Zakat on cryptocurrency is obligatory when your crypto holdings — combined with all your other zakatable assets — exceed the nisab threshold and have been held for a complete lunar year. Most major Islamic scholarly bodies now treat Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies held as an investment or store of value as a tradable asset (mal), making them zakatable at 2.5% of their market value on your zakat date. This guide covers the calculation method, which crypto assets are zakatable, and the scholarly positions you need to know.
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Is Cryptocurrency Zakatable?
The majority contemporary position among Islamic scholars and fatwa councils is that cryptocurrency held as an investment or wealth store is zakatable. This position has been supported by:
- AAOIFI Shariah Standard No. 62 (2021): Classified certain cryptocurrencies as permissible assets for trading and investing under defined conditions, implying zakatable status
- Darul Iftaa (Mufti Taqi Usmani's institution): Treats Bitcoin and similar currencies as assets subject to zakat when held as an investment
- AMJA (Assembly of Muslim Jurists of America): Supports zakat on crypto assets held for investment purposes
- ISPU (Institute for Social Policy and Understanding): Academic consensus supporting zakatable status
Note: This zakat guide addresses the obligation to pay zakat on crypto you hold. For the separate question of whether cryptocurrency trading and holding is permissible at all, see the AAOIFI cryptocurrency shariah ruling.
How to Calculate Zakat on Cryptocurrency
The calculation is straightforward:
- Determine the market value of all your crypto holdings in USD on your zakat date (use a reliable source like CoinGecko or your exchange's price)
- Add to all other zakatable assets (savings, investments, gold, receivables, business inventory)
- Compare the total to the nisab (approximately $476 using silver nisab in 2026)
- If total exceeds nisab: Pay 2.5% on the full zakatable total
- Hawl rule: Crypto must have been in your possession for a full lunar year at the nisab level
Which Crypto Assets Are Zakatable?
| Crypto Asset Type | Zakatable? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Bitcoin (BTC) held as investment | Yes | Market value on zakat date × 2.5% |
| Ethereum (ETH) held as investment | Yes | Market value on zakat date × 2.5% |
| Stablecoins (USDC, USDT, etc.) | Yes | Treated as cash equivalent; full face value |
| Crypto used actively in business/trade | Yes — as business inventory | Market value at zakat date |
| NFTs held as investment | Yes — if tradable and has market value | Scholars differ; apply market value if clearly tradable |
| DeFi yield/staking rewards | Yes — when received | Treated as income; added to zakatable wealth |
| Crypto locked in staking (inaccessible) | Scholarly difference | Conservative view: still zakatable; strict view: on withdrawal |
Worked Examples
Example 1: Bitcoin Long-Term Hold
Ibrahim has 0.15 BTC. On his zakat date, Bitcoin is priced at $95,000 USD. Value: 0.15 × $95,000 = $14,250. Combined with $22,000 in savings: total zakatable wealth = $36,250. Zakat: $36,250 × 2.5% = $906.25.
Example 2: Mixed Crypto Portfolio
Nadia holds 0.05 BTC ($4,750), 1.2 ETH ($4,200), and 2,000 USDC ($2,000). Total crypto value: $10,950. Her other savings: $8,000. Total zakatable wealth: $18,950. Zakat: $18,950 × 2.5% = $473.75.
Example 3: Crypto Below Nisab
Yusuf holds $300 in ETH and $180 in other savings. Total: $480. Silver nisab ~$476. He exceeds the nisab by a small margin. Zakat: $480 × 2.5% = $12.
What About Crypto Losses?
Zakat is based on current market value, not what you paid. If you bought 1 ETH at $4,000 and it is now worth $2,800 on your zakat date, your zakatable amount is $2,800. Zakat is not calculated on cost basis, only on current wealth you actually possess.
DeFi, Staking, and Yield: Special Considerations
Staking rewards and DeFi yield are received as income. When received, they become part of your zakatable wealth and are included in your total on your zakat date. If staking rewards push your total above the nisab, the hawl clock starts from when you first exceeded the nisab (whether from staking rewards or other wealth).
Locked or illiquid positions (such as assets locked in a DeFi protocol you cannot access immediately): the stricter scholarly view holds them non-zakatable until accessible; the conservative view includes them. This is an area where the fatwa continues to develop — follow a scholar you trust or err on the side of including them.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does the hawl restart every time I trade crypto?
Scholars differ. One position holds that swapping one crypto for another (e.g. ETH to BTC) does not restart the hawl, as wealth remains above the nisab throughout. Another holds that the specific asset's hawl restarts on purchase. The practical approach — using a fixed annual zakat date and calculating on whatever you hold that day — is accepted by most scholars as a valid simplification.
Is zakat owed on crypto held in a cold wallet?
Yes. The storage method (exchange, hot wallet, cold wallet) does not affect zakat obligation. What matters is that you own and control the asset. Cold wallet holdings are as zakatable as exchange holdings.
How do I value crypto in a declining market on my zakat date?
Use the market price on your actual zakat date. If markets are extremely volatile, using the average of the day's high and low price is a reasonable approach. There is no obligation to pay zakat based on peak prices — only current possession.
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For the full zakat calculation framework for all asset types, use the HalalWallet zakat calculator or see the zakat on investments guide.






