The Property and other fixed assets category does not include the home you live in but includes property purchased with the intention to make profit from reselling. In addition, the value of leased property is not subject to Zakat. Only the rental income is subject to Zakat.
Scholars give an allowance for up to one lunar year’s worth of the non-interest portion of the mortgage payments to be deducted but this allowance should only be taken if one feels that not doing so significantly impacts one’s ability to make the repayments in a timely fashion.
If you have a second house which is neither to live in, nor for renting out then there is no Zakat due on it while it remains a long-term investment.
If you intend to sell it afterwards, only upon selling it will the proceeds be Zakatable. The proceeds will be added to your Zakatable assets. The value of the house which was initially bought as a long-term investment will not be subject to Zakat.
Of course if you do manage to sell it then Zakat may well become due on the cash proceeds that you are in possession of on your Zakat payment date.
If you are transferring the funds every time the rent is paid, in that scenario, if your Zakat date falls before you have transferred that month’s rent, you will liable to pay Zakat on those funds. Rent which is transferred to your parents is not liable to Zakat for you.
On your Zakat anniversary, whatever residual or net cash you have remaining from your rental income should be added to your cash balance for Zakat purposes. If you have already spent the funds, then no Zakat is due.
Until contracts have been exchanged and paying the deposit becomes a certain liability, Zakat should be paid on the cash. This is because there remains a possibility, at least in theory, of the sale/purchase not proceeding for whatever reason. Until it’s absolutely certain that the cash will leave you, Zakat should be paid.
Doing so will also remove any uncertainty and maximise the blessings of the process for you insha’Allah.
Zakat is not due on the land if you simply own it with no clear intention about what to do with it.
The answer depends on the intention with the land.
If the land has simply been inherited or purchased with no particular intention or as a store of wealth, then no Zakat is due.
If it was bought for investment, meaning capital appreciation purposes specifically, then Zakat is due on the approximate sale price of the land every year. One can delay the payment for each year for the time when the land is actually sold. In this case it will be due for each of the previous years based on the land value at the time.
I pay approximately 300 GBP back to my relatives on a monthly basis and 750 GBP monthly on my mortgage.
Everything outstanding that you owe to your family is deductible if there is no binding contract in relation to the repayment terms.
The mortgage payments should not be deducted. Scholars give an allowance for up to one year’s worth of the non-interest portion of the payments to be deducted but this allowance should only be taken if one feels that not doing so significantly impacts one ability to make the repayments in a timely fashion. If it is an Islamic home purchase plan then these are not considered to be debt and therefore nothing is deductible
With rental property, the only thing to worry about is whatever is left over from the income that has been generated over the course of the year. So in fact, as long as you have accounted for the remaining cash from your rental income in your cash balance, there is nothing further to consider. Capital repayments, service charge, expenses etc that are upcoming will simply reflect in next year’s cash balance on your Zakat anniversary, i.e. the fact that you will have made those expenditures will mean that your cash balance will be lower and therefore that will factor into your Zakat calculation.
The only deductibles today are any overdue expenses or liabilities.
I live with my husband in his house. The house above was bought in order for my mother to have some sort of income when I left to get married.
Zakat would only be payable on any cash that you have remaining from your rental income. If all the cash has been used, then there is nothing to include from it in your calculation.
Scholars do permit deducting up to 12 month’s worth of payments, but only the non-interest or principal portion of the payment. You can determine this split from your lender.
If you have an Islamic finance product then this is not considered to be debt and therefore nothing is deducted.
If you own property other than your home for the purposes of long-term investment without intention to resell then Zakat is due on rental income only. Please note if you are a property developer and you have already mentioned this in the Business section of our online calculator , do not input this information twice. If this is the case, and if rental income has not been included within your cash section, then please state its value in your Zakat calculation.
Reviewed on 29/11/2021