UnitedHealth Group Incorporated (NYSE: UNH) is the largest health insurance company in the United States, with a market capitalisation of approximately $356 billion. For Muslim investors asking “is UnitedHealth halal?”, the answer is a clear fail. UNH breaches two of the three Shariah screening thresholds, and the insurance business model itself is a matter of scholarly concern.
What We Screen For
Shariah-compliant equity screening examines three core financial ratios:
- Debt Purity — Measures interest-bearing debt relative to market capitalisation. Higher scores indicate lower debt dependency.
- Liquidity Purity — Assesses whether a company’s assets are predominantly productive. Scores above 50% are preferred.
- Revenue Purity — Evaluates what share of revenue derives from permissible activities. Scores above 67% indicate compliance.
The Numbers
| Screening Ratio | UNH Score | Threshold | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Debt Purity | 23.27% | >50% | ✗ Fail |
| Liquidity Purity | 46.90% | >50% | ✗ Fail |
| Revenue Purity | 100.00% | >67% | ✓ Pass |
| Overall Ethical Score | 52.79% | — | Watch Tier |
Detailed Assessment
UnitedHealth Group faces challenges on multiple fronts from a Shariah compliance perspective.
The debt purity score of 23.27% is a significant fail. UNH carries substantial long-term debt, exceeding $40 billion, used to fund acquisitions (including Optum and Change Healthcare) and share buyback programmes. This interest-bearing borrowing is well beyond acceptable limits.
The liquidity purity at 46.90% also falls short of the 50% threshold. Insurance companies by nature hold large cash reserves and investment portfolios to cover claims. A significant portion of UNH’s assets are financial instruments rather than productive operating assets, which drags this ratio below the threshold.
The revenue purity scores 100%, reflecting that UNH’s healthcare services revenue is captured as permissible. However, this ratio does not fully capture the scholarly debate around conventional insurance (al-ta’min al-tijari). Many Islamic scholars consider conventional insurance inherently problematic due to elements of gharar (excessive uncertainty) and maysir (gambling-like elements). This is a business model concern that sits beyond the financial ratio screening.
With an overall ethical score of 52.79%, UNH sits in the lower range of our Watch Tier — a stock that would need substantial improvement across multiple metrics to reach compliance.
Shariah-Compliant Alternatives in Healthcare
Investors seeking healthcare exposure may consider companies with different business models:
- Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) — Bronze Tier, 63.21% ethical score. Pharmaceuticals and devices (CAUTION — fails debt only).
- Salesforce (CRM) — Gold Tier, 74.93% ethical score. Different sector, but passes all three screens.
Explore the full list on our Ethical Trading Screener.
Further Research
View the full UnitedHealth Group profile on our UNH Ticker Page.
Explore Shariah-screened equities on our Ethical Trading Screener.