Halal Stocks: How to Find Sharia-Compliant Companies in 2026
Learn how to screen halal stocks, avoid haram revenue, and build a Sharia-compliant portfolio in 2026.
What Makes a Stock Halal?
A stock is generally considered halal when the underlying company avoids haram revenue streams, excessive debt, and interest-based activities. The goal is to own a business that operates within Sharia boundaries, not to speculate on short-term price moves.
Screening Checklist for Halal Stocks
- Revenue: avoid alcohol, gambling, adult entertainment, pork, and conventional banking/insurance exposure
- Debt ratio: keep leverage low
- Interest income: should be minimal
- Business model: the core product should be permissible
Practical Examples
Technology companies, healthcare providers, and certain consumer brands may qualify, but each company must be screened individually.
How DeenGen Helps
We turn screening into a daily habit by delivering concise halal market reports with the key signals you need.
FAQ
Is this topic relevant to Muslim investors?
Yes. This guide is built specifically for Muslim investors looking for a practical halal framework.
How does DeenGen help?
DeenGen turns complex research into concise daily reports you can act on quickly.