Halal and Haram Earnings, Bank Accounts, and Financial Dealings in Islam
Source: Aḥkām wa Masāʾil, Issues of Buying and Selling, Vol.1, p.380
(1) Father’s Salary and Increment Error
- Neglecting office duty: If someone spends around 40% of office hours on personal work, this is negligence and a violation of trust.
- Extra increment due to clerical error: If a clerical mistake results in an additional increment and the person knowingly continues receiving 400–500 extra every month, this portion is doubtful/haram income.
Ruling:
✔ If higher officials are aware and still allow the salary, it is considered halal.
✔ If they are unaware, then approximately 40% will be haram and the rest halal.
✔ For the son (Zayd), taking monthly allowance or expenses from this income will be halal only to the extent of the halal portion.
✔ Eating at home and using provisions is permissible if the majority is halal; otherwise, caution is required.
(2) Earnings of a Brother Working Abroad
- He lied initially (about study leave, and at the airport claiming tourism). This was sinful and requires tawbah.
- If his present job as a doctor is lawful and he fulfills duties honestly, then the salary is halal.
- Money sent to parents and family is halal for them.
(3) Keeping a Non-Interest Bank Account
- Even if the account itself is non-interest, the bank is an interest-based institution.
- Qur’ān: ﴿وَلاَ تَعَاوَنُوْا عَلَى الْإِثْمِ وَالْعُدْوَانِ﴾
“Do not help one another in sin and transgression.” - Thus, keeping money in the bank without need is considered cooperation in sin.
- If no major risk of theft exists at home, keeping funds in a bank is impermissible.
(4) Sending Money Through the Bank
- If Zayd (abroad) sends halal earnings through the bank into Bakr’s account:
✔ The money itself is halal for Bakr.
However, maintaining a bank account remains sinful due to involvement with interest-based institutions.
(5) Mixing of Halal and Haram Income
- If halal and haram wealth is mixed, then:
✔ The exact haram amount must be separated and returned to the rightful owner or spent in a lawful charitable cause.
✔ The remainder is halal.
(6) Mixing of Halal and Haram Money in a Bank Account
- If an account has 500 haram rupees and later halal money is added:
✔ Withdrawing with intention to take only the halal amount does not remove the sin.
Twofold sin occurs:
- Consuming haram.
- Maintaining a bank account in a riba-based system.
✔ However, the money sent by Bakr from abroad remains halal as long as it is withdrawn separately with the correct intention.
Conclusion
◈ Salary must be free from negligence and unlawful increments.
◈ Initial lies require repentance, but lawful jobs produce halal earnings.
◈ Bank accounts in riba-based systems are impermissible unless in dire necessity.
◈ Mixing halal and haram wealth requires purification by removing the unlawful part.
ھذا ما عندي والله أعلم بالصواب