Six recognized Sharia screening standards. 10,400+ TSX, NYSE, and NASDAQ tickers tracked. AI-powered insights from Quinn. Free tier.
Most existing halal stock-screening tools fall into one of two camps: app-only (you can only screen what they pre-curated) or opaque-methodology (you don't see why a ticker passed or failed). Quintarth was built to be the third option — every TSX, NYSE, and NASDAQ ticker, screened on demand, with full methodology transparency.
If you're a Canadian Muslim investor weighing a TSX-listed mining stock, or a US investor looking at a NASDAQ tech company, you should see the exact debt-to-market-cap ratio, the exact non-permissible-revenue percentage, and which of the six standards each result reflects. That's the bar Quintarth holds.
AAOIFI is the most widely-used. DJIM and MSCI Islamic show how a different methodology might rate the same company. We surface all six side by side.
10,400+ tickers across TSX, TSX-V, NYSE, NASDAQ. Live financials from EDGAR, SEDAR+, and yfinance. Quarterly recalculation as financials shift.
Debt ratio. AR ratio. Non-permissible revenue percentage. Cash + interest-bearing securities. Each threshold shown vs. the standard's limit.
Most halal screeners are built for Middle Eastern, Malaysian, or UK investors. Quintarth is built for Canadian and American Muslim investors specifically:
Free Explorer tier: 10 screens/day. Sharia screening included free in Alpha ($79/mo), Apex ($199/mo), Prime ($399/mo). Trader tier ($35/mo) has a $5/mo Sharia add-on. See full pricing.
Is halal investing the same as ESG? No. ESG is environmental, social, governance. Halal is Sharia-compliance — different framework, different criteria, sometimes overlapping outcomes (both exclude tobacco, for example).
Can I use one standard if my mosque uses another? Yes. Quintarth shows results across all six standards simultaneously so you can match your community's chosen methodology.
Does Quintarth give buy/sell advice? No. Quinn surfaces information; investment decisions are yours. Halal screening tells you whether a stock is permissible to consider — not whether it's a good investment.