Praise be to Allaah.
The Muslim
does not have to pay zakaah on his car, house or shop, even if the value of
these things is great. Rather zakaah is due on things that are bought and
sold for the purpose of trade and profit, which are called “trade goods”. If
a person has any property or real estate – land, houses or shops – which he
has acquired for the purpose of trade, buying and selling, then he should
work out their value at the time when zakaah becomes due and pay one-quarter
of one-tenth. But if a person has acquired that property to live in, or to
farm it, or to rent it out or to buy and sell in it, then no zakaah is due
on it.
The scholars
of the Standing Committee said:
Wealth that
people own is of various types. With regard to money, zakaah is due on it if
it reaches the minimum threshold (nisaab) and one hijri year has passed. In
the case of agricultural land, zakaah is due on the grains and crops on the
day of the harvest, not on the land itself. In the case of land or buildings
that are rented out, zakaah is due on the rent when one year has passed, not
on the land or building itself. If the land, building or other goods are for
trade, then zakaah is due on them when one year has passed, and you should
pay zakaah on the profit when one year has passed for the capital, if the
capital has reached the nisaab. End quote.
Fataawa
al-Lajnah al-Daa’imah, 9/331
Based on
this, you do not have to pay zakaah on this shop.
And Allaah
knows best.