Islamic fintechs are rolling out banking apps that adhere to Sharia law

Islamic fintechs are rolling out new apps that adhere to Sharia law.

To cater to Muslim investors, several Islam-friendly fintech startups have launched digital banking products that comply with Sharia law.

Islamic fintechs are rolling out banking apps that adhere to Sharia law

These apps play by stricter rules than their agnostic peers. 

But there’s also a huge upside for these apps — the massive market of 1.8B Muslims (20% of the world’s population, if you’re counting). 

Most banks aren’t halal (AKA “religiously acceptable”)

According to Sharia law, practicing Muslims must follow specific guidelines when banking: 

  • They must not pay or collect interest 
  • They must not participate in unequal transactions 
  • They must not make unethical investments 

Since most Western banks allow all of those things, it can be tricky for Muslims to invest with traditional banks.

So Islamic fintechs are offering new options

Startups Niyah (United Kingdom) and Insha (Germany) guarantee that their customers’ cash won’t be invested in dirty industries like alcohol, porn, betting, tobacco, or pork. 

And a UK startup called Qardus also offers peer-to-peer lending that’s religiously permissible.

These startups still face an uphill battle 

Sharia is complicated and expensive, and 50% of UK Muslims don’t even use Sharia-friendly banks.

But if these morality-motivated fintech startups succeed, they could signal a future where a wider variety of “ethical” banks — like Triodos, Bunq, or Shorehouse — cater to users with varying beliefs.

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