Do you pay zakat on business inventory? Yes. If you operate a trade or business, the goods you hold for resale, outstanding invoices you expect to collect, and certain business cash reserves are generally zakatable once they meet the nisab and have been held for one lunar year. This is separate from personal zakat on savings and investments. This guide explains which business assets count, how to value inventory, and how to calculate zakat on a sole proprietorship, LLC, or partnership in 2026.
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Why Business Assets Are Zakatable
Classical jurists classified trade goods ('urud al-tijarah) as wealth subject to zakat when held with the intention of resale. The Hanafi school, widely followed in zakat calculation guides used by AMJA and other North American fatwa councils, treats inventory at its current market value on your zakat date. Business cash held for operations, accounts receivable you reasonably expect to collect, and raw materials destined for sale also enter the calculation. Fixed assets like equipment, buildings, and vehicles used in the business are generally not zakatable because they are not held for resale.
Which Business Assets Count Toward Zakat?
| Asset | Zakatable? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Inventory and stock for resale | Yes | Value at current market or wholesale price on zakat date |
| Accounts receivable (expected to be paid) | Yes | Include invoices due within a reasonable collection period |
| Business cash and checking accounts | Yes | Operating cash above immediate expenses |
| Raw materials for production | Yes | If intended for sale as finished goods |
| Equipment, machinery, fixtures | No | Tools of trade, not held for resale |
| Business real estate (owned, not for sale) | No | Unless held as investment inventory |
| Goodwill and intangible IP | No | Not treated as liquid trade wealth |
| Uncollectible receivables | No | Debts you cannot reasonably expect to recover |
How to Value Inventory for Zakat
Most scholars instruct you to value inventory at the lower of cost or current market value on your zakat anniversary date. For a retail store, count everything on the shelf at the price you would receive if you sold it today. For a wholesaler, use your wholesale selling price. For a manufacturer, include raw materials and work in progress at their current replacement cost. Perishable goods that would spoil before sale are typically excluded or valued at a discount.
- Retail inventory: current selling price of all stock on hand
- Wholesale inventory: wholesale market value of goods held for distribution
- E-commerce: value of goods in warehouse plus goods in transit you own
- Restaurant or food service: ingredients and supplies held for sale, not kitchen equipment
- Service business with minimal inventory: focus on receivables and business cash instead
Step-by-Step: Calculating Zakat on a Business
- Step 1: Choose your zakat date (many business owners align with Ramadan or their fiscal year end)
- Step 2: Add all business cash and bank balances held for operations
- Step 3: Add the market value of all inventory and trade goods for resale
- Step 4: Add accounts receivable you expect to collect within a reasonable period
- Step 5: Subtract immediate business liabilities due within the next lunar month (supplier invoices, payroll, rent due now)
- Step 6: Add your personal zakatable wealth (savings, investments, gold) to the net business figure if you calculate zakat on a combined basis
- Step 7: Compare the total to the nisab threshold. If above nisab and held for one lunar year, pay 2.5%
For personal zakat on savings and cash, see how to calculate zakat on savings and cash. For debt deductions, see zakat on debt and liabilities. For the nisab threshold itself, see nisab threshold 2026.
LLCs, Partnerships, and Corporations
Sole proprietorship or single-member LLC
Treat the business as an extension of your personal wealth. All zakatable business assets flow into your personal zakat calculation. You pay zakat on the net business assets plus your personal assets.
Multi-member partnership or LLC
Each partner pays zakat on their ownership share of the partnership's zakatable assets. If you own 40% of a partnership with $500,000 in inventory and receivables, your share is $200,000 toward your personal zakat base.
S-Corp or C-Corp
Scholars differ on corporate zakat. Many contemporary fatwa bodies hold that shareholders pay zakat on the value of their shares based on the company's zakatable net assets per share, while the corporation itself does not pay a separate zakat. Consult your scholar or local imam for your specific structure.
Business Zakat vs Personal Zakat: Common Mistakes
- Forgetting receivables: unpaid invoices are often the largest overlooked business asset
- Double counting: do not count the same cash in both personal and business accounts without netting
- Including equipment: machinery and vehicles are tools of trade, not inventory
- Using purchase cost for inventory: value at current market price, not what you paid two years ago
- Ignoring business cash: operating accounts with surplus above immediate bills are zakatable
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I pay zakat on my business if it is not profitable?
Profitability is not the test. Zakat applies to the value of zakatable assets (inventory, receivables, business cash) held above the nisab for one lunar year, regardless of whether the business earned a profit that year.
What about accounts payable I owe suppliers?
Immediate payables due within the next lunar month can be deducted from business assets under the Hanafi and AMJA approach, similar to personal debt deductions. Long term supplier credit extending beyond the month generally is not deducted.
Do I include my 401(k) or business retirement accounts?
Retirement accounts follow separate rules. See zakat on retirement accounts for how to treat 401(k), IRA, and Roth balances.
Can I use the same zakat date for business and personal wealth?
Yes. Most business owners use one zakat anniversary for both personal and business assets. Some prefer to align business inventory counts with a fiscal year end for practical recordkeeping, as long as the lunar year requirement is met.
Where should I pay zakat from business assets?
Zakat from business wealth goes to the same eight categories defined in the Quran (Surah At-Tawbah, 9:60). See where to give zakat in the U.S. for verified organizations and local options.
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This article is for educational purposes and is not a fatwa. Business zakat involves scholarly nuance. Consult a qualified scholar for your specific entity structure and inventory type.






