Mission Statement

To empower Muslim families with Shariah-compliant financial guidance, inheritance planning, and wealth management solutions that preserve, grow, and transfer wealth across generations — all within a trusted, faith-based framework that blends personal service with digital accessibility.

Vision Statement

To be the leading Muslim Family Office in Africa and beyond, known for combining the timeless wisdom of the Qur’an and Sunnah with modern financial expertise, ensuring that every Muslim family can secure its financial legacy with dignity, integrity, and compliance.

Core Values:
1) Integrity & Amanah (Trust)
2) Shariah Compliance
3) Family-Centered Service
4) Excellence (Ihsan)
5) Innovation with Purpose
6) Generational Stewardship: Protecting and transferring wealth for lasting family legacies.

www.muslimfin.co.za


Muslim Finance

Building wealth is only half the journey. Protecting it is the greater challenge.
I'm honoured to have my latest article, "The Great Wealth Transfer We Never Prepared For," featured in the June edition of Muslim Views.

For many South African Muslim families, significant wealth has been created over the past few decades through entrepreneurship, professional careers and property investment. Yet history has shown that wealth can be lost just as quickly when succession planning, governance and financial oversight are neglected.

The article explores an often overlooked reality: preserving wealth requires more than drafting a Will. It requires educating the next generation, establishing clear governance structures, verifying professional advice and ensuring that financial decisions are made with both competence and integrity.

I also reflect on an important responsibility facing our community. While trust is a cornerstone of Islam, trust should always be accompanied by accountability and due diligence. Religious communities are not immune to financial misconduct, and faith should never replace proper governance. Asking questions, verifying credentials and seeking independent advice are not signs of distrust. They are principles deeply rooted in both sound financial practice and Islamic teachings.

As South Africa prepares for one of the largest intergenerational wealth transfers in its history, I hope this article encourages families to have meaningful conversations about stewardship, succession and safeguarding the legacy entrusted to them.

My sincere thanks to the Muslim Views editorial team for providing a platform to advance financial literacy and encourage informed discussion within our community.

Read the full article in the June 2026 edition of Muslim Views (Page 21).

#IslamicFinance #EstatePlanning #FamilyOffice #WealthManagement #InheritancePlanning #Faraid #FinancialLiteracy #CorporateGovernance #RiskManagement #ThoughtLeadership #MuslimViews #SouthAfrica

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[INHERITANCE CALCULATOR] muslimfin.co.za/inheritance-calculator

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Watch our latest Islamic Investing & Market Update June 2026: https://youtu.be/GWmW_3zxM9g

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Most South African businesses have a buy and sell agreement.

Most of those agreements are incomplete.

A buy and sell agreement is not a document you sign once and file away. It is a framework. And every element must be in place for it to hold when the moment arrives.

Eight things your agreement must cover.

The first four are the foundation. A pre-agreed valuation method — reviewed annually. A Takaful or insurance policy sized to cover the full share value. All four trigger events — death, disability, dread disease, retirement. And Shariah alignment — the agreement must not conflict with the Islamic estate.

The next four are where most agreements fail.

Loan account cover — sized separately, not bundled into the share buyout. Ownership structure — entity, cross-purchase or trust each carry different tax and Shariah consequences. An annual review clause — a business that grows needs a policy that reflects it. And spouse consent — required under South African law, missed in almost every agreement we review.

Remove any one of these and the agreement has a gap.

That gap activates at the worst possible moment.

At MuslimFin Family Office, we review buy and sell agreements against all eight. Most need structural correction — not minor adjustments.

If yours has not been reviewed in the last twelve months, it has a gap.

muslimfin.co.za/calendar-ali

#BuyAndSell #BusinessSuccession #IslamicFinance #Takaful #MuslimBusiness #EstatePlanning #MuslimFin #SouthAfrica

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For an exclusive consultation: muslimfin.co.za/calendar-ali

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