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Zakat on Debt and Ushr on Crops Explained with Examples

Ruling on Zakat for a Debtor and Ushr/Nisf Ushr on Agricultural Produce
Source:
Fatāwā Rāshidiyyah, Page 409


❖ Question:​


What is the ruling of Zakat on a person who is in debt?


❖ Answer:​


Al-ḥamdu lillāh, waṣ-ṣalātu wa-s-salāmu ʿalā Rasūlillāh, ammā baʿd...


✿ Zakat for a Person in Debt:​


✿ If a person is in debt and possesses 1,000 rupees in cash, while he owes 500 rupees in debt, then he must first repay the debt.
✿ The remaining amount (in this example, 500 rupees) will be subject to Zakat, if one lunar year has passed over it.
✿ Zakat is obligatory on wealth equivalent to 52.5 rupees, which is one-fortieth (1/40) of the total.
✿ One-fortieth of 52.5 rupees is approximately 1.8 rupees, close to 1.5 rupees.
✿ Similarly, if out of 1,000 rupees, 500 are used to repay the debt, then Zakat will be calculated on the remaining 500 rupees, and one-fortieth will be paid, provided a full year has passed.


✿ In the Case of Wheat or Agricultural Produce:​


✿ If instead of cash, a person owns 50 man (traditional unit) of wheat, with a per-man value of 20 rupees, totaling 1,000 rupees, and he also has a debt of 500 rupees — then the ruling is different.
✿ In this case, Zakat will be paid first, and the debt will not be deducted.


✿ Expenses in Farming (Agriculture):​


The following farming expenses are essential and will not be deducted from the yield:


◄ Cost of seeds,
◄ Labor of oxen or working animals,
◄ Wages of field workers,
◄ Cost of fertilizers.


These are necessary inputs and are not to be subtracted before giving Zakat.


✿ Watering the Land – A Shariah-Based Concession:​


✿ If the land requires less effort and cost to be irrigated, then ʿUshr (1/10th of the produce) is obligatory.
✿ If irrigation requires greater effort and cost, then Nisf ʿUshr (1/20th of the produce) is obligatory.


❖ Examples:​


✿ Lands irrigated naturally by rain are subject to ʿUshr (1/10th), since little or no effort is involved.
✿ Lands irrigated by mechanical or laborious means (like drawing water or manual watering) are subject to Nisf ʿUshr (1/20th).
✿ In our country, lands irrigated by small canals, watercourses, or tube wells all fall under the category of Nisf ʿUshr.
✿ Even though these do not require excessive labor, taxes and water usage fees (ābiyāna, etc.) apply — thus Shariah allows a concession to pay only 1/20th.


❖ Conclusion:​


✿ If a person obtains 50 man of wheat from his farmland, then Nisf ʿUshr, i.e., 2.5 man of wheat, becomes obligatory as Zakat.
✿ The remaining 47.5 man is his to use as he pleases — whether he keeps it or spends it.
Only 2.5 man will be due as Zakat.


ھذا ما عندی، واللہ أعلم بالصواب
 
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