
UK Spending Review: Key Takeaways for Muslim Property Investors
12 June 2025 3 min read
Ibrahim Khan
Co-founder
5 min read
Last updated on:
I was reading an interesting analysis from a leading Muslim institutions accountant (Nasir Rafiq) recently. In it he made the point that Mosques and madrasahs rely heavily (75% of income) on Friday collections and madrasah fees [1]. In particular the analysis says:
A three-month closure of the Mosque will drop the yearly income by at least 20% and this is without the Ramadan donation effect. The closure during Ramadan will eat away a big opportunity to raise funds – often for Mosque expansions.
That’s quite an important point – worth reading twice.
What that is saying is we have a major disaster looming for our community in the UK.
Our institutions – underfunded and limping along at the best of times – are now going to be underwater to the tune of 20-40% (adjusting for Ramadan) [2].
If we don’t do anything about it, our places, our spiritual watering holes, our sources of jama’ah and brotherhood and sisterhood will really suffer.
Because no-one is going to these places right now I don’t think we as a community have fully comprehended the enormity of the issue.
The team at Islamicfinanceguru and I have been wracking our brains on ways to solve this problem. In this article we share a few solutions, including a simple way in which we can help each of our local mosques, Islamic schools or institutions with up to £40,000 (or more).
Mosques, Islamic schools, madrasahs and other Muslim institutions are going to be forced to use modern marketing tools if they are to survive. That means emails to mailing lists, social media campaigns, an online presence, and an innovative way to capture the public’s attention.
For those institutions that do not adapt well to this – they’ll struggle. But for those that do adapt – they’ll actually probably end up raising far more than they usually do. Because there are billions of people online and only a few hundred in the local mosque.
COVID-19 could actually therefore be a blessing in disguise. A mosque that upskills during this period could in the long-term permanently improve its finances.
There are a bunch of ways inshAllah:
At IFG we wanted to help contribute in a meaningful way to what we think is one of the biggest hidden disasters that will emerge from this COVID-19 crisis.
One way we can do that is through our Wills platform. Hence, we are pledging to give 40% of all our revenues from IFG Wills to mosques, Islamic schools, madrasahs or Islamic institutions of your choosing.
All you have to do is put down the name of the institution in the referral section at the end of our Islamic Wills form, and we will donate 40% of the revenue from each such will to that institution.
There is no limit to this campaign. If you do 100 wills we will donate £4000. If you do 1000 wills we will donate £40,000.
Please make use of this campaign for your community. Please share this article with the relevant people in your local Islamic institution too. If you are a committee member or organiser you can do this campaign at a bigger level by filling out this simple form and submitting it to us so we know you have launched a campaign and we know where to send the money.
Please don’t leave it just to the community leaders to run this campaign either. They are often from an older generation and they are feeling a bit lost right now.
Help them.
Now is the time for the new generation to step up to the plate. All you need to do is share this campaign and write your Islamic Will and mention your Islamic institution at the end.
Notes:
[1]: https://duagov.blogspot.com/2020/04/corona-virus-uk-mosques-and-financial.html
[2]: Muslims typically give to Islamic charities and institutions to the tune of around £400m a year (and likely far more). Of that amount, £100m is raised in Ramadan. So about 25% is given in charitable causes in Ramadan.
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