You've probably heard of zakat and sadaqah. But waqf is the third pillar of Islamic giving that most U.S. Muslims never think about until they're putting together an estate plan and someone mentions it in passing. It deserves more than a passing mention.
A waqf is a permanent charitable endowment in Islamic law. You dedicate an asset, and the asset's benefits flow to a charitable cause indefinitely. The asset itself is locked and can't be sold or transferred. The Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) described it as one of the deeds that continue after death: ongoing charity, knowledge that benefits others, and a righteous child who prays for you. Waqf is the institutional version of that first one.
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How waqf works
The mechanics are simple. You set aside an asset, appoint a manager (called a mutawalli), identify beneficiaries, and declare the intention. The asset is now waqf. It can't be inherited. It can't be sold to settle debts. It stays dedicated to its purpose as long as it generates benefit.
Historically, waqf was how mosques, schools, hospitals, and wells got built and maintained across the Muslim world for centuries. A wealthy merchant would endow a building, and the rental income would fund the institution permanently. Some waqf established in the Ottoman era are still operating today.
In the U.S., the legal system doesn't have a "waqf" category, but the closest equivalents are charitable trusts and nonprofit structures. Muslims working with Islamic estate planning attorneys can set up waqf-equivalent structures that accomplish the same goals under American law.
Types of waqf
Scholars recognize two main categories. A family waqf (waqf ahli or dhurri) directs benefits to your descendants first, with the charitable purpose kicking in when the family line ends. A public waqf (waqf khayri) goes directly to a charitable cause with no family benefit.
There's also cash waqf, which is exactly what it sounds like: you dedicate a sum of money rather than physical property. The cash gets invested in sharia-compliant instruments, and the returns fund the charitable purpose. This is increasingly common and easier to set up than real estate waqf for most Americans.
A third type, waqf mushtarak, is shared — multiple donors pool assets into a single endowment. Community-level mosque projects often use this model.
What assets can become waqf?
Traditionally: real estate, farmland, buildings. In modern Islamic finance, scholars have extended this to include cash, stocks (sharia-compliant), and intellectual property. In theory, any durable asset that generates recurring benefit can be endowed.
In practice, for most U.S. Muslims looking at this for the first time, the most realistic options are cash waqf (easiest to set up), investment accounts (if held in a sharia-compliant structure), or real property. The minimum size depends on the institution you work with — some Islamic nonprofits in the U.S. accept waqf contributions starting at a few thousand dollars.
How to set up a waqf in the United States
There's no single federal "waqf registration" process in the U.S. You have a few practical paths depending on what you're trying to accomplish.
The most straightforward option for individuals is contributing to an established waqf fund run by a U.S. Islamic organization. Several national charities — including Islamic Relief USA and Zakat Foundation of America — maintain waqf funds that pool contributions and distribute returns. You contribute, you're done, they manage it.
For larger or more customized endowments, you work with an Islamic estate planning attorney to set up a charitable remainder trust or a donor-advised fund structure that mirrors waqf principles. The intent is declared, the asset is protected, the management is formalized. This is the route for business owners, real estate holders, or anyone with significant assets they want to dedicate.
Either way, the declaration of waqf intent matters. Scholars generally hold that a verbal or written declaration accompanied by transfer of the asset is sufficient. For U.S. legal purposes, you want this formalized in writing with a clear trustee structure.
Is waqf the same as sadaqah jariyah?
Waqf is one form of sadaqah jariyah, but not all sadaqah jariyah is waqf. Sadaqah jariyah is the broader concept: ongoing charity that continues benefiting others after your death. Sponsoring a child's education, funding a water well, or teaching someone a skill — these can all be sadaqah jariyah without being formal waqf.
Waqf is the institutionalized, permanent version. The legal structure and permanent nature of the endowment are what distinguish it. For U.S. Muslims thinking about their long-term charitable legacy, waqf and other forms of sadaqah jariyah both belong in the conversation.
Waqf and your estate plan
Waqf doesn't replace a will or the Islamic inheritance rules (faraid). They coexist. The 1/3 rule that scholars cite — that a Muslim can freely distribute up to one-third of their estate to non-heirs — is often the framework for waqf allocations. The remaining two-thirds follow faraid rules and pass to heirs.
If you're doing serious estate planning, waqf belongs in the same conversation as your will and trust documents. HalalWallet's estate planning resource center covers all of this in one place — the full picture of Islamic inheritance, wills, and charitable giving tools.
For anyone who wants a Muslim attorney to help structure a waqf alongside a compliant will and trust, ShariaWiz is designed exactly for that. They specialize in Islamic estate planning with licensed attorneys. Read the full ShariaWiz review if you want to understand how their service works before reaching out.
The bottom line
Waqf is one of the most underused tools in Islamic giving for American Muslims, mostly because it's unfamiliar and there's no obvious "how to set this up" guide that speaks to the U.S. legal context. The short version: if you want your charitable giving to outlast your life, waqf is the Islamic framework for that.
Start simple. Contribute to an established waqf fund through a vetted charity — you can browse options on HalalWallet's charity directory. For larger endowments or anything real estate-related, work with an attorney who understands both Islamic principles and U.S. trust law. And read up on what your zakat obligations look like separately — waqf and zakat serve different purposes and neither replaces the other.
Frequently asked questions
Is waqf legally recognized in the United States? Waqf as a category doesn't exist in U.S. law, but the same outcomes can be achieved through charitable trusts, donor-advised funds, and nonprofit structures. An Islamic estate planning attorney can set this up in a way that's both legally valid and sharia-compliant.
Can I revoke a waqf after I set it up? Generally, no. The majority scholarly position is that waqf is irrevocable once declared. This is a significant decision — make sure the asset and the cause are ones you're committed to permanently before proceeding.
Does waqf count toward my zakat obligation? Waqf assets themselves are removed from your nisab calculation once dedicated. The returns generated by the waqf go to the charity, not to you, so they don't create new zakat liability for you. Your personal assets outside the waqf are still subject to normal zakat rules.
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What's the minimum amount needed to start a waqf? For institutional waqf funds that pool contributions, some U.S. organizations accept contributions as low as $1,000-$5,000. For a standalone personal endowment set up through a trust, the practical minimum is higher — the attorney and administrative costs make small endowments inefficient. Contact the organization or attorney you're working with for their specific thresholds.
Can waqf be for a family before going to charity? Yes. A family waqf (waqf ahli) provides for descendants first, then converts to a charitable endowment when the family line ends. This is permissible under most scholarly opinions, though some scholars have restrictions on this structure. Discuss the specifics with a scholar or Islamic estate planning attorney.
