Ethical Finance Data
Global Islamic Mortgages.
Compare Providers Worldwide.
The most comprehensive database of Shariah-compliant home finance providers across the UK, USA, UAE, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey. Compare structures, deposits, and terms.
How Islamic Home Finance Works
Unlike a conventional mortgage, which is a loan of money at interest (Riba), Islamic home finance is based on trade, leasing, or partnership. The bank does not lend you money; instead, it enters into a transaction involving the actual property.
Diminishing Musharakah (Co-ownership)
The most common structure in the UK and USA. You and the bank buy the property together. You pay rent on the bank's share (Ijara), while simultaneously buying out the bank's share in monthly installments. Over time, your ownership increases and the bank's decreases until you own 100%.
Murabaha (Cost-Plus Sale)
Common in the GCC and Turkey. The bank buys the property outright and immediately sells it to you at a higher, agreed-upon price. You pay this total price in fixed installments over the term. The profit margin is fixed and cannot increase if you default.
Ijara (Lease-to-Own)
The bank purchases the property and leases it to you for a fixed term. You pay monthly rent. At the end of the term, or once all payments are made, the ownership of the property is transferred to you as a gift (Hibah) or token sale.
Compare Providers by Region
| Provider | Product & Structure | Min. Deposit | Max Term | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Al Rayan Bank | Home Purchase Plan Diminishing Musharakah |
5% | 35 Years | Oldest UK Islamic bank, BTL available |
| Gatehouse Bank | Home Finance Diminishing Musharakah |
5% | 35 Years | Green home finance (reduced rates for EPC) |
| BLME | Premier Mortgage Diminishing Musharakah |
20% | 25 Years | Targeted at HNW individuals & expats |
| UBL UK | Ameen Home Finance Diminishing Musharakah |
20% | 30 Years | Fixed rental rates, resident/expat options |
| Offa | Bridge & BTL Finance Diminishing Musharakah |
25% | 25 Years | UK's first Sharia bridge financing fintech |
| Provider | Product & Structure | Min. Deposit | Max Term | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guidance Residential | Declining Balance Diminishing Musharakah |
5% | 30 Years | Largest US provider, >$10B financed |
| UIF Corporation | Installment Finance Murabaha / Musharakah |
5% | 30 Years | Available in most US states |
| Ameen Housing | Co-op Housing Musharakah (Co-op) |
20% | 15 Years | Community-funded, waitlists apply |
| Devon Bank | Islamic Finance Murabaha / Ijara |
5% | 30 Years | Earliest US provider, Midwest focus |
| Provider | Product & Structure | Min. Deposit | Max Term | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dubai Islamic Bank | Al Islami Home Finance Ijara |
15% | 25 Years | World's first Islamic bank, high limits |
| Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank | Home Finance Murabaha / Ijara |
15% | 25 Years | High LTV for UAE nationals (up to 85%) |
| Emirates Islamic | Home Finance Ijara |
15% | 25 Years | Integration with major UAE developers |
| Provider | Product & Structure | Min. Deposit | Max Term | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maybank Islamic | MaxiHome-i Commodity Murabaha |
10% | 35 Years | Largest Islamic bank in ASEAN |
| CIMB Islamic | Home Financing-i Commodity Murabaha |
10% | 35 Years | Capped ceiling profit rate protection |
| Bank Islam | Baiti Home Financing Tawarruq |
10% | 35 Years | No compounding of profit on arrears |
| Provider | Product & Structure | Min. Deposit | Max Term | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Al Rajhi Bank | Real Estate Financing Murabaha / Ijara |
10% | 30 Years | Integrated with Ministry of Housing programs |
| Bank Albilad | Home Finance Murabaha |
10% | 25 Years | Early settlement options without penalty |
| Provider | Product & Structure | Min. Deposit | Max Term | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kuveyt Turk | Housing Finance Murabaha |
20% | 10 Years | Fixed profit rates, shorter typical terms |
| Albaraka Turk | Real Estate Finance Murabaha |
20% | 10 Years | Pioneer of participation banking in Turkey |
Frequently Asked Questions
Historically, Islamic home finance carried a premium due to smaller pools of capital and higher administrative costs (e.g., double stamp duty, which has now been abolished in the UK). Today, in mature markets like the UK, UAE, and Malaysia, the rates (rental/profit rates) are highly competitive and often match or occasionally beat conventional mortgage rates.
Yes. This is a very common process known as "refinancing" in Islamic banking. The Islamic bank essentially buys the property from you (paying off your conventional interest-bearing mortgage in the process) and then enters into a Shariah-compliant agreement with you (such as Diminishing Musharakah) for the remaining balance.
This is a common point of confusion. Using an interest rate as a benchmark to price a transaction is permissible in Islamic finance, just as a halal butcher might price their meat based on the prevailing market price of conventional meat. The prohibition of Riba applies to the structure of the contract (lending money to make money), not the pricing benchmark used to ensure the bank remains competitive in a dual-banking system.
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