These companies don’t sell alcohol or pork, but they are huge. Does that automatically make them Halal?
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Not automatically! While their main business is Halal (tech), you still have to check their Debt Ratio. If their interest-based debt is too high, they become "Non-Compliant." Luckily, many big tech companies have lots of cash and low debt, so they often pass the Halal test. Always check a "Screener"Read more
Not automatically!
While their main business is Halal (tech), you still have to check their Debt Ratio. If their interest-based debt is too high, they become “Non-Compliant.”
Luckily, many big tech companies have lots of cash and low debt, so they often pass the Halal test. Always check a “Screener” app first!
See lessNot automatically Halal — even big companies like Apple Inc., Alphabet Inc. (Google), and Microsoft Corporation must still pass Sharia screening before they are considered Halal. In Islamic investing, scholars look at two main criteria: 1. Business Activity (What the Company Does) A company is HaramRead more
Not automatically Halal — even big companies like Apple Inc., Alphabet Inc. (Google), and Microsoft Corporation must still pass Sharia screening before they are considered Halal.
In Islamic investing, scholars look at two main criteria:
1. Business Activity (What the Company Does)
A company is Haram if its main business involves:
Alcohol
Gambling
Pork
Interest-based banking
Adult content
Weapons (some scholars differ)
The companies you mentioned:
Apple → Technology (Phones, laptops, services)
Google (Alphabet) → Search, ads, cloud, AI
Microsoft → Software, cloud, enterprise tech
These core businesses are generally Halal ✅
But that’s only the first step.
2. Financial Screening (Very Important)
Even if business is Halal, scholars also check:
Interest-based debt (Riba)
Interest income
Non-halal revenue percentage
This is where many big companies become “conditionally Halal”.
Islamic finance standards (like AAOIFI) usually allow:
Small interest income (below ~5%)
Limited debt ratios
If they exceed those limits → Not Sharia-compliant
Current General View (Simplified)
Many Islamic screening platforms classify:
Apple → Often Sharia-compliant (conditional)
Microsoft → Often Sharia-compliant (conditional)
Google (Alphabet) → Sometimes borderline or varies (due to revenue sources)
These classifications change over time because:
Debt changes
Revenue sources change
Financial reports change
Why Big Companies Are Not Automatically Halal
Even though they don’t sell alcohol:
They hold money in interest-bearing accounts
They issue interest-based bonds
They earn interest income
This introduces Riba, which scholars carefully evaluate.
Safer Approach for Muslim Investors
Many Muslim investors:
Invest in Sharia-compliant ETFs
Use Islamic stock screeners
Focus on clearly Halal companies
Examples of Sharia-compliant indices:
Dow Jones Islamic Market Index
MSCI World Islamic Index
These already screen companies for you.
Practical Advice (For You as a Beginner)
Since you’re cautious about Halal investing (like when you asked about UCAP earlier), the safest approach is:
Invest in clearly Halal stocks first
Avoid grey areas initially
Diversify slowly
Also important: If you’re investing from Nigeria using apps like:
Bamboo
Rise
You can still choose Sharia-compliant US stocks.
See less