Nisab Calculator
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เรากำลังจัดทำคู่มือการศึกษาที่ครอบคลุมสำหรับ Nisab Threshold Calculator กลับมาเร็วๆ นี้เพื่อดูคำอธิบายทีละขั้นตอน สูตร ตัวอย่างจริง และเคล็ดลับจากผู้เชี่ยวชาญ
The nisab is the minimum wealth threshold that determines whether a Muslim is obligated to pay Zakat. If an individual's total zakatable wealth equals or exceeds the nisab and has remained so for one complete lunar year (hawl), Zakat becomes obligatory. The nisab can be calculated using two standards historically used since the time of the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him): the gold standard (85 grams of pure gold) and the silver standard (595 grams of pure silver). These two standards exist because in the early Islamic period, gold and silver were both used as currency. Today, because gold prices have risen dramatically relative to silver, the gold nisab is significantly higher than the silver nisab in monetary value. The gold nisab (approximately $6,000–$7,000 at 2024 prices) is favored by scholars who argue that gold remains a more universal wealth standard. The silver nisab (approximately $450–$600 at 2024 prices) is favored by many contemporary scholars who argue it captures more people within the Zakat obligation, fulfilling the redistribution purpose more broadly. Most Islamic jurisdictions and Zakat organizations provide guidance on which standard to use. The nisab is a living value — it changes daily with gold and silver market prices, meaning you should use the nisab value on your specific hawl (Zakat calculation) date.
Gold Nisab = 85 grams × Current Gold Price per gram; Silver Nisab = 595 grams × Current Silver Price per gram; Zakat Due if: Total Net Zakatable Wealth >= Nisab AND Held for Full Hawl (lunar year)
- 1Determine today's gold price per gram of pure (24K) gold from a reputable financial source. Multiply by 85 to get the gold nisab in your local currency.
- 2Determine today's silver price per gram. Multiply by 595 to get the silver nisab in your local currency.
- 3Choose which standard to apply: consult your local Zakat authority, mosque, or Islamic scholar. Note that using the silver nisab will result in more people having Zakat obligations due to its lower monetary threshold.
- 4Calculate your total net zakatable wealth on your hawl date: add all zakatable assets (cash, bank balances, investment gold/silver, receivables, business inventory, shares) and subtract eligible current liabilities.
- 5Compare your total net zakatable wealth to the chosen nisab amount. If at or above the nisab, Zakat is due.
- 6Verify that the wealth has been continuously at or above the nisab for the full lunar year (hawl). If wealth dropped below the nisab at any point and then recovered, a new hawl begins from the recovery date.
- 7Pay 2.5% Zakat on the total net zakatable wealth (or the applicable specific rate for livestock, agricultural produce, etc.).
Gold prices fluctuate daily — recalculate at your hawl date.
85 grams of gold at $65/gram = $5,525 gold nisab. If your total zakatable wealth is $5,525 or more and has been so for the full lunar year, Zakat is due at 2.5% of your net zakatable wealth.
The silver nisab is dramatically lower than the gold nisab due to silver's historically low price.
595 grams of silver at $0.80/gram = $476 silver nisab. This is approximately 12× lower than the gold nisab at the same time. Under the silver nisab, many more Muslims with modest savings become obligated to pay Zakat.
The choice of nisab standard can determine whether Zakat is obligatory at all.
This person's $3,500 savings falls below the gold nisab ($6,000) but far above the silver nisab ($500). Under the gold standard: no obligation. Under the silver standard: $87.50 Zakat. The scholar or institution you follow determines which standard applies.
Nisab changes with daily precious metal market prices — use on your Zakat calculation date.
Gold nisab: 85 × AED 240 = AED 20,400. Silver nisab: 595 × AED 2.75 = AED 1,636.25. At these prices, the gold nisab (AED 20,400) is 12.5× the silver nisab (AED 1,636). The choice dramatically changes who has Zakat obligations.
Muslims checking whether their savings and assets have crossed the nisab threshold on their annual Zakat calculation date., where accurate nisab ulator analysis through the Nisab Calculator supports evidence-based decision-making and quantitative rigor in professional workflows
Zakat organizations publishing current nisab values in local currencies to help donors determine obligations., where accurate nisab ulator analysis through the Nisab Calculator supports evidence-based decision-making and quantitative rigor in professional workflows
Islamic finance advisers helping clients understand the nisab in the context of total portfolio Zakat calculations., where accurate nisab ulator analysis through the Nisab Calculator supports evidence-based decision-making and quantitative rigor in professional workflows
Imams and Islamic educators explaining the gold vs silver nisab debate and guiding congregations on which standard to follow., where accurate nisab ulator analysis through the Nisab Calculator supports evidence-based decision-making and quantitative rigor in professional workflows
Mobile Zakat apps updating nisab values daily based on live gold and silver market prices.
Minimum Balance Method for Hawl
Some scholars use the minimum balance method: the zakatable wealth is the lowest balance held throughout the hawl year (not the balance on the hawl date). This method results in lower Zakat for those whose wealth fluctuates significantly. The majority method uses the balance on the hawl date.
New Wealth Added During the Hawl
Scholars differ on wealth acquired during the hawl year. Most hold that new wealth added (from savings, inheritance) is added to the existing zakatable wealth and Zakat is paid on the total at the hawl date — the new wealth is not tracked for a separate hawl. Livestock births during the hawl are similarly folded in.
Nisab for Zakat in Countries with Own Gold Standards
In some countries, Zakat authorities publish a standardized nisab value in local currency, updated periodically (monthly or annually). For example, Malaysia's LHDN and various state Zakat boards publish the nisab in Ringgit quarterly. Saudi Arabia's ZATCA provides guidance on the applicable nisab. Always check local Zakat authority guidance.
Comparison with the Historical Context
In the time of the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH), 85 grams of gold represented approximately 20 gold dinars — the approximate threshold at which a person was considered financially comfortable. 595 grams of silver represented 200 silver dirhams, the silver equivalent of the same purchasing power. Today, the gold-to-silver price ratio of approximately 80:1 (compared to historically 12-15:1) creates the large difference between the two nisab standards.
| Standard | Weight | 2024 Price/gram (approx.) | 2024 Nisab Value (approx.) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gold (24K pure) | 85 grams | $65–70/gram | $5,525–$5,950 |
| Silver (pure) | 595 grams | $0.75–0.85/gram | $446–$506 |
| UAE Dirhams (Gold) | 85 grams | AED 240–260/gram | AED 20,400–22,100 |
| UAE Dirhams (Silver) | 595 grams | AED 2.70–3.00/gram | AED 1,607–1,785 |
| SAR (Gold) | 85 grams | SAR 235–250/gram | SAR 19,975–21,250 |
| GBP (Gold) | 85 grams | £50–55/gram | £4,250–4,675 |
What is the nisab?
The nisab is the minimum wealth threshold for Zakat obligation. If your total net zakatable wealth equals or exceeds the nisab for one complete lunar year, Zakat at 2.5% becomes mandatory. The nisab is measured in gold (85 grams) or silver (595 grams) — converted to your local currency at current market prices.
Which nisab standard should I use — gold or silver?
This is a matter of scholarly difference. The gold nisab is generally recommended by traditional scholars and is higher, meaning fewer people are obligated. The silver nisab is lower and encompasses more people. Many contemporary scholars and Zakat organizations (UK's National Zakat Foundation, Zakat Foundation of America) recommend using the silver nisab to maximise charitable redistribution.
Does the nisab change over time?
Yes. The nisab is not a fixed dollar or dirham amount — it is fixed in grams of gold or silver. Since gold and silver prices change daily, the nisab in your local currency changes every day. You should use the gold or silver price on your specific hawl (Zakat calculation) date, not an average or previous year's price.
Do all types of Zakat use the same nisab?
Different types of Zakat have their own nisab: livestock (camels 5, cattle 30, sheep 40), agricultural produce (5 wasqs ≈ 612-653kg), buried treasure (rikaz — 1/5 of the find). For wealth Zakat (savings, gold, business assets), the 85g gold or 595g silver nisab applies. This is particularly important in the context of nisab calculatorulator calculations, where accuracy directly impacts decision-making. Professionals across multiple industries rely on precise nisab calculatorulator 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.
What if my wealth fluctuates around the nisab during the year?
If your wealth falls below the nisab during the hawl year and then rises above it again, the hawl restarts from when the nisab was re-crossed. To be obligated for Zakat, the wealth must remain at or above the nisab for the full lunar year without dipping below. Temporary dips reset the clock.
Does the nisab apply to each asset separately?
The nisab is generally applied to total combined zakatable wealth, not to each asset category separately. If your combined cash, gold, silver, receivables, and business assets together exceed the nisab, Zakat is due on the total — even if each individual component is below the nisab alone. This is particularly important in the context of nisab calculatorulator calculations, where accuracy directly impacts decision-making. Professionals across multiple industries rely on precise nisab calculatorulator 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.
What is the nisab for Zakat al-Fitr?
Zakat al-Fitr (the fast-breaking Zakat) does not use the standard wealth nisab. It is a fixed per-person amount of food staple (historically 1 saa' ≈ 2-3 kg) to be given before Eid al-Fitr prayer. In modern practice, many scholars allow cash equivalent. All Muslims who can afford it must pay Zakat al-Fitr — there is no wealth nisab threshold.
Is the nisab for Zakat on agricultural produce different?
Yes. The nisab for Zakat al-Zuru' (agricultural Zakat) is 5 wasqs of agricultural produce — approximately 612-653 kg (depending on scholarly calculation). The Zakat rate is 10% on rain-fed crops or 5% on irrigated crops. Agricultural Zakat is due at each harvest, not annually based on a hawl. This is particularly important in the context of nisab calculatorulator calculations, where accuracy directly impacts decision-making. Professionals across multiple industries rely on precise nisab calculatorulator 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.
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For simplicity, many Muslims set a fixed Zakat date (e.g., 1 Ramadan each year) and look up the gold or silver price on that date to set their nisab. This consistent annual practice ensures they never miss the Zakat obligation and simplifies the hawl tracking requirement.
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The choice between gold and silver nisab has significant real-world impact on how much of the Muslim population is Zakat-obligated. In 2023, the gold nisab (~$6,000) versus silver nisab (~$450) difference meant that in a country like the UK, using the silver standard would bring tens of millions of pounds more per year into charitable circulation than the gold standard — a fact that makes the nisab choice far more than a theoretical theological question.