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Are Penalty Clauses Allowed in Islam?

15 October, 2024
Q Is it permissible to include penalty clauses in Islamic transactions?

Answer

In the Name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful. 

All praise and thanks are due to Allah, and peace and blessings be upon His Messenger.


In this fatwa:

It is not permissible to include a penalty clause for delay of providing the commodity since a commodity sold through Salam is a debt and it is not permissible to impose an additional charge for delayed repayment of debt.


Answering your question, The Council of the International Islamic Fiqh Academy of the Organization of the Islamic Conference, states:

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What is a penalty clause?

  • A penalty clause, in legal terminology, is an agreement between the two contracting parties on how to assess the compensation for the entitled party in case of default or delay of the other party.

Are Penalty Clauses Allowed in Islam?

Confirming the Academy’s previous resolutions concerning the penalty clause, namely:

  • Resolution no. 85 (2/9) on Salam: “It is not permissible to include a penalty clause for delay of providing the commodity since a commodity sold through Salam is a debt and it is not permissible to impose an additional charge for delayed repayment of debt.”
  • Resolution no. 65 (3/7) on Istisna`: “It is permissible to include a penalty clause if both contracting parties agree, unless subject to inevitable circumstances.”
  • Resolution no. 51 (2/6) on Installment Sale: “When the purchaser delays the payment of due installments, it is not permissible to impose any additional charge whether by virtue of a predetermined condition or otherwise. Such a practice amounts to a commitment of the prohibited usury.”
  • It is permissible to include the penalty clause in the original contract or make it a separate agreement that succeeds the contract prior to the occurrence of the anticipated loss.
  • It is permissible to include a penalty clause in all financial contracts except when the original commitment is a debt. The imposition of a penalty clause in debt contracts is usurious in the strict sense. Accordingly, it is permissible, for instance, to make a penalty clause on the contractor in the construction contract, the supplier in supply contracts and the manufacturer in Istisna` contracts if they fail to or delay in meeting their commitments. It is not permissible, for instance, to make a penalty clause in Installment Sale on a debtor who delays the payment of unpaid installments, whether due to insolvency or payment evasion. It is also not permissible to impose such a clause in the Istisna` contract on a purchaser who fails to meet his obligations.
  • The loss, which is permissible to compensate, includes the actual fi[1]nancial loss suffered by the partner, any other material loss and the certainly realisable gain that he misses due to his partner’s default or delay. This does not include moral prejudice.
  • The penalty clause should become null and void when the concerned partner proves that his failure to meet obligations was due to reasons that fall out of his control, or when he proves that his partner has suffered no loss as a result of his breach of the contract.
  • The Court is permitted, if so required by one of the two parties, to adjust the compensation amount, subject to a reasonable justification, or when the compensation proves to be exaggerated.

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Almighty Allah knows best.

Source: IIFA