Topic hub
Halal stocks — the complete topic hub
Owning shares of a screened company is the most universally accepted form of trading in Islamic finance. This hub covers the screens, the purification math, the index funds, and per-ticker verdicts.
Read our methodology and editorial policy.
Overview
AAOIFI and the Dow Jones Islamic Market Index codify three thresholds: business activity, debt-to-market-cap, and non-permissible income. Pass the screen and you can own the stock; you then purify any incidental impermissible income (~1–4% of dividends typically).
Key terms
Guides (3)
Fatwas (4)
Verdicts (13)
Stock
Is Tesla (TSLA) halal?
Stock
Is Apple (AAPL) halal?
Stock
Is Amazon (AMZN) halal?
Stock
Is NVIDIA (NVDA) halal?
Stock
Is Netflix (NFLX) halal?
Fund
Is S&P 500 index ETF halal?
Derivative
Is Stock options (calls and puts) halal?
Stock
Is Microsoft (MSFT) halal?
Stock
Is Alphabet / Google (GOOGL) halal?
Stock
Is Meta Platforms (META) halal?
Stock
Is Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) halal?
Stock
Is Coinbase (COIN) halal?
Fund
Is Nasdaq-100 ETF (QQQ) halal?
Comparisons (7)
Comparison
Buying stocks vs buying stock options — the shariah verdict
Comparison
AAOIFI vs DJIM stock screening — which methodology should you use?
Comparison
HLAL vs SPUS — which halal US equity ETF should you hold?
Comparison
Halal stocks vs sukuk — which belongs in your portfolio?
Comparison
Physical gold vs gold ETF vs gold CFD — what's halal?
Comparison
Halal robo-advisor vs DIY investing — which makes sense?
Comparison
Zoya vs Musaffa — which halal stock-screening app should you use?
Free: Top 50 Halal Stocks 2026 (PDF)
Get the screened list instantly, plus one short weekly email with new fatwas, broker updates, and rulings on the assets you actually trade.