Zakah on a debt that has to be returned over nine years

20-11-2015 | IslamWeb

Question:

I applied for a one-million loan without interest from my office and received it last year at a rate of return in 10 years. I have returned 0.1 million and 0.9 million remains, but I earned that money and it is available in my account but I should return it to my office over nine years. I want to know whether zakah should be paid on this amount that I have in my account and that has to be returned over nine years or not. Please reply in the light of quran and sunna. It would be highly appreciated if you could answer soon.

Answer:

All perfect praise be to Allaah, The Lord of the Worlds. I testify that there is none worthy of worship except Allaah and that Muhammad  sallallaahu  `alayhi  wa  sallam ( may  Allaah exalt his mention ) is His slave and Messenger.

The loan that you took has entered into your possession from the day that you borrowed it, and you are responsible for paying it back, so if a whole lunar year elapses on it while it is in your possession and it reached the nisaab (minimum amount liable for zakah), then you are obliged to pay zakah on it in principle. If you did not repay the debt, as you clarified in the question, then should you deduct the debt that you owe from the money that you possess and then pay zakah on the remaining amount or not? The majority of the scholars believe that the debt is dropped from zakah of hidden money, i.e. cash money and tradable items. Their evidence is what was proven from ‘Uthmaan  may  Allaah  be  pleased  with  him; that he said in the presence of some Companions: "This month is the month when you should pay zakah, so whoever has debts should repay it and then pay zakah on the remaining amount of money; this was reported by Maalik and Ibn Abi Shaybah and others."

Also, if we say that the indebted person has to pay zakah, then this means that zakah would be paid twice on the same amount because the creditor has also to pay the zakah on his money [which he lent], as is known.

Ash-Shaafi’i holds the view in his new opinion that debt does not exempt a person from paying the zakah; the prominent scholars Ibn Baaz and Ibn ‘Uthaymeen  may  Allaah  have  mercy  upon  them chose this opinion; their evidence is the general saying of Allaah (which means): {Take [O, Muhammad] from their wealth a charity by which you purify them and cause them increase.} [Quran 9:103]

Also, the Prophet  sallallaahu  `alayhi  wa  sallam ( may  Allaah exalt his mention ) used to send his workers to collect alms, and they did not use to ask the people whether or not they had debts. Shaykh Ibn Uthaymeen answered about the saying of ‘Uthmaan, "It proves that if the debt is immediate and the debtor wants to repay it, then he puts it in priority over the zakah [i.e. he first repays the debt]; as regards the debts that are not immediate, then this does not prevent from paying the zakah on it. This is the saying that a person should follow in order to be on the safe side."

The view that we adopt here in Islamweb in regard to this issue is the view of Imaam Maalik  may  Allaah  have  mercy  upon  him which is that the debt is deducted from the wealth on which one is obliged to pay zakah, unless one has other funds that are not zakatable and are in surplus of his need, then he should consider it instead of the debts and then pay the zakah on the wealth that he has.

Based on that, if you have tradable items, such as homes, cars, or furniture that are in surplus of your need, then you should consider this against the debts, so you pay zakah on the money that you borrowed. In any case, it is better to pay the zakah on your debt in order to be on the safe side as per the new opinion of Imaam Ash-Shaafi’i, or that you only deduct the immediate portion of debt that you have to repay, as per the view chosen by some scholars.

For more benefit, please refer to fatwa 116828.

Allaah knows best.

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