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Zakat

Zakat

Practical Overview

In Saudi Arabia, Zakat is administered by ZATCA and is generally prepared and filed on a self-assessment return-filing basis for each fiscal year. For entities that maintain accounting records, the Zakat base is commonly determined by building the base from sources of funds and then subtracting deductible assets, before applying the Zakat rate.

How the Zakat calculation typically works

StarStart from the financial statements. The calculation typically begins with the year-end balances in the financial statements and confirms whether the fiscal year aligns with the Hijri year (354 days) or differs (e.g., Gregorian year-end).

Key items that can affect outcomes:

  • Accuracy of year-end cut-off and end-of-period balances
  • Correct classification of items as current vs. non-current
  • Consistency between audited statements, ledgers, and supporting schedules

2. Build the “sources of funds” additions (Zakatable funding sources).The Zakat base is built by adding Zakatable sources of funds, which generally include equity and equivalent items, plus certain liabilities that are added within regulatory limits.

Common additions include:

  • Share capital and additional contributions
  • Retained earnings / accumulated losses
  • Provisions
  • Long-term loans / financing
  • Deferred tax liabilities
  • Contractual obligations
  • Lease obligations

Key items that can affect outcomes:

  • Whether an item is treated as equity vs. liability (and whether ZATCA rules require reclassification)
  • Whether obligations are classified as current vs. noncurrent
  • Quality of documentation supporting the nature of provisions and obligations

3. Identify and subtract deductible assets (deductions).The next step is subtracting deductible assets. Generally, these tend to be non-current assets held for use (not for trading) and certain qualifying investments or items.

Common deductible categories include:

  • Net book value of tangible long-term assets
  • Net book value of intangible long-term assets
  • Certain investments (inside or outside KSA)
  • Certain government-related balances
  • Spare parts / materials not held for sale

Key items that can affect outcomes:

  • Completeness and accuracy of the fixed asset register
  • Evidence that an asset is held for use vs. trading
  • Whether investment deductibility conditions are satisfied

4. Confirm what remains non-deductible.As a practical rule, current operating assets generally remain within the Zakat base unless a specific deduction rule applies.

  • Items that commonly remain non-deductible include: Cash and receivables
  • Inventory (other than spare parts / materials not held for sale)
  • Advances to suppliers relating to non-deductible assets (e.g., inventory)
  • Certain short-term investments

Key items that can affect outcomes:

  • Receivable quality (aging, collectability, and consistency of provisioning treatment)
  • Inventory classification (trading inventory vs. materials / spare parts not for sale)
  • Clear mapping between working capital accounts and Zakat working papers

5. Apply the allocation (placement) concept, capping rule, and minimum/maximum base limits.This is where many computations change materially.

Allocation / placement concept:

  • If a current asset is deducted, a proportionate share of current liabilities is added to the Zakat base.
  • If a non-current asset is not deducted, a proportionate share of non-current liabilities previously added must be excluded.
  • Capping rule: total liability additions should not exceed total deductions.

Minimum and maximum limits:

  • Minimum Zakat base: the base generally cannot be less than adjusted net profit, subject to regulation-guided minimum-limit mechanics (including the interaction with non-deducted assets and differences between book and adjusted profit).
  • Maximum Zakat base: capped by equity and equivalents plus the difference between adjusted and book profit.

Key items that can affect outcomes:

  • Misclassification between current and non-current items (assets and liabilities)

Incomplete allocation calculations

  • Weak reconciliation between financial statements and the Zakat schedules (especially equity, provisions, and liabilities)

6. Apply the Zakat rate and compute Zakat due.

  • Zakat is levied at 2.5% of the Zakat base for a Hijri year.
  • If the fiscal year differs from the Hijri year (e.g., Gregorian year-end), Zakat is calculated on a days basis: Zakat % = (2.5% ÷ 354) × actual number of days — which yields approximately 2.577% for a 365-day year.

Working With Us

Our team provides practical support to help businesses understand their Zakat obligations and maintain reliable, well-documented compliance processes — especially regarding classification, allocation mechanics, and defensible working papers.

To discuss your accounting, audit, or compliance needs, please contact us to schedule a consultation.