unlike Zakat, there's no minimum amount and no annual calculation. Unlike Sadaqah, it's restricted to Islamic causes rather than general welfare. It's the category of giving that funds the physical and operational infrastructure of the Muslim community.
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How Lillah differs from Zakat
Zakat is one of the five pillars of Islam. It's obligatory for any Muslim whose wealth exceeds the nisab threshold and has been held for a full lunar year. The rate is 2.5% of qualifying assets. And it can only go to eight categories of recipients specified in the Quran: those in poverty, the needy, Zakat workers, those whose hearts are being reconciled, those in bondage, debtors, those striving in the way of Allah, and travelers in need. Every rule is fixed.
Lillah has none of those restrictions. You can give $5 or $5,000. You can give it in Ramadan, in January, or on a random Tuesday. There's no nisab and no percentage. The only rule is that it goes to Islamic institutional causes, not to individual recipients directly. Your mosque's operating budget, your Islamic school's building fund, a madrasa in another country — all of these are appropriate recipients of Lillah.
One practical consequence worth knowing: Lillah cannot substitute for Zakat. If you owe $3,000 in Zakat this year and donate $3,000 to your local mosque, the mosque donation is Lillah. Your Zakat obligation is still unpaid. The two types of giving are separate acts of worship with separate rules — and separate spiritual rewards.
How Lillah differs from Sadaqah
Sadaqah is the broad category of voluntary Islamic giving. It can go to anyone in genuine need or any cause with a genuine benefit — a hungry stranger, a disaster relief fund, your neighbor's medical bills, even a non-Muslim food bank. There's no restriction on who receives Sadaqah. The reward is in the act of giving for Allah's sake, regardless of the recipient's religion or situation.
Lillah sits inside the Sadaqah category, but with a narrower scope. Think of it this way: all Lillah is Sadaqah, but not all Sadaqah is Lillah. If you give $100 to a general humanitarian organization that serves anyone in need, that's Sadaqah. If you give $100 to fund new Qurans for your mosque's library, that's Lillah. The distinction is whether the cause is specifically Islamic or more broadly humanitarian.
The practical difference shows up when organizations designate funds. A donation marked "Sadaqah" gives an Islamic charity more flexibility — it can direct those funds to non-Muslim beneficiaries if their programs serve a mixed population. A donation marked "Lillah" signals that the donor intends it strictly for Islamic institutional use. Major U.S. charities like Islamic Relief USA and Zakat Foundation of America typically distinguish between these designations in their giving portals.
Who can receive Lillah?
Islamic institutions are the primary recipients: mosques, madrasas, Islamic schools, Islamic hospitals, and orphanages operating under Islamic management. Relief organizations like ICNA Relief USA and Life for Relief and Development accept Lillah for their institutional programs — wells, schools, and medical clinics built and managed under Islamic principles — as distinct from direct cash transfers to individuals.
Non-Muslims generally cannot receive Lillah as individual recipients, since the giving is specifically designated for Islamic causes. This is where it parts from Sadaqah, which can benefit non-Muslims freely. If a charity operates mixed programming, the Lillah portion should stay within the Islamic-specific programs.
Can you give Lillah to any Islamic charity in the U.S.?
Yes, as long as the organization is using it for Islamic institutional purposes. The HalalWallet charities directory lists vetted U.S. Islamic charities where you can compare programs and designate your giving. When donating, look for whether the charity allows you to specify Lillah as the designation — most established organizations do. If they don't have a specific Lillah option, ask how institutional or programmatic donations are designated.
One thing worth checking: whether the organization is 501(c)(3) registered. For U.S. donors, a 501(c)(3) designation means your Lillah donation may be tax-deductible. The spiritual act of giving is the same regardless, but the tax benefit is real and worth using. All of the major U.S. Islamic charities in the HalalWallet directory are registered 501(c)(3) organizations.
Fitting Lillah into your overall giving plan
Most U.S. Muslims think about Islamic giving in two main buckets: the obligatory (Zakat) and the voluntary (everything else). Adding Lillah as a distinct category inside the voluntary bucket helps organize your giving more intentionally. Your mosque needs operational funding — that's Lillah. The Islamic school your children attend needs classroom supplies — that's Lillah. A general earthquake relief fund for a Muslim-majority country — that might be Sadaqah, Lillah, or even Zakat-eligible depending on who specifically receives the funds.
For Zakat calculation and eligible recipients, the HalalWallet zakat resource center covers the full picture. And if you're weighing which Islamic charities to support with Lillah, the right comparison goes beyond name recognition — programs, financials, and transparency scores matter. The question of whether to give locally or internationally applies to Lillah the same as it does to Zakat.
How much should you give as Lillah?
There's no prescribed amount. Unlike Zakat, where 2.5% is the floor, Lillah is entirely discretionary. Many Muslims set an annual giving budget that covers Zakat first, then allocates remaining voluntary giving across Lillah (for local Islamic institutions) and broader Sadaqah (for humanitarian causes). If you give $200 a month voluntarily beyond your Zakat, splitting that between your mosque's operational needs and a broader cause is a reasonable approach — but the proportions are up to you.
Frequently asked questions about Lillah
Is Lillah the same as Sadaqah? Not exactly. Lillah is a specific type of voluntary charity restricted to Islamic institutions and causes. Sadaqah is the broader category of voluntary giving and can go to anyone in need. All Lillah is Sadaqah, but not all Sadaqah is Lillah.
Can Lillah count toward my Zakat? No. Zakat and Lillah are separate religious obligations and acts of worship. Donations to a mosque or Islamic school as Lillah do not reduce your Zakat obligation.
Can I give Lillah anonymously? Yes, and anonymous giving is considered virtuous in Islam because it eliminates any possibility of showing off (riya'). Lillah given privately is fully valid and carries the same spiritual reward.
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What's the difference between Lillah and waqf? Waqf is an Islamic endowment — assets permanently set aside for charitable use, like donating a building to a mosque so it generates ongoing benefit. Lillah is a direct donation. Waqf creates a lasting institution; Lillah funds ongoing operations.
Can non-Muslims receive Lillah? Generally no, not as individual recipients. Lillah is designated for Islamic institutional causes. If you want to support a humanitarian organization that serves non-Muslims, that giving would be classified as Sadaqah rather than Lillah.






