Is The Walt Disney Stock Halal?
The Walt Disney Company · DIS · NYSE
The Walt Disney Company (DIS) passes our computed AAOIFI financial-ratio screen (data as of 2026-03-28) — interest-bearing debt 27.2% and cash plus interest-bearing securities 3.3% of market cap, both under the 30% limits — but both major U.S. Shariah-screened ETFs (SPUS and HLAL) exclude it from their holdings as of June 2026, which typically signals a business-activity concern that automated ratio screens cannot see. We report it as conditional until the segment revenue in the latest annual filing is verified.
Financial data as of 2026-03-28 · Screening basis: AAOIFI · Last reviewed 2026-06-14
Our Analysis
Disney is a case where Muslim investors genuinely disagree, and the disagreement is about the business itself, not just the numbers. Of its $94.4 billion in fiscal 2025 revenue, the Entertainment segment ($42.5 billion) is built on producing and distributing films, television, and streaming content, and the Sports segment ($17.7 billion) is largely ESPN. The Experiences segment ($36.2 billion) is theme parks, resorts, a cruise line, and consumer products. Parks and cruises are closer to ordinary hospitality, but they serve alcohol, and the content businesses are what most screeners scrutinize.
Many Shariah stock screeners fail Disney at the business-activity stage because a large share of its revenue comes from entertainment media, a category these methodologies treat as impermissible or heavily restricted, independent of any financial ratio. Others weigh the Experiences segment favorably and view the content concern as a matter for the investor's conscience and purification rather than an automatic exclusion. There is no single agreed answer; this is a real difference of scholarly and methodological opinion, and an honest brief has to present it as such rather than declare a verdict.
Consistent with the stricter reading, Disney is in the S&P 500 yet is held by neither SPUS (as of June 11, 2026) nor HLAL (as of February 28, 2026). Both the entertainment-industry screen and Disney's substantial leverage are plausible reasons, but neither fund publishes a stock-level explanation, so the precise cause cannot be confirmed. A Muslim investor considering Disney should recognize that the major US Shariah funds currently exclude it, that screeners commonly fail it on content, and that anyone who concludes otherwise is taking a minority position that still calls for purification of impermissible income.
Business Activity Screen
The Walt Disney Company is a diversified entertainment company operating in three segments. Per its fiscal 2025 10-K (year ended September 27, 2025), total revenues were $94,425 million: Entertainment $42,466M (film, television, and direct-to-consumer streaming including Disney+ and Hulu), Sports $17,672M (primarily ESPN), and Experiences $36,156M (theme parks, resorts, cruise line, and consumer products), net of $1,869M intersegment eliminations.
Disney is one of the names where the business-activity screen, not just financial ratios, is contested. The Entertainment segment ($42.5 billion) produces and distributes films, television, and streaming content that includes material many scholars consider impermissible (music, depictions, and adult or morally objectionable themes), and the Sports segment ($17.7 billion, mainly ESPN) carries gambling-adjacent advertising and sportsbook integrations. The Experiences segment includes theme parks and a cruise line that serve alcohol. Disney does not separately disclose alcohol revenue, and the contested 'content' question is qualitative rather than a disclosed dollar figure. Disney also carries substantial debt and earns/pays interest. Disney is an S&P 500 constituent but is absent from SPUS (2026-06-11) and HLAL (2026-02-28); for media-content companies, both the entertainment industry screen and leverage are plausible causes, but the funds do not publish per-stock reasons.
Financial Ratio Screen
| Screen | Value | AAOIFI limit | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Interest-bearing debt / market cap | 27.2% | < 30% | Pass |
| Cash + interest-bearing securities / market cap | 3.3% | < 30% | Pass |
| Impermissible income / total revenueInterest income only — verify other impermissible revenue lines in the 10-K | 0.3% | < 5% | Pass |
Spot market cap at research date (consider trailing average for borderline names). Data as of 2026-03-28 · 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 →
How The Walt Disney screens across Shariah standards
All three mainstream bases below reach the same conclusion for this company.
| Standard | Debt | Cash & interest securities | Limit / basis | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AAOIFI (our standard) | 27.2% | 3.3% | < 30% of market cap | Pass |
| Dow Jones Islamic / S&P Shariah thresholdDow Jones and S&P apply this limit against a trailing 24–36-month average market cap; shown here on the same point-in-time market cap for comparison. | 27.2% | 3.3% | < 33% of market cap | Pass |
| MSCI Islamic / FTSE Yasaar basisTotal-assets denominator. MSCI/FTSE also apply entry/exit buffers and a receivables screen we do not reproduce. | 23.1% | 2.8% | < 33.33% of total assets | Pass |
HalalWallet computation reproducing each standard's threshold and denominator from public filings (balance sheet as of 2026-03-28) — not the providers' licensed index determinations, which can differ. Debt is interest-bearing borrowings (operating leases excluded). The impermissible-income screen (< 5% of revenue) is common to all of these standards and is shown in the ratio table above. Dow Jones and S&P apply their limit against a trailing 24–36-month average market cap; MSCI and FTSE add entry/exit buffers and a receivables screen. Full methodology →
Conditions
Our computed AAOIFI financial-ratio screen passes on the latest filing data, but both major U.S. Shariah-screened ETFs — SPUS (S&P Shariah methodology) and HLAL (FTSE Shariah methodology) — exclude The Walt Disney Company from their holdings as of our June 2026 check, even though it is in their parent indices. Professional screens apply filing-level business-activity analysis (alcohol, pork, tobacco, or media revenue share) and different ratio bases that an automated ratio screen cannot replicate. That divergence usually signals an impermissible-revenue question. Treat this as unresolved until the segment revenue in the latest annual filing is verified line by line.
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.
SP Funds S&P 500 Sharia ETF (SPUS)
Not held in SPUS as of 2026-06-11. Absence can reflect screen failure or index scope — verify before citing as a screen outcome.
Source →Wahed FTSE USA Shariah ETF (HLAL)
Not held in HLAL as of 2026-06-11. Absence can reflect screen failure or index scope — verify before citing as a screen outcome.
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 The Walt Disney 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.
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Reviewed by: HalalWallet Editorial Team
Last reviewed: 2026-06-01
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