Zakat and Taxable Limit of Grains
Issue No. 1593- Zakāt on wheat, barley, date and raisin will become obligatory when their quantity reaches the taxable limit which is about 847 kg.
Issue No. 1593- Zakāt on wheat, barley, date and raisin will become obligatory when their quantity reaches the taxable limit which is about 847 kg.
Issue No. 1594- If before giving zakāt, one consumes a quantity of wheat, barley, date and raisin, or gives it away to another person, he should pay zakāt on the quantity spent by him.
Issue No. 1595- If the owner dies after zakāt has become obligatory on him, the zakāt should be paid out of his estate. However, if he dies before the payment of zakāt becomes obligatory, every one of the heirs, whose share reaches the taxable limit, should pay zakāt on his own share.
Issue No. 1596- The Mujtahid can appoint someone to collect zakāt after wheat and barley are threshed and chaff is separated from grains, and when the dates and grapes become dry, and if the owners of these things refuse to pay zakāt, which is the right of the deprived, the designated person can get it from them by force.
Issue No. 1597- If a person buys a crop or an orchard before zakāt becomes obligatory on it, the new owner should pay its zakāt, but if he buys it after zakāt becomes obligatory on it, the seller (previous owner) should pay its zakāt.
Issue No. 1598- If a person purchases wheat, barley, dates or grapes, and knows that the seller has paid zakāt on them, or doubts whether or not he has paid it, it is not obligatory on him to pay anything. In case he knows that he (the seller) has not paid zakāt on them, and if the Mujtahid does not permit the transaction, the transaction with regard to that portion is void. If the Mujtahid permits the transaction, he takes the amount of zakāt from the seller. In case he does not permit the transaction, he takes the amount of zakāt from the buyer in this case if he has already given the amount of zakāt to the seller, the buyer can take it back from him.
Issue No. 1599- If the weight of wheat, barley, date and grape reaches the taxable limit when they are wet, and becomes less when they dry, payment of zakāt on them is not obligatory.
Issue No. 1600- If a person consumes wheat, barley, date and raisin before they dry, and they would have reached the taxable limit if they had dried up, he should pay zakāt on them.
Issue No. 1602- If wheat, barley, dates, and grapes are irrigated with rain water, Qanats, river, dam, or benefit from the moisture of the land, the zakāt due on them is 10% and if they are watered with deep, semi deep or shallow well water or with bucket, etc., the zakāt payable on them is 5%.
Issue No. 1607- One can deduct the expenses incurred for farming, such as the value of the seeds, from the produce, and pay zakāt on the remainder, although the recommended precaution is that he doesn’t deduct.
Issue No. 1608- If a person buys a vine or a date-palm tree, its value should not be included in the expenses for sure. If one buys dates or grapes before they are ripe, as an obligatory precaution, he should not deduct its value from the harvest either. Also, the money he pays for purchasing the land is not a part of the expenses.
Issue No. 1609- If a person owns wheat, barley, palm-dates and grapes in different cities where the time of ripening of crops and fruits is different from one another and all of them are considered to be the product of one and the same year, and if the product which ripens first reaches the taxable limit, he should pay zakāt on it at the time of its ripening and should pay zakāt on the remaining products when they become available. And if the thing which ripens first does not reach the taxable limit, he should wait until the other fruits/grains ripen. Hence, if they reach the taxable limit collectively, payment of zakāt on them is obligatory.