Praise be to Allaah.
If the conditions of zakaah being due are met with regard to
this money, such as it reaching the nisaab and one full (hijri) year having
passed since it was acquired, then zakaah must be paid on it, even if this
money is being saved to meet a specific need such as accommodation,
education or maintenance.
Shaykh Ibn Baaz (may Allaah have mercy on him) was asked in
Majmoo’ al-Fataawa (14/130):
I am saving money from my salary each month. Do I have to pay
zakaah on this money, knowing that I am saving this money to build myself a
house and to pay the dowry for my marriage soon, in sha Allaah, and I have
been saving this money for several years in the bank because I have nowhere
else to keep this money?
He replied:
Wealth that is being saved to get married, to build a home or
for other purposes is subject to zakaah if it reaches the nisaab and one
full year has passed, whether it is gold, silver or cash, because of the
general meaning of the evidence which indicates that zakaah is obligatory on
that which reaches the nisaab and one full year has passed, with no
exceptions.
As for putting the money in riba-based banks, that is not
permissible, because that is helping them in sin and transgression. But if
that is done out of necessity, then it is permissible, but it should be
without interest. End quote.
He was also asked in Majmoo’ al-Fataawa (14/126)
If a person is saving money with the aim of getting married,
is it exempt from zakaah?
He replied (may Allaah have mercy on him):
Zakaah is not waived if one has the intention of getting
married; the same applies to one who is collecting money to pay off a debt
or to buy real estate to set up as a waqf or to buy a slave in order to set
him free. Rather zakaah must be paid in all cases, if one year has passed
since the money was collected, because Allaah, may He be glorified, has
enjoined zakaah on the accumulated amount, and He has not stated that such
purposes could mean that it is waived. Zakaah increases wealth and does not
decrease it; it purifies it and purifies its owner, as Allaah says
(interpretation of the meaning):
“Take Sadaqah (alms) from their wealth in order to purify
them and sanctify them with it”
[al-Tawbah 9:103]
And the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon
him) said: “Wealth does not decrease because of charity.” Narrated by Muslim
(2588). End quote.
In Fataawa al-Lajnah al-Daa’imah (9/381) it says:
Zakaah is due on money that has been saved for building if
one full year has passed and it reaches the nisaab by itself or when added
to other wealth that is subject to zakaah, such as cash or trade goods. End
quote.
This was stated by Shaykh Ibn ‘Uthaymeen (may Allaah have
mercy on him) in his fatwas, and we have quoted his fatwa in the answer to
question no. 41805.
The most correct of the scholarly views is that zakaah must
be paid on the wealth of one who owes a debt, and the one who is paying a
debt in instalments, because a debt for which payment has been deferred does
not mean that zakaah is waived on the wealth that is being saved if it
reaches the nisaab, because zakaah is an act of worship that is required of
the one who has wealth, based on the general meaning of the verses and
ahaadeeth which enjoin paying zakaah. This has been discussed in detail in
the answer to question no. 22426.
Based on this, you have to pay zakaah on the money that has
been saved. As for the money which you gave as a down payment to buy the
house, you do not have to pay zakaah on it because it is no longer in your
possession since you gave it to the seller.
And Allaah knows best.