Is American Express Stock Halal?
American Express Company · AXP · NYSE
American Express Company (AXP) does not pass Shariah screening: its core business fails the activity screen (american express is a conventional financial-services company that issues credit and charge cards, operates a global card network, and provides banking, deposits, and non-card lending), and impermissible income / total revenue is 31.8% against the < 5% limit (data as of 2026-03-31). Screened alternatives exist in the same sector — see the halal stock screeners and ETF guides below.
Financial data as of 2026-03-31 · Screening basis: AAOIFI · Last reviewed 2026-06-14
Our Analysis
American Express is not Shariah-compliant, and the reason is structural rather than a matter of ratios drifting over a threshold. Although Amex is often thought of as a 'payments' brand, its actual business is conventional consumer and commercial finance: it issues credit and charge cards, lends to cardholders, takes deposits through its banking arm, and earns the bulk of its income from interest and finance charges — the definition of riba.
The screens confirm it. HalalScreener reports prohibited income at roughly 64% of revenue, more than twelve times the 5% AAOIFI limit, and gives AXP an F (0/100). Musaffa and Muslim Xchange both classify it not compliant. Because the impermissible income is the business itself — not a small interest line on idle cash — there is no purification that rehabilitates it.
The practical takeaway: AXP should be avoided by investors following AAOIFI-style screening. Muslims seeking exposure to the payments and fintech theme are usually pointed toward companies whose revenue is genuinely transaction-fee based rather than interest based, but each such name must still be screened on its own merits.
Business Activity Screen
American Express is a conventional financial-services company that issues credit and charge cards, operates a global card network, and provides banking, deposits, and non-card lending. Its revenue is dominated by interest income, card fees, and net interest on lending — core interest-based (riba) finance.
American Express fails the Shariah business-activity screen because its primary business is interest-based lending and conventional banking. HalalScreener reports prohibited income at 63.73% of revenue — far above the 5% AAOIFI limit — and interest-bearing deposits at 19% of market cap. This is a structural failure, not a purifiable sliver.
Financial Ratio Screen
| Screen | Value | AAOIFI limit | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Interest-bearing debt / market cap | 27.2% | < 30% | Pass |
| Cash + interest-bearing securities / market cap | 24.3% | < 30% | Pass |
| Impermissible income / total revenueInterest income only — verify other impermissible revenue lines in the 10-K | 31.8% | < 5% | Fail |
Spot market cap at research date (consider trailing average for borderline names). Data as of 2026-03-31 · thresholds per AAOIFI Shariah standards.
This verdict uses the AAOIFI standard — the most widely used and, at a 30% debt limit, the most conservative mainstream Shariah standard. Interest-bearing debt and interest-bearing securities each stay under 30% of market cap, and impermissible income under 5% of revenue. Other standards (Dow Jones Islamic, S&P Shariah, MSCI Islamic, FTSE Yasaar) use ~33% limits or screen against total assets, so a borderline company can be rated differently by each. How we screen & why screeners disagree →
Scholars' & Screeners' Positions
Published positions, cited as stated. Screeners can reach different conclusions on the same company because of ratio timing and methodology differences — we report the disagreement rather than flatten it.
HalalScreener
Rates AXP Not Halal (F, score 0/100): prohibited income 63.73% of revenue (limit 5%); fails financial ratio screens despite passing business-category screen as a 'payments' firm.
Source →Musaffa
Classified NOT HALAL as of April 2026 — card-issuing, lending, and banking business with non-compliant financial ratios.
Source →Muslim Xchange
Marks AXP Shariah NOT compliant as of May 2026.
Source →
What to do instead
You don't have to choose between investing and your values — screened alternatives exist for nearly every position.
Related guides
Consider Consulting an Islamic Scholar
Major whether American Express Company is halal decisions often involve nuances that vary by scholarly opinion and personal circumstance. While HalalWallet provides educational comparisons and tools, we are not scholars or financial advisors. For personal guidance on Shariah compliance, consider speaking with a qualified Islamic scholar, your local imam, or a Shariah-certified financial advisor familiar with your situation.
Important: HalalWallet is an educational comparison platform. We do not provide financial, legal, or religious advice.
Product structures and Shariah-compliance oversight vary by provider. Before applying:
- Verify halal compliance directly with the provider.
- Review the contract structure (Murabaha, Ijara, Musharakah, etc.) and any disclosed Shariah board opinions.
- Consult a qualified Islamic finance advisor or scholar for guidance on your individual circumstances.
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Sources and review process
This page is reviewed against HalalWallet editorial standards and source documentation.
Reviewed by: HalalWallet Editorial Team
Last reviewed: 2026-06-01
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Editorial Team, HalalWallet
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