Introduction
As digital assets reshape global finance, Islamic scholars and fintech innovators are tasked with navigating this space through the lens of Shariah. While conventional taxonomies group tokens by technology or economics, Islamic finance requires a distinct framework—rooted in classical Fiqh principles.
At Azka Advisors, we’ve developed a Shariah-centric taxonomy of crypto assets to help scholars, platforms, and investors ethically engage with the digital asset ecosystem.
Level 1: Primary Shariah Classification
1. Currency/Payment Tokens
Coins/tokens in this category function as digital money or medium of exchange. They are governed by currency exchange (Bai‘ al-Sarf) Shariah rules, which emphasize immediate exchange and Riba avoidance. Example: Bitcoin (BTC)
2. Non-Currency/Payment Tokens
These coins/tokens represent non-monetary rights, utility, or real-world assets. They are evaluated according to the Shariah principles specific to the underlying asset or source of value. Example: UniSwap token (UNI)
3. Hybrid Tokens
These tokens have dual functionality—used both as a mode of payment and also have a utility, right, usufruct, or real-world asset behind them. Example: Ether (ETH)
Classification Criteria:
- If monetary use dominates → classify as currency.
- If non-currency feature dominates → treat as non-currency.
- If unclear → apply stricter currency rules.

Level 2: Functional Subcategories
Currency/Payment Tokens
Currency or payment coins/tokens can be further divided into other categories, such as:
1.1 Stablecoins
A stablecoin is a cryptocurrency whose value is pegged to another fiat currency. The peg is maintained through various means, like cash reserves, crypto collaterals, or algorithms. Examples: USDC, USDT, FRAX, CBDCs
Shariah Focus: Reserve backing, redemption model, and exposure to interest.
1.2 Non-Stable Digital Currencies
They are designed primarily as peer-to-peer digital currencies. Examples: BTC, LTC, XRP
Shariah Focus: Payment use, Sarf rules.
1.3 Gold/Silver-Backed Tokens
Gold and silver are recognized under Shariah or Islamic Fiqh as natural currencies (Thaman Khulqi), therefore, direct tokenized representation of physical gold and silver is considered currency in Shariah. Examples: PAXG, XAUT
Shariah Focus: Considered Naqd (natural currency), must be redeemable, ownership and possession must be clear.

Non-Currency/Payment Tokens
Non-currency or payment coins/tokens can be further divided into other categories, such as:
2.1 Fungible Tokens
- Utility Tokens (e.g., UNI, LINK)
They represent a utility or benefit in the form of access to a platform, application, or network feature.
Shariah Focus: Type of benefits, rights granted, Gharar avoidance. - Security Tokens
They represent ownership in financial instruments or real-world assets. They are mainly considered as securities because of their investment aspect. They are further divided into: -
- Asset-backed (e.g., real estate, equities, commodities, excluding gold, silver, and fiat).
- Synthetic assets (e.g., mirror real-world assets like stocks, indexes via derivatives, such as, sTSLA).
Shariah Focus: Asset permissibility, ownership clarity, speculative elements.
2.2 Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs)
They are unique digital tokens that represent ownership or rights over digital or real assets. Examples: collectibles, digital art, real estate deeds, IP rights, etc.
Shariah Focus: Tangibility of benefit, lawful transfer, speculative risk.
2.3 Meme Coins
They are tokens with minimal or no utility, often driven by community hype or humor. Examples: DOGE, SHIB, PEPE
Shariah Focus: High Gharar and Maysir exposure, case-by-case review advised.

Functional Notes
- A token may serve multiple purposes, but classification here is based on its dominant intended use, not incidental roles.
- Categorization is not a Shariah verdict. It is an analytical framework. Permissibility depends on:
- Underlying asset/benefit/utility/other source of value
- Contractual structure
- Risk transfer and ownership
- Compliance with key principles (Riba, Gharar, Maysir, etc.)
Conclusion
A Shariah-based taxonomy is a foundational step toward ethical innovation in halal crypto space. It bridges tradition and technology, enabling confident navigation of Web3 for both scholars and Muslim investors.
At Azka Advisors, we’re committed to developing such frameworks, screening tools, and certifications—so that the future of crypto finance and Web3 remains halal, ethical, and impactful.