Few questions in Islamic finance generate as much debate as: "Is cryptocurrency halal?" Bitcoin alone has a $1.8 trillion market cap, and millions of Muslim investors want to know whether they can participate. Unlike stock screening — where established methodologies exist — crypto is genuinely contested among scholars.

This article presents the major scholarly positions, the key arguments on each side, and a practical framework for making your own informed decision. We also screen crypto-adjacent public companies to show how the Shariah compliance picture extends beyond the coins themselves.

The Three Scholarly Positions

Position 1: Cryptocurrency Is Permissible (Halal)

Held by: Mufti Faraz Adam (Amanah Advisors), the Shariah Review Bureau (Bahrain), and several contemporary scholars.

Arguments:

Position 2: Cryptocurrency Is Impermissible (Haram)

Held by: Grand Mufti of Egypt (Shawki Allam), the Turkish Directorate of Religious Affairs, and some AAOIFI scholars.

Arguments:

Position 3: It Depends (Conditional Permissibility)

Held by: AAOIFI (as an organization), the OIC Fiqh Academy, and many independent scholars.

Arguments:

No Consensus Exists

Unlike stock screening — where AAOIFI, DJIM, FTSE, MSCI, and S&P all have established methodologies — there is no universally accepted Shariah screening standard for cryptocurrency. Any claim that crypto is definitively "halal" or "haram" oversimplifies a genuinely contested scholarly debate. Consult your own trusted scholar.

Crypto-Adjacent Stocks: What We Can Screen

While we can't screen cryptocurrencies themselves, we can screen publicly traded companies with significant crypto exposure. Here's what the Halal Terminal API shows:

Company Ticker Crypto Exposure Shariah Status Issue
CoinbaseCOINCrypto exchange (100%)DISPUTEDExchange facilitates trading of non-compliant tokens
MicroStrategyMSTRBitcoin treasury ($15B+)CONDITIONALBusiness is software, but majority of value is BTC holdings
Block (Square)SQBitcoin trading via Cash AppCONDITIONALMixed business: payments (halal) + crypto trading + lending (haram)
NVIDIANVDAGPU mining demandCOMPLIANTSells hardware — not directly involved in crypto
AMDAMDGPU mining demandCOMPLIANTSells hardware — not directly involved in crypto

Note: NVIDIA and AMD pass Shariah screening because they manufacture semiconductors — a clearly permissible activity. The fact that some customers use GPUs for crypto mining does not make the hardware manufacturer non-compliant, just as a car manufacturer isn't responsible for how drivers use the car.

A Practical Framework for Muslim Investors

Given the scholarly disagreement, here's a framework to think through your own position:

  1. Start with your scholar's position. If you follow a scholar or institution that has ruled on crypto, follow their guidance.
  2. Distinguish utility from speculation. Buying Bitcoin as a long-term store of value is different from day-trading meme coins.
  3. Avoid clear haram. Regardless of your position on Bitcoin, staking protocols that guarantee returns (riba), leveraged crypto trading (gharar), and meme coins (pure speculation) are problematic under any interpretation.
  4. Separate crypto from stocks. Your stock portfolio can be clearly screened using established methodologies. Don't let crypto uncertainty prevent you from investing in clearly halal equities.

Screen Crypto-Adjacent Companies

# Screen any company with crypto exposure
import requests

for symbol in ["COIN", "MSTR", "SQ", "NVDA", "AMD"]:
    resp = requests.post(
        f"https://api.halalterminal.com/api/screen/{symbol}",
        headers={"X-API-Key": "YOUR_KEY"}
    )
    data = resp.json()
    status = "COMPLIANT" if data["is_compliant"] else "NON-COMPLIANT"
    print(f"{symbol}: {status} (purification: {data['purification_rate']:.1%})")

Two ways to screen

Halal Terminal

Screen stocks and ETFs interactively with real-time data, multi-methodology verdicts, and transparent financial ratios.

Key Takeaways