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Zakat on livestock (Zakat al-An'am) is one of the oldest and most detailed forms of Zakat, with specific rules established directly in Hadith by the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him). It applies to three types of grazing livestock (al-saima): camels (ibil), cattle (baqar/bakar), and sheep/goats (ghanam). The key principles are: only free-ranging (grazing) livestock count — animals that are commercially worked or fed by the owner rather than by grazing may be exempt; the livestock must be held for a full lunar year (hawl); and each livestock type has its own nisab (minimum threshold) and its own Zakat scale. For camels, the nisab is 5 camels (below 5, no Zakat); different numbers of camels yield different types and numbers of animals due as Zakat. For cattle, the nisab is 30 head. For sheep and goats, the nisab is 40. Mixed herds of the same species (sheep and goats counted together) follow a combined scale. Horses, mules, and donkeys are generally not subject to Zakat unless they are held for commercial trading (in which case they fall under business inventory Zakat). The Zakat on livestock is typically paid in kind — giving actual animals — though modern scholars increasingly permit payment of cash equivalent at current market prices.
Camels: Nisab = 5 (Zakat = 1 goat for 5-9; scales up); Cattle: Nisab = 30 (Zakat = 1 one-year-old for 30-39; scales up); Sheep/Goats: Nisab = 40 (Zakat = 1 sheep for 40-120; scales up); Held for full hawl; Free-grazing (saima) required
- 1Classify the livestock: camels, cattle (including buffalo in many rulings), or sheep and goats (counted together).
- 2Determine if the livestock are free-grazing (saima) — fed predominantly by natural pasture at the owner's expense or free ranging on natural land. Commercially raised livestock fed by the owner may be exempt as saima and fall under business inventory rules instead.
- 3Count the total number of animals in each category as of the hawl (one complete lunar year from when the nisab was first reached).
- 4Apply the Zakat scale for each category: camels use a detailed scale from 5-9 animals to 120+; cattle from 30; sheep/goats from 40.
- 5If the livestock count is between scales (e.g., between 40 and 120 sheep), the Zakat amount stays at the lower scale until the next threshold is crossed.
- 6Zakat is typically given as actual animals — the specified type and age defined in the Hadith for each range. Contemporary scholars permit cash equivalent at current market value.
- 7Animals of the same species can be mixed — sheep and goats are counted together; different species (camels vs cattle) are assessed separately.
Nisab for sheep/goats is 40 animals. Below this, no Zakat applies.
With 35 sheep, the flock falls short of the 40-animal nisab. No Zakat is due for this year. If the flock grows to 40 before the hawl date next year, Zakat will be due.
Sheep and goats are combined for the nisab count and Zakat scale.
25 + 20 = 45 combined. Exceeds the 40 nisab. For 40-120 animals, Zakat is 1 sheep. A quality female sheep (ewe) is the standard Zakat. The given animal should be of average quality from the flock, not the poorest or the best.
Cattle nisab is 30. For 30-39: tabi' (one-year-old); for 40-59: musinnah (two-year-old).
45 cattle exceeds the 40-cow threshold (musinnah tier). Zakat: 1 female two-year-old cow (musinnah). This is the prescribed Zakat for 40–59 cattle. The owner gives a young female cow meeting the age specification.
Camel Zakat uses goats as the payment unit for smaller herds.
For 10-14 camels, the Zakat is 2 goats (sharif). At 12 camels, the owner gives 2 goats to eligible Zakat recipients. As herd sizes increase (25+, 36+, 46+), the Zakat transitions to female camels of specified ages.
Traditional livestock farmers in GCC, South Asia, and Sub-Saharan Africa calculating annual Zakat on their herds., representing an important application area for the Zakat Livestock Calc in professional and analytical contexts where accurate zakat livestock calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Islamic scholars and Zakat agencies providing guidance to agricultural communities on livestock Zakat scales., representing an important application area for the Zakat Livestock Calc in professional and analytical contexts where accurate zakat livestock calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Zakat collection organizations in Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, and Sudan collecting livestock Zakat from rural farmers., representing an important application area for the Zakat Livestock Calc in professional and analytical contexts where accurate zakat livestock calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Muslim farmers determining whether their commercially fed animals fall under trade Zakat or traditional livestock Zakat., representing an important application area for the Zakat Livestock Calc in professional and analytical contexts where accurate zakat livestock calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Zakat education programs teaching the detailed nisab scales and animal specifications to new Muslims., representing an important application area for the Zakat Livestock Calc in professional and analytical contexts where accurate zakat livestock calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Stud and Work Animals
{'title': 'Stud and Work Animals', 'body': 'Animals kept for stud or heavy work purposes (e.g., a bull used for plowing, a stallion for breeding) are generally exempt from livestock Zakat as they are working assets, not grazing wealth. However, if kept alongside a herd above the nisab, they may be counted depending on the scholarly opinion followed.'}
Buffalo
In the Zakat Livestock Calc, this scenario requires additional caution when interpreting zakat livestock results. The standard formula may not fully account for all factors present in this edge case, and supplementary analysis or expert consultation may be warranted. Professional best practice involves documenting assumptions, running sensitivity analyses, and cross-referencing results with alternative methods when zakat livestock calculations fall into non-standard territory.
Ownership vs Custody
In the Zakat Livestock Calc, this scenario requires additional caution when interpreting zakat livestock results. The standard formula may not fully account for all factors present in this edge case, and supplementary analysis or expert consultation may be warranted. Professional best practice involves documenting assumptions, running sensitivity analyses, and cross-referencing results with alternative methods when zakat livestock calculations fall into non-standard territory.
Animals Acquired Through Purchase vs Birth
{'title': 'Animals Acquired Through Purchase vs Birth', 'body': "If the nisab is reached only through purchasing additional animals (not births), a new hawl begins from the acquisition date. However, newborn animals from an existing above-nisab herd generally do not reset the hawl — they are folded into the existing herd's hawl calculation."}
| Livestock Type | Nisab (Minimum) | Range | Zakat Due |
|---|---|---|---|
| Camels | 5 | 5–9 | 1 goat |
| Camels | 5 | 10–14 | 2 goats |
| Camels | 5 | 15–19 | 3 goats |
| Camels | 5 | 20–24 | 4 goats |
| Camels | 5 | 25–35 | 1 female camel (bint makhad) |
| Cattle/Buffalo | 30 | 30–39 | 1 one-year-old (tabi') |
| Cattle/Buffalo | 30 | 40–59 | 1 two-year-old (musinnah) |
| Cattle/Buffalo | 30 | 60–69 | 2 tabi' (one-year-olds) |
| Sheep/Goats | 40 | 40–120 | 1 sheep |
| Sheep/Goats | 40 | 121–200 | 2 sheep |
| Sheep/Goats | 40 | 201–399 | 3 sheep |
| Sheep/Goats | 40 | 400+ | 4 sheep + 1 per 100 thereafter |
What is Zakat al-An'am?
Zakat al-An'am is the Zakat on livestock — specifically camels (ibil), cattle (baqar), and sheep/goats (ghanam). It is one of the oldest forms of Zakat with detailed scales prescribed in the Sunnah. The Zakat is typically paid in kind (actual animals) but may be paid in cash at current market value.
What does 'free-grazing' (saima) mean?
Saima refers to livestock that feed primarily from natural pasture and grazing land, without the owner bearing significant feed costs. Animals that are commercially fed by the owner (hay, grain, commercial feed) for most of the year are not considered saima. If not saima, the livestock may instead be treated as business inventory and subject to trade Zakat rules.
What is the nisab for each livestock type?
Camels: minimum 5 camels. Cattle: minimum 30 head. Sheep and goats: minimum 40 (counted together). Below these thresholds, no Zakat applies to that livestock category. The hawl must also be complete — the livestock must have been above the nisab for the full lunar year. This is particularly important in the context of zakat livestock calculator calculations, where accuracy directly impacts decision-making. Professionals across multiple industries rely on precise zakat livestock calculator computations to validate assumptions, optimize processes, and ensure compliance with applicable standards. Understanding the underlying methodology helps users interpret results correctly and identify when additional analysis may be warranted.
Can livestock Zakat be paid in cash?
The traditional method is to give actual animals. However, many contemporary scholars and Zakat organizations permit cash payment equivalent to the current market value of the required animals. This is particularly relevant in urban settings or where recipients prefer cash. This is particularly important in the context of zakat livestock calculator calculations, where accuracy directly impacts decision-making. Professionals across multiple industries rely on precise zakat livestock calculator computations to validate assumptions, optimize processes, and ensure compliance with applicable standards. Understanding the underlying methodology helps users interpret results correctly and identify when additional analysis may be warranted.
Are commercially farmed animals subject to livestock Zakat?
Opinions vary. If animals are raised purely for commercial production (dairy cows, chickens) with the owner bearing feed costs, many scholars treat them as business inventory subject to trade Zakat. If animals graze freely and naturally, Zakat al-An'am rules apply. Consult a qualified scholar for your specific farming operation. This is particularly important in the context of zakat livestock calculator calculations, where accuracy directly impacts decision-making. Professionals across multiple industries rely on precise zakat livestock calculator computations to validate assumptions, optimize processes, and ensure compliance with applicable standards. Understanding the underlying methodology helps users interpret results correctly and identify when additional analysis may be warranted.
Do horses, donkeys, and mules have Zakat?
Horses, mules, and donkeys are generally exempt from Zakat under most scholarly interpretations — unless they are held for trade (sale), in which case they fall under business/trade Zakat at 2.5% of their value. Working animals used for transport or labor are exempt. This is particularly important in the context of zakat livestock calculator calculations, where accuracy directly impacts decision-making. Professionals across multiple industries rely on precise zakat livestock calculator computations to validate assumptions, optimize processes, and ensure compliance with applicable standards. Understanding the underlying methodology helps users interpret results correctly and identify when additional analysis may be warranted.
How are newborn animals counted?
Animals born during the hawl year are counted as part of the herd on the hawl date. If a herd reaches the nisab only because of births during the year, a new hawl begins from when the nisab was first reached. Most scholars count offspring as part of the original herd if the parent herd was already above nisab.
What quality of animal should be given as Zakat?
The Zakat animal should be of average quality from the herd — not the best (which would be an unnecessary hardship on the owner) and not the worst or sick animal (which would be unfair to recipients). The Prophet (PBUH) prohibited giving the worst quality animal as Zakat. The Zakat collector traditionally selects a middle-quality animal.
Pro Tip
Modern livestock farmers in GCC countries should consult both the traditional livestock Zakat rules and the business inventory Zakat rules for their situation. Commercially farmed poultry and fish (aquaculture) are typically governed by trade/business Zakat principles, not the traditional al-An'am scale which applies specifically to camels, cattle, and sheep/goats.
Did you know?
The first Zakat collection in Islamic history involved livestock — the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) appointed Zakat collectors (amilin) who would travel to tribal areas to assess and collect livestock Zakat according to the scale he prescribed. The Hadith of Anas ibn Malik recording the detailed camel and cattle Zakat scales is among the most precisely transmitted and detailed financial texts in Islamic tradition.