HASAN.VC https://hasan.vc/ Wed, 25 Feb 2026 09:57:15 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://hasan.vc/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/cropped-favicon-32x32.png HASAN.VC https://hasan.vc/ 32 32 Building Camels, Not Unicorns: HASAN.VC’s 2024-2025 Impact Report https://hasan.vc/building-camels-not-unicorns-hasan-vcs-2024-2025-impact-report/ https://hasan.vc/building-camels-not-unicorns-hasan-vcs-2024-2025-impact-report/#respond Mon, 23 Feb 2026 07:04:27 +0000 https://hasan.vc/?p=16067 What if the future of venture capital isn’t about burning through millions to chase billion-dollar valuations, but about building resilient, values-driven companies that can survive and thrive in any market condition? HASAN.VC’s first-ever Impact Report reveals a radically different approach to early-stage investing, one that’s producing remarkable results across Southeast Asia and beyond.  As the […]

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What if the future of venture capital isn’t about burning through millions to chase billion-dollar valuations, but about building resilient, values-driven companies that can survive and thrive in any market condition?

HASAN.VC’s first-ever Impact Report reveals a radically different approach to early-stage investing, one that’s producing remarkable results across Southeast Asia and beyond. 

As the #1 Most Active VC in SEA and #3 globally in the Islamic Digital Economy, we’re here to prove that ethical investing and strong performance aren’t mutually exclusive.

The Camel Manifesto: A Different Philosophy

The Camel Manifesto: A Different Philosophy

Inspired by the camel’s ability to survive harsh, uncertain conditions, we invest in resilient and sustainable early-stage startups over wannabe unicorns chasing hyper-growth. This isn’t just philosophy, it’s producing measurable outcomes:

  • 91% of our alumni startups remain active: a remarkable survival rate in an environment where early-stage startups failure rates are high
  • 71% are in active growth phase, scaling operations sustainably
  • 16% have crossed $100k in annual revenue, with outliers reaching $700k

But what’s most telling? Our founders report an average score of 4.25/5 for feeling “at peace” and “aligned” after adopting the halal worldview and Camel-based approach. That’s the power of building with purpose.

From Singapore to Saudi Arabia: A Global Movement

From Singapore to Saudi Arabia: A Global Movement

Our accelerator program has supported 120+ startups across 3 cohorts, with founders from 14 different countries. From Malaysia and Indonesia to Saudi Arabia, Canada, and beyond, this is truly a global movement of values-aligned entrepreneurship.

entrepreneurship

Behind these founders stands an equally diverse investor community: 60+ angel investors from 16 countries who bring capital, domain expertise in technology, finance, healthcare, and more. This is smart money that opens doors, builds relationships, and provides strategic guidance.

Portfolio Impact: Where Values Meet Value

This report features these case studies of portfolio startups delivering both social impact and financial returns:

  • Qara’a: Over 1.6 million students learning Qur’an through AI-powered feedback
  • HealthPro: 50+ health facilities empowered, 500,000+ patients served with improved care
  • GoTechUp: 50,000+ students gaining hands-on STEM skills through gamified learning

Each represents a different approach to solving real problems for underserved communities, and each is building sustainable revenue models from day one.

Why This Report Matters

Whether you’re:

  • A founder considering applying to our accelerator
  • An investor looking to align your portfolio with your values
  • An ecosystem builder curious about alternative models for startup building
  • A researcher studying Islamic finance and ethical investing

This report offers unique insights from our lived experience.

What You’ll Find in the Full Report:

 ✓ Operational health metrics and financial performance data
✓ Geographic breakdown of startups and investors
✓ Portfolio startups’ impact stories with hard numbers
✓ Founder testimonials on their transformation journey
✓ Investor perspectives on ethical venture investing
✓ Our Camel Manifesto and investment philosophy

hvc reports

Join the Movement

This is only the beginning. We’re building an ecosystem that prioritizes integrity and purpose, always. Whether you’re ready to start a company, back a founder, or simply want to learn more about our work and community, we’d love to connect.

join at HASAN.VC

Explore opportunities:

Together, we build a legacy. Invest in the future, for eternity.

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Shariah-Compliant Investing in Start-ups with the Camel Framework https://hasan.vc/shariah-compliant-investing-in-start-ups-with-the-camel-framework/ https://hasan.vc/shariah-compliant-investing-in-start-ups-with-the-camel-framework/#respond Fri, 13 Feb 2026 05:48:26 +0000 https://hasan.vc/?p=16035 This article is for informational purposes only and is not financial or Shariah advice. Some platforms may require Accredited Investor status. We encourage all readers to perform their own due diligence and consult with legal or religious counsel before deploying capital. HASAN.VC assumes no liability for investment decisions made based on this information. For many […]

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This article is for informational purposes only and is not financial or Shariah advice. Some platforms may require Accredited Investor status. We encourage all readers to perform their own due diligence and consult with legal or religious counsel before deploying capital. HASAN.VC assumes no liability for investment decisions made based on this information.

For many Muslims, Shariah-compliant investing revolves around wealth preservation. This would typically mean a portfolio split between gold and real estate (or even just sitting dormant in a bank account). It was a strategy built on tangible assets, holding onto what you already have because you can physically see it. 

While assets like gold serve to preserve wealth, it does not build the future. It generates little employment for the next generation let alone solutions for the systemic challenges facing the Ummah and humanity in an increasingly volatile world. 

To achieve true and meaningful impact, there must be a shift toward investments that align with ethical values while contributing to healthy economic growth. In this context, Islamic Venture Capital is not merely an alternative, but an essential driver of progress.

We believe this frontier must be approached with a new and healthier mindset. The mainstream startup world is obsessed with “Unicorns,” but for the ethical, Shariah- conscious investor, this ‘betting big’ mindset is less favoured. Society needs a more resilient path which is more intune to reality. 

We champion the Camel Startup philosophy. 

Related Insight: How Halal Venture Capital Is Unlocking $3 Trillion Opportunities in Emerging Markets

The Mirage of the Unicorn vs. Camel Resilience

In the high-stakes environment of Silicon Valley, the “Unicorn”, a startup that reaches a valuation of $1 billion is often the ultimate trophy. However, the journey toward this valuation relies on a “burn-to-grow” strategy, where immense capital is spent to buy rapid scale, often at the expense of long-term viability. This “growth at all cost” mindset can lead to a fundamental disconnect, where the startup’s valuation is prioritized over a sustainable and sensible business model.

The Mirage of the Unicorn vs. Camel Resilience

A culture defined by high “burn rates” clashes with the Islamic principle of Mizan (balance). For the disciplined investor, the Unicorn often proves to be an overvalued mirage that is highly speculative and inherently fragile. When global liquidity contracts and capital becomes scarce, such companies frequently collapse. This occurs because the underlying structures were not engineered for long-term endurance, but rather for a rapid exit or acquisition.

HASAN.VC prioritizes the cultivation of Camel startups over the pursuit of speculative Unicorns. A Camel startup operates on three core principles that align with Islamic ethical standards and serve to develop long-term economic stability:

  • Sustainability as a Foundation: There is an active focus on generating early revenue and the management of investor capital as an Amanah (trust) that is handled responsibly.
  • Market Resilience: By maintaining lean operations, these ventures are engineered to navigate economic volatility and market shifts, increasing survival rates in turbulent conditions.
  • Dignified Scalability: Growth is pursued at a measured pace that respects the well-being of the founders, the integrity of the workforce, and the broader community.

Further Reading: 5 Reason Why Camels Make Amazing Startup 

A strategic breakdown of why the Camel make a better Startup than the Unicorn

Filling the Market Gap: Serving the Muslim Economy

The global Muslim economy represents one of the most significant underserved segments in the modern financial landscape. Although the Ummah constitutes over 25% of the world’s population, the volume of venture capital directed toward Muslim founders remains a marginal fraction of the global total. Halal Venture Capital is still nascent, estimated to be at US$3bn, it is a small niche in the global VC scene.  

Filling the Market Gap: Serving the Muslim Economy

In tech, most global apps and solutions do not factor in the unique demand for Halal products and services. While the compliance factor is important, the spirit, nature and impact of conscious and responsible business is where humanity can gain and advance sustainably in a healthy way. 

Prioritizing the Real Economy over speculative trading redirects capital into tangible sectors like healthcare and ethical fintech to drive actual growth. This shift turns Shariah compliance into a tool for job creation by funding and helping create new businesses that innovate, build new technology products, and solve real problems.

It also drives the circulation of wealth by ensuring money reaches suppliers and employees rather than sitting in financial silos. Ultimately, this increases the velocity of economic activity, as every dollar spent on wages and infrastructure ripples through the economy to create more opportunity for everyone.

The Power of 40: Systematic Risk Mitigation

Angel investing is frequently approached with caution due to the high risk associated with the asset class. Data from Startup Genome indicates that approximately 90% of startups fail, while research from Harvard Business School further clarifies that 75% of venture-backed startups fail to return investor capital. In a concentrated portfolio of only a few ventures, the mathematical probability of loss is high.

The Power of 40: Systematic Risk Mitigation

To capture high-growth potential, the fundamental principles of Modern Portfolio Theory are applied. The strategy involves constructing a “caravan”, building a diversified portfolio of 40 (or more) startups.

AT HASAN.VC, our Fund 1 targets to invest in 40 to 50 startups, building our portfolio – a herd of Camel startups.

Diversification serves as the primary mechanism for risk mitigation in this asset class. By maintaining exposure across at least 40 startups, the high performance of a few can offset the losses of others, enhancing the stability and returns of the overall portfolio. 

Technical Insight: The Importance of Having a Portfolio as a Startup Investor: Insights from Islamic Finance

Technical insights into how Modern Portfolio Theory and diversification serve as the primary safeguards against the inherent volatility of early-stage technology investments.

The Paradigm Shift in Shariah-Compliant Investing

The transition from passive wealth preservation to active growth represents a strategic evolution in the impact of capital within the Ummah. Historically, high-growth venture capital was a closed ecosystem, largely restricted to institutional players and small circles of high-net-worth individuals. 

The Paradigm Shift in Shariah-Compliant Investing

This shift moves away from the rigid bureaucracy of traditional finance toward a direct, thesis-driven approach. By joining angel groups, investors can access high-growth venture capital opportunities that were once reserved for institutional players. This model makes the ecosystem more inclusive, allowing wealth to circulate effectively through specialized collectives like the HASAN.VC Angel Group.

Through this collaborative structure, investors gain entry to a diversified portfolio of startups, balancing high-growth potential with a professional, community-driven framework.

In an Islamic economic context, this circulation is the practical application of Barakah (divine blessing through growth). Stagnant wealth inherently loses its potential to drive change and create value for society. Islam strongly discourages hoarding. Conversely, when capital is deployed into ventures solving tangible human problems, it can leave a legacy of value that transcends generations. 

The Camel framework ensures that this deployment is not fueling artificial growth, but on building a resilient foundation for a better future.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

What is the Camel startup philosophy, and how does it differ from a Unicorn?

Unlike Unicorns, which often prioritize rapid, “burn-to-grow” scale at the expense of long-term viability, a Camel startup focuses on sustainability, early revenue, and market resilience. The Camel model aligns with the Islamic principle of Mizan (balance), favoring measured growth and lean operations over speculative, high-risk valuations.

How does Islamic Venture Capital (IVC) differ from traditional venture capital?

Traditional VC frequently uses debt-like instruments and operates with  growth at all cost mentalities. In contrast, IVC is built on a partnership of equals model that avoids interest (Riba) and prioritizes ethical, Shariah-compliant sectors like healthcare and fintech. It views capital as an Amanah (trust) to be handled responsibly.

Why does HASAN.VC target a portfolio of 40 to 50 startups?

This strategy is based on Modern Portfolio Theory to mitigate the high inherent risk of angel investing. Since a large percentage of startups fail, building a caravan of at least 40 companies ensures that the high performance of a few successful ventures can offset losses elsewhere, providing greater overall stability and return potential.

How does this investment approach contribute to the Real Economy?

Rather than keeping wealth stagnant in dormant bank accounts or speculative trade, this framework drives the circulation of wealth. By funding startups that solve tangible problems, capital is used for job creation, infrastructure, and innovation, which creates a ripple effect of opportunities across the global Muslim economy.

Who can participate in these investment opportunities?

Participation is currently limited to members of the HASAN.VC Angel Group. This collective structure allows individual investors to access high-growth venture capital opportunities that were historically reserved for large institutional players.

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Halal Investment Options in Canada: 2026 Investor’s Guide https://hasan.vc/halal-investment-options-for-canadian-muslims/ https://hasan.vc/halal-investment-options-for-canadian-muslims/#respond Mon, 02 Feb 2026 15:29:01 +0000 https://hasan.vc/?p=12127 The 2026 Outlook: Halal Investment Options in Canada Canada isn’t just an ‘up-and-comer’ in halal finance anymore, it’s one of the global hubs for ethical capital. With a Muslim population exceeding 1.9 million, the Canadian landscape is no longer just a participant, it is a primary driver of the worldwide growth of ethical investments.   […]

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The 2026 Outlook: Halal Investment Options in Canada

Canada isn’t just an ‘up-and-comer’ in halal finance anymore, it’s one of the global hubs for ethical capital. With a Muslim population exceeding 1.9 million, the Canadian landscape is no longer just a participant, it is a primary driver of the worldwide growth of ethical investments.

 

As we move through 2026, the era of “limited options” is over. Today’s investors have access to a sophisticated, regulated ecosystem of Halal Investment Options that rival conventional finance in both diversity and performance.

 

Expert Insight: “A few years ago, halal investment options were extremely limited. Today, we’re seeing stronger community awareness, increased advocacy, and a new generation of investors actively seeking ethical, Shariah-compliant solutions.”  Dr. Mohamad Sawwaf, CEO and Co-founder of Manzil 

 

Dr. Mohamad Sawwaf is a prominent figure in the North American Islamic finance sector. Through Manzil, he has been instrumental in developing Shariah-compliant financial products, including home financing and investment funds, to serve the Muslim community in Canada.

 

Quick View: Halal Investment Options in Canada (2026)

 

Firm / Platform

Best For

Type of Investment

Manzil

Comprehensive Finance

Mortgages & Wealth

Halvest

Impact Investing

Alternative Assets

Wealthsimple

Passive Robo-investing

Optimized ETFs

ShariaPortfolio

Global Wealth

Managed Portfolios

OneVest

Modern Portfolios

Halal Equity Funds

Zoya

DIY Investors

Stock Screening

These platforms offer a range of Halal investment options in Canada. Manzil focuses on mortgages and wealth planning, Halvest on impact-driven alternative assets, and Wealthsimple provides passive ETFs for hands-off investing. 


ShariaPortfolio manages global portfolios, OneVest offers modern equity funds, and Zoya helps DIY investors screen for Shariah-compliant stocks. Together, they make it easier to invest in ways that are both ethical and growth-oriented.

 

Halal Investment Options in Canada Toolkit

For a Halal investment option to be successful in Canada, it must be held within a registered tax account. Think of a Halal account as a protective shield. It’s a special folder for your money that keeps the government from taking a cut of the profits you earn through Halal investing.

 

Prior to 2026, many Canadian Muslims found this level of integration impossible as few Shariah-compliant products were eligible for registered plans. Today, the landscape has shifted, allowing for “plug-and-play” compatibility with Canada’s primary wealth-building tools:

 

  • TFSA (Tax-Free Savings Account): This is your “Growth Engine.” When you hold Halal ETFs such as the Manzil Nasdaq ETF every dollar of profit is 100% tax-free. Without this integration, a significant portion of your ethical gains would be lost to the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA).(Consult your tax advisor for the latest tax guidance)
  • RRSP (Registered Retirement Savings Plan): This is your “Tax Shield.” For those in higher tax brackets, contributing to a Halal RRSP reduces your taxable income today while allowing capital to grow tax-deferred until retirement.

By “plugging” Halal portfolios into these standard Canadian accounts, you ensure your faith-aligned money is working just as hard (and as tax-efficiently) as any conventional investment.

While Canadian Halal investment options are now on equal footing with conventional platforms, for many Muslim investors, the goal has shifted. It is no longer just about ensuring an account is “Halal” or interest-free.

 

Today’s sophisticated investors recognize that wealth is a trust (Amanah). They are increasingly seeking opportunities that allow their capital to create a tangible impact on the Ummah and mankind, securing benefits for both this world and the next.

 

The “Missing Piece”: Direct Venture Participation

While the local market provides a secure foundation through ETFs and public equities, these options are primarily “passive”, you are essentially buying a slice of existing giants. To achieve true direct risk-sharing, a core pillar of Islamic finance, sophisticated investors are moving toward Venture Participation.

 

  • Public vs. Private: Public markets act as a “safe harbor” for liquidity, but private Venture Capital is where real-world innovation is funded directly. It allows you to participate in solutions that address societal needs rather than just tracking a stock index.
  • The  Strategic Advantage: Unlike buying a stock, Venture Capital is a form of direct partnership where you move from being a distant observer to an active partner. You aren’t just reading quarterly reports; you are effectively   involved in providing “Smart Capital” where your industry expertise and professional networks directly impact a startup’s growth and survival.
  • Direct Risk-Sharing: This embodies the core Islamic principle of Musharakah (partnership). You share directly in the tangible risks and rewards of an early-stage company, rather than simply holding a paper asset.
  • A Growing Ecosystem: Canadians now represent a significant portion of global ethical venture networks. In fact, 25% of the HASAN.VC investor base is Canadian, signaling a shift beyond passive “floor” investments toward high-impact opportunities.

It is worth noting that the second largest group of angels that has come into the HASAN.VC ecosystem it’s actually from Canada. Mostly joined as investors through word of mouth.

 

HASAN.VC operates as a global private angel group within this ecosystem. It serves as a community-driven bridge for Canadians to participate in resilient “Camel” startups companies that prioritize long-term sustainability and ethical growth over speculative “burn.”

 

Resilience-driven growth isn’t limited to private equity. Explore how new market products are changing the landscape in our guide to 5 High-Growth Halal Tech Startups to Watch.

 

The “Camel Startup” Strategy

 

In the conventional startup world, investors often chase “Unicorns” companies that prioritize rapid, aggressive growth and high “burn rates” to achieve billion-dollar valuations. However, the 2026 economic landscape has shifted toward a more grounded model known as the “Way of the Camel.”

 

Unlike unicorns, which often rely on a constant stream of external investment to survive, Camel Startups are built for resilience and endurance in harsh conditions.

 

  • Sustainability Over Speed: Camels focus on building lean, efficient business models that reach profitability early. They scale only when demand and resources allow, ensuring they never outgrow their infrastructure.
  • Resource Efficiency: Much like their namesake, these startups can “cross the desert” with minimal resources. They manage cash flow with extreme discipline, allowing them to survive market volatility without needing constant funding rounds.
  • Alignment with Shariah Values: The model emphasizes real economic activity, asset-backed growth, and the avoidance of excessive speculation (Gharar).
  • Long-Term Impact: By prioritizing substance over flash, these companies create lasting value for their communities and investors, focusing on “Impact and the Akhirah” rather than just a quick exit.

The Camel Startup Philosophy is ingrained in the DNA of HASAN.VC. Born from our founders’ experiences with market disconnects and limited resources, we built a “founder-first” firm to champion resilience over hype.

 

For Canadian angel investors, this provides a rigorous framework to back startups designed to outlast market cycles. By prioritizing substance, HASAN.VC ensures your capital supports ventures that deliver ethical growth and lasting impact for the Ummah and the global economy.

 

Joining the HVC Angel Community: Your Path to Impact

If your local foundations are secure, transitioning into an active angel investor is about moving from “passive tracking” to active alignment.HASAN.VC  process is designed to ensure that every partner in HVC ecosystem is here for more than just a return they are here to #CirculateGood.

 

1. The Digital Entry

The Early Days of Halal Investing in Canada

 

The process starts at the HASAN.VC Angels portal. This initial step is a baseline check of your investment goals and experience. HVC looks for individuals who are ready to commit their capital to high-impact, ethical ventures and who resonate with The “Camel” philosophy of resilience over speculative hype.

 

2. The Discovery: Finding Your “Alignment”

The core of our onboarding is the Discovery Call with an HVC Relationship Manager. This is a deep-dive conversation focused on finding the right “fit” between your aspirations and our mandate. During this call, the call will focus on:

 

  • Mission Match: Ensure your desire to create a tangible impact on the Ummah and mankind aligns with HVC specific deal flow.
  • Smart Capital Discovery: Whether you are an engineer, a doctor, or a business leader, your unique professional background can be a strategic asset for our founders. 
  • Active Partnership: discussion on the Musharakah mindset sharing in the tangible risks and rewards of building the future, rather than just being a spectator.

Ultimately, the HVC ecosystem is built on the belief that wealth is a tool for transformation. When we move beyond ‘passive tracking’ and into active alignment, we create a ripple effect that extends far beyond a balance sheet.

By choosing to share in the risks and rewards of these ethical ventures, you are helping to anchor a new generation of founders. Step into your role as a partner in progress and help us build a future we can all believe in

 

Frequently Asked Questions

  1. How can I ensure my investment is Halal and creates impact?
    Impact comes from where you put your capital. Platforms like HasanVC offer Shariah-compliant investments in sectors such as fintech, healthcare, and technology, supporting ventures that generate meaningful social and economic outcomes.
  2. How do I choose which startups to invest in?
    Focus on resilient, scalable ventures with ethical business models. Look for startups that prioritize sustainability, revenue discipline, and long-term impact while operating in Shariah-compliant sectors like fintech, technology, or healthcare.
  3. How often should I review my investment portfolio?
    Quarterly reviews are recommended, with an annual verification of Shariah compliance. Many platforms provide alerts if a company’s operations or financials fall outside Shariah standards, helping maintain both ethical alignment and impact goals.
  4. What types of sectors can I invest in through Halal startup funds?
    Impact-focused Halal funds typically include fintech, technology, and healthcare startups sectors that combine growth potential with tangible benefits for the community. 
  5. How is my investment monitored for Shariah compliance and impact?
    Platforms like HasanVC provide regular updates on startup performance, financials, and compliance, ensuring your investments remain Shariah-compliant while contributing to meaningful social and economic outcomes.

 

Disclaimer :This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Please consult a qualified financial or tax advisor before making investment decisions.

 

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How to Earn Halal Money Online: Practical Tips and Strategies https://hasan.vc/how-to-earn-halal-money-online-practical-tips-and-strategies/ https://hasan.vc/how-to-earn-halal-money-online-practical-tips-and-strategies/#respond Thu, 15 Jan 2026 04:03:31 +0000 https://hasan.vc/?p=6897 In 2026, earning halal money online is less about side hustles and more about building skills and systems that compound. The main emerging paths include Artificial Intelligence (AI) enabled services that require human judgment, ethical ecommerce, specialised freelancing, and small SaaS micro-startups. These models work because money is earned through contribution, growth does not depend […]

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In 2026, earning halal money online is less about side hustles and more about building skills and systems that compound. The main emerging paths include Artificial Intelligence (AI) enabled services that require human judgment, ethical ecommerce, specialised freelancing, and small SaaS micro-startups. These models work because money is earned through contribution, growth does not depend on getting an investment, and the work can survive market cycles.

 

Earning halal income is a non-negotiable boundary for Muslims who put their faith first, not as a matter of convenience or lifestyle.

 

The internet has made earning money easier than ever, but it has also blurred the lines between what is permissible, what is questionable, and what quietly compromises values. Many online income models rely on riba, excessive speculation, or industries that extract more harm than good. Others appear harmless on the surface, yet fall apart under scrutiny.

 

Still, numerous genuinely halal ways to earn online do exist. When done properly, earning becomes more than personal survival. It is the first step toward independence, responsibility, and eventually contributing capital to things that strengthen society and the ummah.

 

This guide focuses on earning through real skill, responsibly.

 

1. What Does Halal Income Mean in Practice?

Halal income refers to earnings generated through activities permitted under Islamic law. In practice, this means income must come from effort, avoid harmful (prohibited) industries, and remain free from riba (interest-based loans).

 

Honest Work
Income should be tied to real contribution. Clarity, fairness, and accountability matter. If a deal feels uncomfortable to explain openly, that discomfort is often a signal.

 

Prohibition of Riba (Interest)
Any income that comes from earning or paying interest is not permissible. This includes interest-based savings, lending platforms, penalties, or growth models that involve borrowing.

 

Avoiding Prohibited Industries
Income linked to alcohol, gambling, conventional finance (due to riba), adult content and non-halal forms of entertainment, pork related products, or activities that harm society is not acceptable.

 

These principles do not limit opportunity. They usually steer people toward cleaner, more resilient ways of earning.

 

Assessing Your Skills and Interests

2. How Should You Choose a Halal Online Income Path?

Start with what you are already good at. The safest way to choose a halal income path online is to start with skills you already have or are willing to develop and apply them to real problems people are willing to pay for.

 

Common skills that translate well online include:

 

  • Writing and editing
  • Graphic design and branding
  • Programming and web development
  • Teaching and tutoring
  • Reviewing, analysing, or improving content

For many people, these skills are only the beginning. They generate income first, then stability. Over time, they can evolve into small businesses, products, or platforms.

 

Some stop at earning. Others think longer term. Once income is stable and obligations are covered, halal investment opportunities become relevant.

3. What Are the Best Halal Ways to Earn Money Online in 2026?

Freelancing

Freelancing remains one of the best ways to earn halal income online. You offer a defined service, agree on terms upfront, and are paid for the work you deliver.

 

Common freelance services include:

  • Writing and editing
  • A.I reviewing 
  • Design and development
  • Programming and software work
  • Virtual assistance and operations support

Platforms like Upwork or Freelancer are simply tools. As for A.I tasks you can enrol with companies like Data Annotation or Outlier. Projects you take on need to be reviewed carefully, especially when clients operate in industries you may not want to support.

 

For many founders, freelancing is to support the journey, not the destination. It is how camel businesses begin steady, income generating, and able to survive without external feeding.

 

Is AI-Related Online Work Halal and Sustainable?

Yes, AI-related online work can be halal and sustainable when it involves permissible content, clear purpose, and compensation for genuine human effort.

 

AI systems still depend on humansto provide context, cultural understanding, and decision-making. Common tasks include:

 

  • Reviewing AI-generated text, images, or audio
  • Labelling and categorising data
  • Evaluating search results or translations
  • Assessing quality, relevance, or safety

Many roles focus on localisation and how content makes sense within a specific language or culture. Opportunities exist across regions, and fluent English is not a requirement.

 

Beyond review work, AI has created service-based opportunities. Some individuals help businesses automate internal processes. Others build simple AI tools for education, research, or operations. When AI is used as a tool rather than a shortcut, it fits naturally within a halal framework.

Content Creation

 

E-commerce

E-commerce remains a viable halal income path in 2026 when ownership, transparency, and discipline are maintained.

 

This includes:

  • Physical products such as apparel, niche goods, or handmade items
  • Digital products including e-books, templates, courses, or software tools

Models that obscure sourcing, pricing, or responsibility introduce unnecessary risk. Certain forms of dropshipping where sellers neither control inventory nor clearly communicate fulfilment often create avoidable problems.

 

The most durable e-commerce businesses prioritise margin discipline, repeat customers, and operational control over sheer volume.

 

Content Creation

Content creation allows individuals to earn by sharing knowledge or experience they genuinely stand behind.

 

This may include:

  • Blogging supported by ethical affiliate partnerships
  • Educational or informational video content
  • Niche media platforms built on long-term trust

Sustainable content businesses are rarely built overnight. They reward consistency, clarity, and credibility more than clever tactics. AI has changed how quickly content can be produced, but it has not replaced judgment or conviction. The creators who last are the ones whouse AI as a tool, not as a voice.

 

Online Teaching and Tutoring

Online Teaching and Tutoring

Online teaching is one of the most straightforward halal income paths. It is service-based, transparent, and directly beneficial.

 

People teach:

  • Academic subjects
  • Languages
  • Professional or technical skills
  • Religious knowledge

The model is simple: knowledge exchange for agreed payment.

Curious about other halal investment options? Check out this article: Where Can Muslims Invest Money? Halal Investment Options Explained.

4. The Camel Principle: Why Sustainability Matters More Than Speed

At HASAN.VC, we nurture and invest in sustainable halal startups, often described as camels, not unicorns. Camels move steadily, survive harsh conditions, and do not rely on constant external funding.

 

Sustainable Halal income with barakah (blessings) works the same way. The goal is not explosive growth funded by debt or hype, but resilience. Service-based earning, disciplined margins, and gradual expansion create income that can withstand downturns.

 

Many founders who eventually build scalable halal ventures begin with simple services. Income comes first. Stability follows. Only then does scaling make sense.

 

From Income Seeker to Wealth Builder

Most people approach halal income with a narrow question: How do I earn?

 

That question is necessary, but incomplete.

 

Earning is the foundation. What matters next is what the income enables. When work is steady, expenses are covered, and pressure eases, a new responsibility appears: stewardship.

 

At this stage, the goal shifts from chasing more income to deploying surplus intentionally. That might mean reinvesting into skills, building small businesses, supporting other founders, or participating in halal investment opportunities. The discipline learned while earning,  patience, margin awareness, and restraint, becomes the same discipline required to build lasting wealth.

 

This transition does not typically happen quickly, and it should not. Wealth built too early often carries the same fragility as income built on hype. Sustainable wealth grows from income that is already resilient.

 

For many, this is where the idea of angel investing, venture support, or backing mission-driven businesses becomes relevant. Not to speculate, but as an extension of responsibility. Capital stops being a measure of success and becomes a powerful tool for good.

 

The strongest ecosystems are built when earners mature into builders, and builders mature into stewards.

    Ensuring Halal Compliance in Your Online Work

    5. How Should You Set Up Your Online Presence?

    A halal online presence should be simple, transparent, and built around trust, clearly showing what you do and how people can work with you.

     

    A simple website or portfolio would do the job. So does a clear explanation of what you do and how to reach you. Social platforms can work when used deliberately rather than constantly.

     

    Reliability, consistency, and professionalism compound over time. So does the willingness to say no to work that does not sit right.

     

    Trust matters online, especially when money is involved.

     

    6. How Do You Manage Money Ethically Once You Earn It?

    Managing money ethically means avoiding harmful and haram (impermissible in Islam) sectors and industries, earning or paying interest, keeping finances transparent and growing only at a pace your income can sustain.

     

    Use ethical and Shariah-compliant banking and payment tools that avoid interest where possible. Keep clear records. Set aside money for taxes early. Be cautious with growth expenses.

     

    How income is managed matters as much as how it is earned. This stage is rarely glamorous, but it determines whether earning turns into stability or stress.

    Overcoming Challenges in Earning Halal Money Online

    7. Common Challenges—and How to Navigate Them

     

    Surround Yourself with the Right People
    Progress compounds faster when you’re around people who share your values. Seek out communities where ethics, discipline, and long-term thinking are taken seriously. For example, the HASAN.VC Angel Group is a global community of individuals who are passionate and keen to support and invest in halal or Muslim-ledstartups.

     

    Attend the Right Rooms
    Make time for online and in-person events where thoughtful founders, operators, and investors gather. The goal isn’t collecting contacts, but learning how others think, decide, and navigate real constraints.

     

    Commit to Continuous Learning
    Markets change, tools evolve, and skills age quickly. Stay current by learning deliberately through courses, reading, and hands-on practice. Skill development is one of the few advantages that compounds without compromising principles.

     

    Protect Your Focus and Discipline
    Halal income is rarely built through intensity alone. It requires consistency. Set clear goals, structure your time, and keep your attention on long-term outcomes. Be wary of and avoid short-term noise and distractions.

    Earning a halal income online

    Conclusion

    For most people, the journey begins with earning. For others, it is a beginning.

     

    Halal income built on real work creates more than security. It creates options. Over time, those options become the ability to support others, back founders, and deploy capital with intention rather than pressure.

     

    Income built this way behaves more like a camel than a unicorn, resilient, patient, and built to carry weight over time.

     

    When income becomes stable, the question eventually changes.

     

    You stop asking, How do I earn?
    And start asking, Where should this money go?

     

    That is where impact begins to compound.

     

    Practical Questions People Are Asking

    What is the safest way to earn halal income online in 2026?

    The safest paths are skill-based and service-driven freelancing, teaching, consulting, and ethical AI services. These models are transparent, tied to real effort, and do not rely on interest, leverage, or speculation.

     

    Is AI-related online work halal long-term?

    It can be, when the work involves permissible content and genuine responsibility. Roles focused on implementation, review, or automation for real businesses tend to be more sustainable than trend-driven side hustles. 

     

    Can freelancing lead to long-term stability?

    Yes, when treated as a starting point rather than a ceiling. Many resilient businesses begin as services and later evolve into products or platforms without relying on debt.

     

    How do I tell if an online business involves riba indirectly?

    Look at how growth is financed. If survival depends on borrowing, penalties, or interest-based instruments, that is usually a warning sign.

     

    When does it make sense to move from earning to investing?

    After income is stable, obligations are covered, and you have surplus you can commit long-term. Investing from stability creates options; investing from pressure creates risk.

     

    [contact-form-7]

    The post How to Earn Halal Money Online: Practical Tips and Strategies appeared first on HASAN.VC.

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    How Halal Venture Capital Is Unlocking $3 Trillion Opportunities in Emerging Markets https://hasan.vc/how-halal-venture-capital-is-unlocking-3-trillion-opportunities-in-emerging-markets/ https://hasan.vc/how-halal-venture-capital-is-unlocking-3-trillion-opportunities-in-emerging-markets/#respond Thu, 01 Jan 2026 17:51:24 +0000 https://hasan.vc/?p=15316 A quiet but powerful transformation is taking place across Southeast Asia and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries. A new generation of founders is building companies that refuse to see faith, technology, and growth as opposing forces. They are launching fintech platforms, logistics tools, lifestyle brands, and digital services that feel modern, ambitious, and globally […]

    The post How Halal Venture Capital Is Unlocking $3 Trillion Opportunities in Emerging Markets appeared first on HASAN.VC.

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    A quiet but powerful transformation is taking place across Southeast Asia and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries. A new generation of founders is building companies that refuse to see faith, technology, and growth as opposing forces. They are launching fintech platforms, logistics tools, lifestyle brands, and digital services that feel modern, ambitious, and globally competitive—while remaining firmly rooted in time-tested values.

    Driving much of this momentum is halal venture capital, sometimes referred to in institutional circles as Islamic venture capital. This form of funding provides growth capital within clear ethical and Shariah-compliant boundaries. In fast-growing emerging markets, that clarity is not a limitation, it is a strategic advantage.

    The Rise of the “Camel” Startup

    Camel Startup

    In the traditional venture capital hubs of Silicon Valley and London, the “Unicorn” has long been the gold standard. Unicorns are defined by their $1 billion valuations and their scaling approach of burning through massive amounts of cash to capture market share at any cost. However, in the volatile environments of emerging markets, the Unicorn model often proves fragile.

    Startups are increasingly designed like camels, not unicorns. Camels are resilient, resourceful, and built for endurance. They are capable of overcoming the toughest conditions. Like camels traversing harsh deserts, these companies are built to survive uncertainty, adapt to challenging markets, and thrive over the long term. Halal venture capital empowers these “camel startups” to scale their vision while staying aligned with values that matter.

    The “Unicorn vs. Camel” Comparison

    FeatureUnicornCamel
    Primary GoalHyper-growthSustainability / Resilience
    Growth StrategyBlitzscaling (Burn to Scale)Sustainable Pacing (Profit First)
    GovernanceSubjective ESG StandardsRule-based Shariah Clarity
    Market FocusSaturated Western Markets$3T Emerging Market Frontier

    For global investors seeking scalable opportunities that combine sustainable growth and ethical impact, halal venture capital represents one of the most underexplored and high-potential frontiers in today’s investment landscape.

    The Halal Economy: A $3 Trillion Market in Emerging Economies

    The halal economy is often misunderstood by those outside the ecosystem. It is not limited to halal food certification or traditional Islamic banking. In reality, it represents a comprehensive economic framework rooted in fairness, transparency, real-asset value, and shared prosperity.

    Today, this ecosystem spans a diverse range of high-growth industries:

    Digital Finance and Fintech: Beyond banking, this includes Shariah-compliant micro-lending, alternative investments in SMEs and startups, wealth management and personal finance, ethical insurance (Takaful), and Web3 solutions.

    Healthcare and Medical Technology: Ensuring that pharmaceuticals and medical treatments meet ethical standards while expanding access to life-saving tech in underserved regions.

    Supply Chain and Logistics: Utilizing IoT and AI to ensure “Halal Integrity” from farm to fork, reducing waste and increasing transparency for the world’s 2 billion Muslim consumers.

    Modest Fashion and Consumer Brands: A multi-billion dollar sector that focuses on dignity, ethical manufacturing, and sustainable materials.

    Media, Education, and Content: Digital platforms that offer values-aligned learning and entertainment for the world’s youngest, fastest-growing demographic.

    Collectively, the global halal economy is valued at over $3 trillion and continues to grow at an annual rate exceeding 7%. Much of this growth is driven by emerging markets, where populations are young, digitally connected, and increasingly entrepreneurial.

    Despite this momentum, innovation in the halal economy remains undercapitalized. Many founders struggle to access funding that understands both their commercial ambition and their ethical boundaries. This is precisely where halal venture capital plays a defining role.

    Join the Movement: Invest in Resilience

    Are you an angel investor seeking to diversify into high-growth emerging markets without compromising on ethical integrity? 

    At HASAN.VC, we bridge the gap between faith-inspired entrepreneurship and global investment standards. Join our network of angel investors to gain early access to “Camel Startups” that are built to endure, scale, and deliver real-world impact.

    Explore Investment Opportunities at HASAN.VC

    What Halal Venture Capital Really Is and How It Differs

    Halal venture capital refers to equity-based startup investment structures that comply with Shariah principles while following globally recognized venture capital best practices. While the term “Islamic venture capital” remains common in industry discourse, many founders and investors prefer “Halal VC” because it is clearer, more practical, and easier to communicate to a global audience.

    At its core, halal venture capital avoids:

    1. Interest-based financing (Riba): Removing the burden of debt that can crush early-stage startups.
    2. Excessive speculation (Gharar): Ensuring that investments are based on real value and transparent contracts.
    3. Harmful or unethical business models: Avoiding industries such as gambling, tobacco, or exploitative lending.

    It emphasizes fairness and risk-sharing through equity, focusing on real economic activity and long-term value creation. This structure aligns naturally with venture investing, which already favors patience and founder alignment over short-term financial engineering.

    Why “Ethical VC” Lacks Clarity Compared to Halal VC

    The rise of ethical and ESG-focused investing reflects a positive shift in global capital markets. However, “ethical” venture capital suffers from one critical weakness: ambiguity. What qualifies as “ethical” can vary widely depending on cultural norms, political context, or corporate branding. ESG criteria are frequently self-reported, inconsistently enforced, and open to interpretation.

    Halal venture capital operates within a clear, rule-based framework. Shariah compliance is binary, where a business either meets the criteria or it does not. This clarity reduces reputational risk, strengthens governance, and builds trust between founders and capital partners. For serious investors, this precision is not restrictive; it is risk-reducing.

    Strategic Capital as a Driver of Sustainable Development

    Conventional financial institutions may view early-stage startups in emerging markets as volatile and difficult to exit. Venture capital, by contrast, is designed for exactly these conditions. It specializes in identifying scalable models and supporting founders through uncertainty.

    At HASAN.VC, halal venture capital is positioned as a bridge that connects faith-inspired entrepreneurship with global investors seeking impactful and sustainable ventures to support. This approach rests on three core commitments:

    Principled Capital Allocation: Capital is deployed only into ventures demonstrating transparency, fairness, and responsible operations.

    Inclusive Innovation Support: Founders across Muslim-majority regions gain access to capital, mentorship, and strategic networks.

    Scaling Real-World Impact: Investments prioritize businesses that improve quality of life, not merely based on financial statements.

    The Broader Socioeconomic Impact

    Venture capital does not merely fund startups it shapes ecosystems that create the future. By channeling capital into halal economy startups, investors help generate:

    ● Employment opportunities across technology, logistics, and manufacturing.

    ● Knowledge transfer through mentorship and governance support.

    ● Women’s economic participation, especially in underserved markets where tech provides a platform for entrepreneurship.

    ● Financial inclusion for populations historically excluded from formal banking through Shariah-compliant fintech.

    ● Technology sovereignty for developing nations, reducing dependence on foreign tech giants

    Frequently Asked Questions About Halal Venture Capital

    1. What is halal venture capital?

    It is equity-based startup investment that complies with Shariah principles. It focuses on sustainable value creation, avoiding debt and business practices that bring good to humanity and the world.

    2. How is it different from Islamic venture capital?

    The terms are often used interchangeably, but “halal venture capital” is a more practical, founder-centric term used to communicate the framework’s values to a global, secular market. It has a more ‘industry’ connotation instead of a religious one.

    3. Who can invest in halal venture capital funds?

    Both Muslim and non-Muslim investors can participate. In fact, many non-Muslim angel investors are drawn to Halal VC because of its moral grounding, focus on real-asset value and reduced speculation.

    4. Does halal venture capital oppose high valuations?

    No. It welcomes high valuations provided they are driven by real growth and sustainable revenue, rather than “growth at any cost” mindset that may lead to unfair business practices and speculative market bubbles.

    5. Why is it important for emerging markets?

    It provides growth funding in regions where conventional funding may be limited by high interest rates or a lack of ethical alignment. It ensures that innovation respects the values of the local population.

    The Future of Halal Venture Capital

    Halal venture capital is steadily moving beyond niche status. As more funds adopt Shariah-compliant frameworks, this approach is emerging as a credible model for sustainable, inclusive growth.

    For emerging economies, the implications extend beyond finance; it is about building globally competitive companies without sacrificing ethical integrity.

    Investing in Growth That Lasts

    Investing in Growth That Lasts

    Venture capital can shape not just markets but entire societies. Guided by clear principles, it elevates emerging economies from innovation consumers to global value creators. In this landscape, the “Camel” startup is the new standard – resilient, resourceful, and built to endure volatility.

    Halal venture capital provides the steady support that helps these ventures grow responsibly, stay true to their principles, and create lasting impact for both communities and investors.

    Ready to back the next generation of resilient founders? Visit HASAN.VC to learn more about our mission and our portfolio.

    [contact-form-7]

    The post How Halal Venture Capital Is Unlocking $3 Trillion Opportunities in Emerging Markets appeared first on HASAN.VC.

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    How to Raise Funds for Your Halal Startup – Step by Step https://hasan.vc/how-to-raise-funds-for-your-halal-startup-step-by-step/ https://hasan.vc/how-to-raise-funds-for-your-halal-startup-step-by-step/#respond Fri, 26 Dec 2025 06:38:58 +0000 https://hasan.vc/?p=15270 Raising funds is one of the biggest milestones in a startup’s journey. It can also be one of the most challenging, especially if you are building a halal startup that wants to grow ethically and in line with Islamic values. Many Muslim founders today are launching incredible ventures, from halal food brands and fintech apps […]

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    Raising funds is one of the biggest milestones in a startup’s journey. It can also be one of the most challenging, especially if you are building a halal startup that wants to grow ethically and in line with Islamic values.

    Many Muslim founders today are launching incredible ventures, from halal food brands and fintech apps to sustainable fashion and clean energy startups. Yet when it comes to raising capital, they often face the same question:

    “How can I attract investors and still stay true to my faith?”

    The good news is that you absolutely can. The key is understanding how to raise funds the right way, both strategically and Islamically.

    This guide walks you step by step through how to raise money for your halal startup while blending modern fundraising methods with Islamic finance principles.

    Step 1: Build a Strong, Ethical Foundation

    Before you pitch investors, make sure your business model, products, and practices are halal and ethical.

    Build a Strong, Ethical Foundation

    This means:

    • Avoiding haram sectors like alcohol, gambling, conventional interest-based finance, and adult entertainment.
    • Ensuring transparency in how you generate profit, without deception, excessive speculation, or unfair contracts.
    • Prioritizing real economic activity instead of financial engineering.
    • Structuring investments in accordance with Shariah principles, with fair, participatory terms that create a true partnership between founders and investors

    For deeper insights into the halal investment ecosystem, read How Venture Capital Can Drive Innovation in Islamic Finance.

    Starting with integrity does more than attract values-aligned investors. It builds long-term trust with customers, partners, and your team.

    Step 2: Understand What Type of Funding You Need

    Not all capital is the same. Depending on your stage and goals, you may choose different funding paths.

    Understand What Type of Funding You Need

    A. Bootstrapping

    Use your own savings or early sales revenue to finance growth without external investors.

    Why it matters for halal founders: Bootstrapping gives you complete independence from third party capital providers. It allows you to avoid any riba-based loans (like personal credit cards) and full control to keep your business Shariah-compliant.

    Pros:
    ✅ Complete ownership and control
    ✅ No equity dilution or investor pressure
    ✅ Forces disciplined spending and early validation
    ✅ Zero riba concerns

    Cons:
    ❌ Limited by personal financial capacity
    ❌ Slower growth compared to funded competitors
    ❌ High personal financial risk

    Shariah note: Bootstrapping is inherently halal as you’re using your own permissible wealth. Just ensure your business operations and revenue sources remain Shariah-compliant.

    B. Seedstrapping -HASAN.VC’s Recommended Approach

    Raise a small pre-seed or seed round from angels or early-stage VCs, then grow your startup to healthy cash flow and a solid customer base before considering additional funding.

    Why this is ideal for halal startups: Seedstrapping balances external support with founder control. It validates your business with some dilution while giving you a runway to build sustainably. This approach aligns with Islamic finance principles of equity-based investment and shared risk. The AI revolution has made this more viable. Where what once cost $500K can now be built for $50K.

    Our VC fund invests $60K to $200k in pre-seed and seed stage startups who graduate from our virtual accelerator program. HASAN.VC looks for Camel Startups. Startups that build lean and strong teams and are capital efficient, able to generate healthy revenue within its first year.

    Pros:
    ✅ Validates business model with real investor backing
    ✅ Maintains significant founder ownership
    ✅ Builds sustainable unit economics early
    ✅ Equity structure aligns with Islamic finance (Musharakah principle)

    Cons:
    ❌ Requires discipline to not over-raise later
    ❌ May grow slower than heavily-funded competitors
    ❌ Need to balance investor expectations with sustainable growth

    Shariah note: Structure seed investments as equity partnerships (Musharakah) where both parties share profit and risk. Here, investors become direct equity shareholders. Be careful of instruments that may lead to debt, including some versions of SAFE notes and convertible notes especially with interest-bearing terms.  Document clearly that operations will remain halal. Engage shariah advisors that are friendly to startups in their pricing.

    C. Family and Friends

    Raise small amounts from your personal network—family members, close friends, or community members who believe in you.

    Family and Friends

    Why it matters for halal founders: Your family and community often share your values, making them natural supporters who understand your Shariah commitments. However, mixing personal relationships with business requires open communication with clear agreements.

    Pros:
    ✅ Often more flexible terms than formal investors
    ✅ Values-aligned supporters who understand your mission
    ✅ Can be structured simply and quickly
    ✅ Builds community ownership

    Cons:
    ❌ Can strain relationships if business struggles
    ❌ May lack strategic guidance professional investors provide
    ❌ Limited funding amounts
    ❌ Potential mismatch of expectations

    Shariah note: Structure using Mudarabah (profit-sharing) or Musharakah (partnership). Put everything in writing, the investment amount, ownership percentage or profit-sharing ratio, decision-making rights, and exit provisions. Avoid “loans with expected returns” as this can slip into riba territory.

    D. Angel Investors

    High-net-worth individuals who invest their personal wealth in early-stage startups in exchange for equity, often bringing hands-on mentorship.

    Angel Investors

    Why values alignment matters: The right angel investor brings more than capital. They bring support for your mission, relevant expertise, and networks. For halal startups, finding angels who understand your values means you can ensure no compromise on Shariah compliance.

    Pros:
    ✅ Mentorship and strategic valuebeyond money
    ✅ Faster decision-making than institutional VCs
    ✅ Often more flexible terms
    ✅ Personal investment means genuine commitment

    Cons:
    ❌ Limited capital compared to VC firms
    ❌ Individual angels have varying expertise levels
    ❌ Need to vet each angel for values alignment
    ❌ May lack institutional resources

    Shariah note: Structure as direct equity purchases. Avoid convertible notes with interest or debt instruments . Ask potential angels: Do you understand our halal commitment? Are you comfortable with our restrictions? How do you structure investments? 

    E. Venture Capital (VC)

    Professional investment firms managing funds, investing over all stages from Seed to late stage.

    Venture Capital (VC)

    HowIslamic finance can align with VC: Venture capital can be based on equity-based structures (no interest-based debt), embraces risk-sharing between investor and entrepreneur (Musharakah), and focuses on long-term partnership. When VCs invest in this way, they share your journey-profits when you succeed, losses when you don’t.

    Pros:
    ✅ Significant capital for aggressive scaling
    ✅ Strategic expertise and extensive networks
    ✅ Credibility for future fundraising
    ✅ Strategic and corporate support through board seats
    ✅ Equity partnership aligns with Shariah principles

    Cons:
    ❌ Significant equity dilution
    ❌ Board seats mean shared decision-making
    ❌ Pressure for rapid growth and defined exit timeline
    ❌ Complex term sheets requiring legal and shariah expertise
    ❌ Not all VCs understand or appreciate halal constraints

    Shariah note: The cleanest structure is a direct equity investment ie a Musharakah.  Any agreement that creates a debt relationship is a Shariah risk, as there can be no benefit given for debt. You will need legal and Shariah advice or support, to look into technical aspects of your agreement, especially for SAFE notes, liquidity preferences, capital guarantees, interest or coupons, or other terms related to preference shares, and maintain control over Shariah compliance. Avoid VCs who don’t respect your halal boundaries or have portfolios heavily in haram industries. Have term sheets reviewed by advisors knowledgeable in both venture law and Islamic finance.

    HASAN.VC: As a halal VC fund, we back startups who comply with Halal principles. Our portfolio proves you don’t sacrifice ethics for scale. 

    Step 3: Structure Your Funding in a Halal Way

    In Islamic finance, how you raise money matters as much as why. Avoid debt and ensure that financial relationships are based on fairness, shared risk, and real value. 

    Structure Your Funding in a Halal Way

    Common Shariah-compliant structures include:

    Mudarabah (Profit-Sharing Partnership)

    The investor provides capital and the entrepreneur provides expertise. Profits are shared according to an agreed ratio. Losses are borne by the investor unless negligence occurs.

    Musharakah (Joint Venture Partnership)

    Both parties contribute capital and share profits and losses proportionally. This suits long-term or co-investment arrangements.

    Murabaha (Cost-Plus Sale)

    Used for purchasing assets or inventory, sometimes structured to be short-term. Investors buy the item and sell it to you at a marked-up price, payable over time. Not many global options are available for such financing, although some countries have crowd-investing or P2P lending platforms that serve startups.

    Wakalah (Agency Agreement)

    You act as an agent managing investor funds for a specific purpose.

    These structures are technical, and require professional advice. At HASAN.VC we work with our Shariah advisory firm Adl Advisory to design deals that are fair to founders and investors while maintaining Shariah-compliance.

    Step 4: Prepare a Clear and Honest Pitch

    Your pitch deck is the key document that tells investors who you are, what you are building, and why they should support you.

    Prepare a Clear and Honest Pitch

    A strong and halal-aligned pitch includes:

    • Mission and Values
      Show that your startup is purposeful and aligned with Islamic ethics.
    • Problem and Solution
      Explain the challenge you are solving and how your product addresses it better than others.
    • Market Opportunity
      Demonstrate the market size and your understanding of your audience.
    • Business Model
      Explain how you make money in a halal and transparent way.
    • Traction and Validation
      Highlight customers, partnerships, and early revenue.
    • Team
      Show who is behind the startup and why investors can trust them.
    • Financial Projections and Funding Needs
      State how much you need, how you will use it, and what investors receive in return.

    Integrity always sells. Being honest about your challenges builds far more confidence than exaggerating your numbers. Our five weeks Accelerator program equips founders with mentors who help them build a compelling pitch deck for their fundraising journey.

    Step 5: Find the Right Investors

    Not every investor will understand your halal approach, and that is fine. Your goal is to find those who appreciate your values.

    Find the Right Investors

    Start by exploring networks focused on ethical, faith-based, or impact investing:

    • Islamic venture funds  like us at HASAN.VC
    • Family offices
    • Angel networks and groups
    • Islamic crowdfunding and fintech platforms
    • Development or CSR funds and competitions supporting the halal economy and social impact

    Be transparent about your Shariah principles. Many non-Muslim investors appreciate ethical frameworks, especially when they reduce risk and promote long-term sustainability.

    Step 6: Negotiate Fair and Transparent Terms

    When investors show interest, the next step is agreeing on terms. Shariah compliance must be maintained carefully.

    Negotiate Fair and Transparent Terms

    Avoid terms that:

    • Guarantee capital, fixed returns or interest
    • Transfer risks unfairly to one party
    • Create ambiguity about ownership or profit distribution

    Focus on clarity, shared accountability, and fairness.

    If needed, seek legal and Shariah guidance from halal-compliant service providers like those listed in the HASAN.VC Verified Services Marketplace.

    Step 7: Build Relationships, Not Just Transactions

    Fundraising does not end when the money arrives. Investors become part of your long-term success.

    Build Relationships, Not Just Transactions

    Provide transparent updates, communicate challenges honestly, and ask for advice.
    Relationships are often more valuable than capital itself.

    If you want to join a supportive ecosystem, you can apply to HASAN.VC’s accelerator or venture studio programs as a startup when applications open.

    Step 8: Stay True to Your Values as You Grow

    Growth brings new opportunities, but also new temptations. As your business scales, staying halal becomes even more important.

    Stay True to Your Values as You Grow

    Develop governance systems that ensure ongoing Shariah compliance, such as:

    • Ethical procurement policies
    • Avoiding interest-based financing
    • Regular Shariah audits or review
    • Structured ethical operations

    Your values are part of your brand. In a world where transparency is increasingly demanded, being authentically halal is a unique strength. Beyond compliance, uphold high levels of accountability and excellence, and spread a culture and mission that creates huge value and brings great benefit to society.

    Final Thoughts: Raising Capital the Right Way

    Raising funds for a halal startup is not about limiting your options. It is about redefining the path to success. World-class businesses can be built without compromising your beliefs.

    Final Thoughts: Raising Capital the Right Way

    When you build ethically, structure transparently, and partner wisely, you attract investors who share your vision and elevate your impact.

    At HASAN.VC, we see it often. Founders who remain true to their principles build not only sustainable companies, but also movements that inspire trust across borders.

    Halal entrepreneurship is not just business. It is barakah in motion, where faith, purpose, and innovation come together to create real value for the world.

    [contact-form-7]

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    Impact Investors Propelling Growth in the $7.7 Trillion Halal Economy https://hasan.vc/impact-investors-propelling-growth-in-the-7-7-trillion-halal-economy/ https://hasan.vc/impact-investors-propelling-growth-in-the-7-7-trillion-halal-economy/#respond Thu, 18 Dec 2025 16:49:12 +0000 https://hasan.vc/?p=15241 The concept of halal has transformed dramatically over the past few years. What once simply referred to permissible food choices for Muslims has blossomed into a comprehensive global ecosystem that touches ethics, lifestyle choices, financial systems, and international commerce. As projections indicate the worldwide halal economy will surge to US$7.7 trillion by 2025, a new […]

    The post Impact Investors Propelling Growth in the $7.7 Trillion Halal Economy appeared first on HASAN.VC.

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    The concept of halal has transformed dramatically over the past few years. What once simply referred to permissible food choices for Muslims has blossomed into a comprehensive global ecosystem that touches ethics, lifestyle choices, financial systems, and international commerce. As projections indicate the worldwide halal economy will surge to US$7.7 trillion by 2025, a new wave of impact investors recognizes this space as more than just a business prospect. They see it as a pathway for meaningful, purpose-led economic development.

    This article explores why and how impact investors are entering the halal economy, and how VC firms like HASAN.VC serve as essential connectors between faith-rooted principles and worldwide scalability.

    Understanding the Halal Market’s Magnitude

    Research from YCP Solidiance reveals that the comprehensive halal industry market is expected to expand from approximately US $5.7 trillion in 2021 to an impressive US $7.7 trillion by 2025. This remarkable ecosystem extends well beyond the food sector, encompassing Islamic financial services, halal-certified consumer products, modest fashion lines, halal tourism experiences, pharmaceutical products, cosmetics, media platforms, and various lifestyle services.

    Multiple factors are driving this exceptional growth trajectory. The global Muslim population exceeds 2 billion people, which is ¼ of the world, with a predominantly young demographic profile. Rising middle-class incomes throughout Muslim-majority nations, enhanced halal certification systems and regulatory frameworks, plus growing worldwide appreciation of ethical and consumption and business all contribute to this expansion.

    The Natural Alignment Between Impact Investing and Halal Economics

    Impact investors actively pursue both financial returns and quantifiable social, ethical, or environmental benefits. The halal economy represents the perfect convergence of purpose and profit for these investors.

    Ethics in Operations: Islamic business principles avoid interest-based transactions (riba), prohibit involvement in harmful sectors such as alcohol production and gambling operations, and requires transparency while rejecting excessive uncertainty (gharar). These core values align naturally with ethical investment frameworks.

    Measurable Social Impact: Investments in halal marketplaces, inclusive fintech solutions serving underbanked Muslim communities, traceable supply chain technologies, or ethical fashion brands deliver concrete, measurable benefits through increased access, greater inclusion, and enhanced fairness in commerce.

    Substantial Untapped Market Potential: A multi-trillion dollar opportunity means impact investors can participate in substantial, large-scale economic growth.

    Universal Relevance: Although the halal economy centers on Muslim consumer requirements, its appeal extends beyond Muslim markets. Halal standards frequently intersect with broader ethical, clean, and sustainable product categories, attracting diverse consumer bases.

    Priority Investment Areas Within the Halal Sector

    Several compelling themes emerge for impact-focused investment within the halal economy:

    Halal Finance and Fintech (Financial Technology): Islamic finance assets continue experiencing robust growth, with rising worldwide demand for Halal financial instruments. Fintech innovations play a pivotal role here, including digital platforms for halal investing, Islamic microfinance solutions, and Shariah-compliant crowdfunding platforms.

    Supply Chain Integrity and Traceability: Particularly within food, cosmetics, and pharmaceutical sectors, maintaining complete “halal integrity” throughout the entire process from sourcing through manufacturing, certification, and distribution proves critical. Advanced technologies like blockchain and IoT increasingly facilitate this transparency.

    Halal Consumer Products and Lifestyle Offerings: Modest fashion, halal wellness products, and tourism experiences all present substantial growth opportunities aligned with demographic trends and value systems.

    Huge Emerging Markets: Southeast Asian nations (Malaysia, Indonesia), the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, Turkiye and Central Asia represent growth hotspots for halal economy investments. These regions typically possess established regulatory frameworks, recognized certification bodies, and risingmarket readiness.

    Navigating Challenges Through Strategic Impact Investment

    Like any significant market, certain obstacles exist. Impact investors who comprehend these challenges gain competitive advantages:

    Inconsistent Certification Standards: The global halal certification landscape is not unified. Varying standards across regions can create market confusion for investors and consumers.

    Balancing Growth with Values: Scaling operations while preserving faith-based and ethical integrity presents ongoing challenges. Investors equipped with robust governance frameworks make substantial differences.

    Identifying Quality Investment Opportunities: Despite the expansive market size, locating early-stage companies with exceptional teams, scalable business models, solid governance structures, and clear impact metrics requires specialized insight and networks.

    Consequently, impact investors benefit tremendously from partnering with funds or networks possessing deep understanding of both the values dimension and commercial scaling.

    HASAN.VC: Bridging Faith and Financial Growth

    This is precisely where HASAN.VC fulfills a crucial role. Based in Malaysia and Singapore with a Muslim-founded leadership team, HASAN.VC operates at the intersection of faith-driven purpose and global investment standards.: Our Angel Group invests in our VC Fund, which then makes investments in early-stage Camel startups.

    Camel Startups? Read our Camel Manifesto.

    Dedicated Halal Commerce Focus: HASAN.VC actively identifies and supports startups operating in halal consumer goods, traceability platforms, marketplaces, and digital ecosystems serving the broader halal economy. 

    Strategic Regional Positioning: With Southeast Asia and Asia as core geographic focuses, HASAN.VC taps directly into substantial Muslim populations and emerging innovation hubs where the halal economy thrives.

    Values-Aligned Governance: HASAN.VC integrates Shariah-aligned ethics throughout its entire investment process. We work hard and take seriously compliance and strive to make enduring and meaningful impact. The fund exemplifies the difference between halal investing and conventional venture capital.

    Scalable Global Perspective: While firmly rooted in regional markets, HASAN.VC maintains orientation toward global growth-stage potential, strategically leveraging the US$7.7 trillion worldwide market opportunity.

    Bridge for Impact Investors: For impact investors seeking authentic, integrity-based exposure to the emerging world , HASAN.VC offers credible, locally-grounded market access to the top early stage startups, combining cultural authenticity with professional investment discipline.

    HASAN.VC  is the essential bridge connecting values-based investing with huge and impactful investment in 50 startups. . Through its angel investor community, HASAN.VC brings together professionals passionate about ethical investments.

    Practical Action Steps for Impact Investors

    If you’re an impact investor or fund advisor evaluating this space, consider these concrete steps:

    Clarify Your Values-Investment Alignment: Determine which specific impact objectives (financial inclusion, ethical operations, technological innovation) correspond with halal-ecosystem investment themes. Understanding venture capital vs angel investing helps clarify your approach.

    Select Focused Verticals: Concentrate on one or two high-potential verticals (for example, halal fintech, traceability technology, modest fashion) rather than attempting broad, unfocused diversification across the entire halal economy.

    Partner with Signal-Rich Networks: Whether through established funds like HASAN.VC or founder networks throughout Southeast Asia and MENA, collaborate with players who genuinely understand halal values alongside startup scaling mechanics.

    Implement Dual-Metric Measurement: Monitor both commercial performance indicators (growth rates, revenue generation) and values-based metrics (ethical sourcing practices, certification integrity, social inclusion outcomes).

    Commit to Long-Term Vision: The halal economy offers massive scale but continues evolving. Policies, certification systems, and consumer expectations shift over time. Long-term commitments deliver the strongest results.

    For those seeking halal investment opportunities, exploring platforms specifically designed for this purpose proves invaluable.

    Final Perspective

    The projected US$7.7 trillion magnitude of the global halal economy presents a compelling proposition for any investor pursuing both scale and meaningful impact. However, the genuine potential extends beyond mere market size to encompass how we steward this opportunity with ethics, inclusivity, and strategic vision.

    Impact investors who enter this ecosystem with authenticity, professional discipline, and appropriate partners discover a remarkable convergence of purpose and profit. Platforms like HASAN.VC precisely deliver this alignment, being rooted in Muslim values, actively operating in high-growth regions, and calibrated for global outcomes.

    As the halal economy advances into its next expansion phase, the critical question shifts from whether you will invest to how you can invest with complete integrity, meaningful reach, and measurable impact. For those committed to earning and investing through halal methods, this represents an unprecedented opportunity to align financial goals with faith-based values.

    Join the HASAN.VC community today and become part of a global network of over 400+ angel investors committed to circulating good in this world and the next through ethical, Shariah-compliant investments in innovative startups.

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    What Is Halal Venture Capital? The Future of Ethical Investing in Muslim Markets https://hasan.vc/what-is-halal-venture-capital-the-future-of-ethical-investing-in-muslim-markets/ https://hasan.vc/what-is-halal-venture-capital-the-future-of-ethical-investing-in-muslim-markets/#respond Fri, 12 Dec 2025 03:12:32 +0000 https://hasan.vc/?p=15108 When you read about venture capital, you often hear of fast growth, big risks, and the pursuit of outsized returns. But what if you could combine those ambitions with values rooted in justice, ethics, and faith? That’s where Halal Venture Capital comes in. In this article, we dive intoHalal VC, an emerging area in Islamic […]

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    When you read about venture capital, you often hear of fast growth, big risks, and the pursuit of outsized returns. But what if you could combine those ambitions with values rooted in justice, ethics, and faith? That’s where Halal Venture Capital comes in.

    In this article, we dive intoHalal VC, an emerging area in Islamic finance and a highly impactful form of Shariah-compliant investing. Halal VC has fast become relevant for practicing Muslims and the broader ethical economy movement, and what the digital AI future holds.

    What “Halal VC” Means

    Halal literally means “permissible” under Islamic law or the Shariah, which is derived from the holy Quran and Hadith.. In financial terms, Halal venture capital refers to investing in startups in ways that do not violate key Islamic finance principles. These include:

    Halal VC Means
    • No interest (riba): Investments should not have any lending with interest.
    • Excessive uncertainty or speculation (gharar): business models or contracts should avoid high ambiguity or gambling-like dynamics.
    • Avoiding haram industries: underlying business in sectors involved with alcohol, gambling, conventional financial services (due to interest), tobacco, weapons, or anything clearly prohibited under Shariah.
    • Profit-and-loss sharing: Participation-based partnership models ( mudarabah, musharakah) are preferred over debt-based ones.
    • Ethical operations include honesty, transparency, fairness, stewardship, social welfare, not causing harm to people or the environment, and treating workers fairly.

    Halal VC is more than a filter; it’s a holistic approach. It’s an ethical paradigm. It involves choosing how to invest, who to invest in, and how the contracts are structured so that the returns are acceptable under faith and ethics, not just profits.

    How It Differs from Conventional Venture Capital

    How It Differs from Conventional Venture Capital

    Here are some key contrasts between conventional VC and Halal VC:

    FeatureConventional VCHalal VC
    Funding structureMay involve debt, convertible notes, interest-bearing instruments, etc.Prefers equity, profit-sharing, contracts structured without interest; avoids or carefully handles any financing that could conflict with Shariah rules.
    Types of businessAny business with high growth potential, regardless of industry, so long as legal/market allowedExcludes haram sectors which are disallowed to protect society and uphold morals and dignity
    Risk sharing / capital guaranteeSome investors expect downside protection; liquidation preferences, convertible notes with caps; preference shares etc.These can be problematic if they mimic interest or guarantee returns or capital.
    Purpose beyond profitScalability and valuations are priority, and these are functions of the profit motiveProfit is important, but also considerations of social good, ethical impact, justice, community benefit; seeking “barakah” (blessing) in business and serving our users.

    Why Halal VC Is More Important Now

    The desire to invest is driven by high inflation and better education. At the same time, public stock trading has seen a decline in demand and sentiment due to the perception that it is manipulated (See Oxford Study: Retail investors are amateurs in a high-stakes market: they cannot win) and due to the involvement of Bigtechs in various issues and scandals.

    Why Halal VC Is More Important Now

    Additionally, several forces are pushing growth in the VC and startup space. There is a rising demand for ethical, sustainable, faith-aligned investing in Muslim-majority economies and globally. Here are some of the drivers and recent data:

    • Growth of Islamic finance globally: The global Islamic finance market had about US$4 trillion in assets in 2024, expected to exceed US$7.7 trillion by 2033.
    • Shariah-compliant investment products are multiplying: fintech apps and platforms, Web3 apps, alternative finance, real estate, , sukuk, takaful, and ethical funds are expanding. 
    • Startup and VC activity in Muslim markets is rising in some places, although unevenly:
    • In MENA, total startup investment dropped about 42% in 2024 compared to 2023, but the number of deals remained stable and equity-based deals (excluding debt) dropped less sharply. Finance Middle East
    • UAE regained its lead in 2024 with about US$1.1 billion invested across ~207 deals. Saudi Arabia followed with US$700 million in ~186 deals. Egypt raised US$334 million across 84 deals.
    • Türkiye’s startup investment volume surged about fivefold in 2024 to US$2.6 billion, up from around US$500 million in 2023. Fintech, biotech, and AI were among the leading sectors. muslimnetwork.tv
    • Ethical & impact investing is trending globally, especially after COVID, climate pressures and rising inequality. Investors are more aware that financial returns aren’t the only measure; environment, social governance (ESG) factors, halal and ethical alignment are equally or even more important for many. 
    • The Islamic digital economy observed strong activity among startups in 2024-2025: hundreds of deals and investments, mostly in the early stages. Sectors like halal e-commerce, Islamic fintech, edtech, healthtech and AI-driven halal products are getting funded.

    These trends show an upward trajectory for both supply and demand as more entrepreneurs build startups that meet ethical or Halal criteria, and more investors looking for such opportunities.

    Examples

    Here are some examples that illustrate Halal VC and Muslim countries:

    Takadao
    • Takadao: A Halal Singapore-Saudi fintech that is building Web3 community-owned alternatives to traditional finance. The startup recently secured US$1.5 million in seed funding from HASAN.VC and investors from France, the UK, Japan, Saudi Arabia, and the US, bringing its total funding to US$3.1 million. With products like The LifeDAO and the newly launched LifeCard bridging stablecoin wealth with real-world spending, Takadao demonstrates how ethically aligned, halal-first innovation continues to attract international capital and validate the global demand for “Muslim-friendly” and halal financial solutions.
    • Saudi Arabia: In April 2025, Saudi startups raised US$158.5 million across eight deals, more than two-thirds of all startup funding in MENA that month. The strong performance signals investor confidence in Saudi’s startup ecosystem.

    How Halal VC Supports Social & Economic Value

    Halal VC isn’t just about avoiding what’s wrong, but about proactively doing good. Here’s how:

    How Halal VC Supports Social & Economic Value
    1. Community & social impact built in: Startups that serve Muslim consumers often tackle real needs—halal food supply chains, faith-tech, education, community services, ethical lifestyle platforms, etc. These tend to have built-in positive social externalities.
    2. Encouraging fairness and equity: Because of the profit-loss sharing model, there is often more alignment between founders and investors (less “debt burden”). Also, ethical constraints push toward transparency in operations.
    3. Financial inclusion: In many Muslim countries large parts of the population are underserved by conventional banking/finance due to lack of Shariah-compliant options. Halal VC, halal fintech, sukuk, etc., can help bring access to capital and financial services in ways people feel comfortable with.
    4. Sustainable/ethical business models: Given the constraints (avoidance of harmful industries, risk of wrongdoing etc.), many halal-aligned businesses tend to factor in environmental, social governance (ESG) type concerns more naturally.
    5. Building trustworthy brand & consumer loyalty: In Muslim markets, products and services perceived as halal and ethically sound can win consumer trust and loyalty in a way that purely profit-driven products may not. That can translate into durable long-term businesses.

    Challenges & What Needs Careful Attention

    It’s not all smooth sailing. These are some of the challenges the Halal VC space faces:

    Challenges & What Needs Careful Attention
    • Clarity & standardization of Shariah compliance: Different scholars / advisory boards may interpret rules differently. What’s “acceptable debt level,” or what’s “haram business involvement indirectly” can vary. Investors and startups need clear, trusted certification or advisory mechanisms. For example, the popular SAFE note used for early-stage investing has potential Shariah issues due to its debt-like nature.
    • Returns vs constraints trade-off: Because certain business models, industries, or instruments are off limits, the investment universe is narrower. That can limit diversification in those acceptable sectors.
    • Product structures & legal nuance: Some conventional VC terms (convertible notes, preference shares, liquidation preferences, guaranteed minimum returns) may conflict with Shariah principles. Structuring deals that satisfy both investor expectations and religious/ethical constraints requires creativity, legal work, and sometimes compromise.
    • Regulatory & tax environments: In many Muslim majority countries, the legal and regulatory frameworks for Islamic finance may be more mature for banking and sukuk and less so for VC / startup funding. There may be tax disadvantages, foreign investment restrictions, or legal uncertainties. In some countries, there may be tax benefits.
    • Awareness & capacity: Founders may not always understand what makes an investment Halal; investors outside the community may not fully appreciate or demand the specific structures. Talent and capital for halal-aligned startups can be harder to access if the ecosystem is underdeveloped.

    The Future of Halal VC: Opportunities & Why Global Investors Are Paying Attention

    So where is this going? And why should global investors (not just those in Muslim markets) be watching this space?

    Opportunities & Why Global Investors Are Paying Attention
    1. Growing markets + population dynamics
      The Muslim population is large and young. Consumer demand in Muslim-majority countries (in Southeast Asia, South Asia, the Middle East, and Africa) is expanding quickly. As incomes rise, more people seek products and services that align with both modernity and their faith/values.
    2. Ethical finance is becoming mainstream.
      ESG, impact investing, ethical finance, etc., are no longer fringe ideas. Institutional investors, sovereign wealth funds, and pension funds in the West are increasingly incorporating values, sustainability, and impact. Halal VC fits into that paradigm neatly.
    3. Innovation & fintech to unlock new models
      Technology (fintech, blockchain, digital platforms) can lower costs, improve transparency, allow for new deal structures that align with Shariah. Tools for screening, for certification, for profit-sharing contracts over smart contracts etc.
    4. Cross-border investment potential
      Investors in non-Muslim majority countries are interested in halal or ethical funds, both for faith-based investors and for general ethical/inclusion appeals. That means capital flows from outside the Muslim world into halal-aligned startups will likely increase.
    5. Regulations & institutional support catching up
      Governments in several countries are pushing to strengthen their Islamic finance sectors, harmonise standards, and provide incentives. This helps reduce friction for Halal VC.

    Conclusion: Where We Might Be Headed

    Where We Might Be Headed

    Halal VC stands at an intersection of faith, ethics, and growth. As more entrepreneurs build startups that not only aim to scale fast but also to do good both for their communities and for the planet Halal VC offers a framework for investing that feels more aligned, more responsible, and with its own kind of long-term value.

    Global investors are waking up to the opportunity: there is demand, there is value, and there is increasing clarity on how to do it properly. For Halal VC to thrive, though, the ecosystem needs stronger standards, better deal structures, more awareness, and legal/regulatory support.

    If you’re an entrepreneur, investor, or simply someone who cares about values in finance, this moment is exciting. Halal VC isn’t just a niche for Muslims, it’s part of the future of ethical capitalism itself.

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    HASAN.VC Backs Takadao’s US$3.1M Raise, Launch of LifeCard in Ethical Web3 Finance https://hasan.vc/hasan-vc-backs-takadaos-us3-1m-raise-launch-of-lifecard-in-ethical-web3-finance/ https://hasan.vc/hasan-vc-backs-takadaos-us3-1m-raise-launch-of-lifecard-in-ethical-web3-finance/#respond Mon, 08 Dec 2025 05:40:39 +0000 https://hasan.vc/?p=15086 HASAN.VC, Southeast Asia’s ethics-driven venture capital fund, has joined a globally diverse group of investors backing Takadao, the Riyadh and Singapore-based Web3 platform pioneering community-owned financial alternatives. With this round, Takadao has raised US$3.1 million in total funding, reinforcing its position as a global leader in ethical, community-governed fintech. The funding coincides with the launch […]

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    HASAN.VC, Southeast Asia’s ethics-driven venture capital fund, has joined a globally diverse group of investors backing Takadao, the Riyadh and Singapore-based Web3 platform pioneering community-owned financial alternatives. With this round, Takadao has raised US$3.1 million in total funding, reinforcing its position as a global leader in ethical, community-governed fintech.

    The funding coincides with the launch of The LifeCard, Takadao’s prepaid VISA card that enables members to spend stablecoins like cash anywhere VISA is accepted. More than a payments tool, LifeCard is integrated into the wider LifeDAO ecosystem, which includes life protection, non-custodial investment pools, DeFi wallets, and a financial literacy hub, all governed collectively by its community.

    For HASAN.VC, Takadao represents the emerging class of “camel startups”: resilient, mission-driven ventures building long-term, values-aligned economic infrastructure.

    “Takadao is reshaping what ethical fintech can look like in the Web3 era,” said Umar Munshi, General Partner at HASAN.VC. “Their model aligns perfectly with our commitment to empower founders who build with integrity, transparency, and impact. Supporting Takadao means supporting a future where communities own their financial tools.”

    Mohd Akhtaar, General Partner and Principal of Accelerator at HASAN.VC, added:

    “What excites us about Takadao is its practical vision: connecting Web3 innovation with real everyday use. The LifeCard creates a direct bridge between digital assets and daily life, something millions of users across Southeast Asia and the global Muslim community are eager for.”

    Takadao’s expansion spans two of the world’s fastest-growing ethical finance markets: the GCC and Southeast Asia. HASAN.VC’s investment reinforces a powerful narrative: Muslim founders are building globally, and values-driven capital can accelerate their journey.

    “Partnering with HASAN.VC gives us a direct link to Southeast Asia,” shared Morrad Irsane, CEO and co-founder of Takadao. “Their community, track record, and values-driven approach make them an ideal partner as we scale The LifeDAO and LifeCard to millions of users.”

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    Saudi Sharia Fintech Startup Takadao Secures US$3.1 Million Investment for MENA–Southeast Asia Expansion https://hasan.vc/saudi-sharia-fintech-startup-takadao-secures-us3-1-million-investment-for-mena-southeast-asia-expansion/ https://hasan.vc/saudi-sharia-fintech-startup-takadao-secures-us3-1-million-investment-for-mena-southeast-asia-expansion/#respond Sun, 07 Dec 2025 03:10:33 +0000 https://hasan.vc/?p=15139 Kuala Lumpur, MINA – Takadao, a Web3 platform headquartered in Riyadh and Singapore, has officially secured new investment backing from HASAN.VC, an ethical venture capital fund based in Southeast Asia. With its latest funding round totaling US$3.1 million, Takadao has strengthened its position as a pioneer in community-based alternative financial solutions and a global leader […]

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    Kuala Lumpur, MINA – Takadao, a Web3 platform headquartered in Riyadh and Singapore, has officially secured new investment backing from HASAN.VC, an ethical venture capital fund based in Southeast Asia.

    With its latest funding round totaling US$3.1 million, Takadao has strengthened its position as a pioneer in community-based alternative financial solutions and a global leader in ethical fintech innovation.

    The funding coincides with the launch of LifeCard, a prepaid VISA card that enables users to spend stablecoins like cash across the global VISA merchant network. The product is not merely a payment instrument, but also a gateway to the LifeDAO ecosystem, which offers high-level security, non-custodial services, and community-driven support for ethical financial transactions.

    HASAN.VC views Takadao as a representative of the new generation of camel startups- companies built for resilience and long-term, values-driven missions.

    “Takadao is redefining what ethical fintech looks like in the Web3 era,” said Umar Munshi, General Partner at HASAN.VC.

    According to him, Takadao’s model fully aligns with HASAN.VC’s focus on supporting founders who prioritize integrity, transparency, and positive impact.

    “Investing in Takadao means supporting a future where communities own and control their financial tools,” Umar said.

    Mohd Akhtaar, General Partner and Principal Accelerator at HASAN.VC, added that what excites them most is Takadao’s practical vision – bridging Web3 innovation with real-world daily use.

    “LifeCard creates a direct bridge between digital assets and everyday activities – something highly relevant for millions of users in Southeast Asia and the global Muslim community,” he said.

    Takadao’s expansion targets two of the fastest-growing regions in ethical finance: the GCC and Southeast Asia.

    According to HASAN.VC, this support strengthens a new narrative that Muslim founders are capable of building globally scaled companies with meaningful impact through community-based approaches.

    “Partnering with HASAN.VC gives us direct access to Southeast Asia,” said Morrad Irsane, CEO and co-founder of Takadao.

    “Their community, their track record, and their values-driven approach make them the ideal partner as we expand LifeDAO and LifeCard to millions of users worldwide,” he said.

    HASAN.VC is a venture fund focused on founders and on building a better future through investments in high-resilience, impact-driven camel startups.

    Through its funding programs, acceleration initiatives, and global network, HASAN.VC aims to democratize ethical investment by channeling capital to more than 40 technology startups across Southeast Asia and beyond. The fund is registered in Labuan and operates an accelerator office in Singapore.

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