Is Stake halal? The short answer: yes, Stake is Shariah-compliant, with regulatory approval and independent Shariah oversight in place.
Halal investing follows principles from Islamic finance. In simple terms, it means:
Property, as a tangible asset that generates rental income, is widely regarded as a suitable basis for Shariah-compliant investment structures.
The key is how the investment is structured and managed.
Yes. Stake Properties is Shariah-compliant. This position is supported by:
These are independent, third-party assessments. The compliance position has been reviewed and confirmed by qualified Shariah experts and a regulated financial authority.
Stake uses a fractional ownership model. Here is how it works, step by step:
Critically, investors are not lending money to earn profit. They are taking a legal ownership in a real asset and participating in its income and potential appreciation.
The SPV (Special Purpose Vehicle) is a legal entity created specifically to hold one property. It exists solely to own that asset and nothing else.
When you invest through Stake, you own shares in the SPV. The SPV owns the property. This means your investment is directly tied to a real, titled asset rather than to a financial product or loan.
This structure gives investors legal exposure to the underlying real estate and is central to why the model can be structured as Shariah-compliant: it is ownership, not lending.
Returns through Stake can come from two sources:
Returns are linked to the property's actual performance. This is one of the structural reasons the model aligns with Shariah principles.
Stake oversees each investment, the companies responsibilities include:
Stake charges clearly defined fees for these services. The fee structure is transparent and agreed upfront, which is consistent with requirements around contract clarity.
| Interest/profit-based model | Stake model | |
|---|---|---|
| How money is deployed | Lent to a borrower | Invested into a real asset (property) |
| How returns are generated | Interest charged on the loan | Rent and potential capital appreciation |
| Investor's role | Creditor / lender | Part-owner of the asset |
| Return type | Fixed interest rate | Variable, linked to performance |
| Risk sharing | Borrower bears risk, lender earns interest | Investor shares in upside and downside |
While Shariah compliance is especially important for Muslim investors, many non-Muslim investors are also drawn to the underlying principles.
Asset-backed investing, transparent fee structures, shared risk and reward, and a focus on real-economy assets rather than financial speculation are characteristics that appeal across a wide range of investor profiles.
Shariah-compliant is a framework, which resonates with anyone who values knowing exactly what their money is invested in.
Shariah-compliance does not remove investment risk, therefore, before investing, it is important to understand:
Returns come from rental income and potential property appreciation, not interest/profit.
Explore halal property investing with Stake from AED 500.
All Investments carry risks. Stake Properties Limited is regulated by the DFSA as an Operator of a Crowdfunding Platform in the UAE.