This is an incomplete list of notable Muslims who live or lived in the United States.

Academia

thumb|[[Adil Najam during a talk at Deutsche Welle Building in Bonn, Germany on January 21, 2010]]

  • Asad Abidi – Professor of Electrical Engineering at the University of California, Los Angeles; member of the National Academy of Engineering
  • Amjad Masad – Founder and CEO of Replit
  • Gul Agha – Professor of Computer Science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  • Akbar S. Ahmed – US resident Pakistani anthropologist; the Ibn Khaldun Chair of Islamic Studies at American University; producer of the film Journey Into Europe, on Islam in Europe
  • Saleem H. Ali – environmental researcher and Associate Dean for Graduate studies at the University of Vermont's Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources; writer and contributor to publications such as the International Herald Tribune; has dual American and Pakistani citizenship
  • Talal Asad – Professor of Anthropology and Religious Studies at CUNY
  • Farooq Azam – Distinguished Professor at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UCSD; researcher in the field of marine microbiology
  • Ayesha Jalal – MacArthur Fellow and Richardson Professor of History at Tufts University
  • Mohammad Aslam Khan Khalil – Professor of Physics at Portland State University; a highly cited researcher in the field of atmospheric physics
  • Sadaf Jaffer – the first female Muslim American mayor, first female South Asian mayor, and first female Pakistani-American mayor in the United States, of Montgomery in Somerset County, New Jersey.
  • Hafeez Malik – Professor of Political Science at Villanova University, in Pennsylvania
  • Zia Mian – physicist
  • Adil Najam – Professor of Geography and International Relations and Director of the Pardee Center at Boston University; founding editor of popular blog Pakistaniat
  • S. Hamid Nawab, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Biomedical Engineering, Boston University; co-author of widely used textbook Signals and Systems (1997), published by Prentice Hall (Pearson); researcher in signal processing and machine perception with application to auditory, speech, and neuromuscular systems
  • Anwar Shaikh – Professor of Economics at the graduate faculty of The New School in New York City
  • Sara Suleri – Professor of English at Yale University
  • Abdul Jamil Tajik – researcher in clinical medicine
  • Muhammad Suhail Zubairy – Professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy; holder of the Munnerlyn-Heep Chair in Quantum Optics at the Texas A&M University

Activism and government

thumb|Former UN ambassador [[Zalmay Khalilzad with President George W. Bush at the White House]]

  • Huma Abedin – aide to United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton; served as traveling chief of staff during Clinton's campaign for the Democratic nomination in the 2008 presidential election
  • Saqib Ali – served as delegate to the Maryland House of Delegates, elected in 2006, represented the 39th District
  • Tahir Ali – first Pakistani American elected as a National delegate-at-large (R) from Massachusetts, 1992
  • Aisha al-Adawiya – American interfaith activist and founder of Women in Islam
  • Nihad Awad – National Executive Director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations
  • André Carson – Congressman from Indiana
  • Shamila N. Chaudhary – US government policy adviser
  • Nusrat Jahan Choudhury - civil rights lawyer and District Court judge for the Eastern District of New York. First Muslim woman to serve as a United States federal judge.
  • Robert D. Crane – former foreign policy advisor; author
  • Sada Cumber – first US envoy to the Organisation of the Islamic Conference
  • Hamida Dakane – first Black and first Muslim to serve in the North Dakota House of Representatives
  • Keith Ellison – first Muslim congressman from Minnesota
  • Louis Farrakhan – leader of the Nation of Islam
  • George Bethune English (1787–1828) – American adventurer, diplomat, soldier, and convert to Islam.
  • Ghazala Hashmi – Lieutenant Governor of Virginia and first Muslim woman elected to a statewide office in the United States
  • Ibrahim Hooper – National Communications Director for the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)
  • Mansoor Ijaz – hedge fund manager and venture capitalist involved in Pakistan–United States relations and peace efforts surrounding the Kashmir conflict
  • Arsalan Iftikhar – human rights lawyer, global media commentator, and author of the book Scapegoats: How Islamophobia Helps Our Enemies & Threatens Our Freedoms
  • Noor Al-Hussein – anti-nuclear weapons proliferation advocate and former Queen consort of Jordan
  • Hakim Jamal – civil rights activist; Member of the Nation of Islam but converted to traditional Islam after the assassination of his cousin Malcolm X.
  • Mustafa T. Kasubhai - first Muslim federal judge in the United States
  • Zalmay Khalilzad – former US Ambassador to the United Nations; former U.S. Ambassador to Iraq and Afghanistan
  • Yuri Kochiyama – Japanese American activist who converted to Sunni Islam from Protestantism in 1971
  • Edina Lekovic – Communications Director of the Muslim Public Affairs Council
  • Zohran Mamdani – first Muslim elected Mayor of New York City
  • Gholam Mujtaba – chair of the Pakistan Policy Institute, a think tank dedicated to improve the US-Pakistan relationship
  • Ilhan Omar – One of the first two Muslim women elected to Congress.
  • Farah Pandith – Special Representative to Muslim Communities for the US Department of State; official advisor to President Obama on Muslim matters
  • Zahid Quraishi – first Muslim Article III district court judge in the United States
  • Zainab Salbi – co-founder and president for Women for Women International
  • Betty Shabazz (also known as Betty X) – civil rights activist and educator; widow of Malcolm X
  • Ilyasah Shabazz – social activist and daughter of Malcolm X
  • Malcolm Shabazz – activist and grandson of Malcolm X; Murdered during a labor rights tour in Mexico
  • el-Hajj Malik el-Shabazz (also known as Malcolm X) – human rights activist, civil rights activist, public speaker and Black Muslim minister; Joined the Nation of Islam in 1952, before converting to Sunni Islam in 1964.
  • Azadeh Shahshahani – human rights attorney and past president of the National Lawyers Guild
  • Saghir "Saggy" Tahir – New Hampshire State Representative; the only elected Pakistani American in the Republican Party; re-elected in 2006 for a fourth term to represent Ward 2, District 9 in his home town of Manchester
  • Shirin R. Tahir-Kheli – White House appointee at various senior posts in the executive branch and the State department during five Republican administrations.
  • Rashida Tlaib – One of the first two Muslim women elected to Congress.
  • Elias Zerhouni – Director, National Institutes of Health

Armed forces

  • Kareem Rashad Sultan Khan – United States Army Soldier killed in Iraq
  • Humayun Khan – United States Army Soldier killed in Iraq

Foreign military service

  • Ma Dunjing – Chinese Muslim General of the National Revolutionary Army, immigrated to Los Angeles in the United States after retirement in 1950
  • Ma Hongkui – Chinese Muslim General of the National Revolutionary Army, immigrated to Los Angeles in the United States after retirement in 1950

Art

thumb|upright|Artist [[Shirin Neshat at the Viennale 2009]]

  • Kameelah Janan Rasheed — Artist based in New York City
  • Deana Haggag – Egyptian-American art museum curator, President and CEO of United States Artists in Chicago
  • Shirin Neshat – Iranian-American visual artist and film director. Awarded The Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize in 2006, and the Silver Lion in 2009
  • Shahzia Sikander – Pakistani-American artist and MacArthur Fellow
  • Minoosh Zomorodinia – Iranian-born American visual artist and curator

Business

thumb|Billionaire [[Chobani CEO, philanthropist and activist Hamdi Ulukaya]]

  • Javed Ahmed – former chief executive of Tate & Lyle, a FTSE 250 company and one of Britain's oldest brands
  • Michael Chowdry (1955–2001) – Forbes 400 businessman; founder of air cargo company Atlas Air, which in 2001 was worth over $1.39 billion
  • Mohamed El-Erian – chief economic adviser of Allianz, the parent company of PIMCO, where El-Erian was CEO and manager of over $1 trillion in global assets; president of Queens' College, Cambridge
  • Tariq Farid – founder and chief executive of Edible Arrangements
  • Nabeel Gareeb – president and chief executive of renewable energy company MEMC (now SunEdison) from 2002 to 2008; ranked 6th highest-earning U.S. CEO in 2008
  • Fred Hassan – chairman of investment company Caret Group, director of private equity firm Warburg Pincus, former chief executive of pharmaceutical companies including Schering-Plough from 2003 to 2009, when the company completed its merger with Merck & Co.
  • Mansoor Ijaz – founder and chairman of Crescent Investment Management, television commentator
  • Jawed Karim – co-founder of YouTube
  • Farooq Kathwari – chairman, president and chief executive of Ethan Allen
  • Shahid Khan – owner of sports teams the Jacksonville Jaguars and Fulham F.C., and autoparts maker Flex-N-Gate, lead investor in All Elite Wrestling
  • Safi Qureshey – co-founder and former CEO of AST Research, philanthropist received the UN Global Leadership Award and the Global Citizen Prize

Comedy

thumb|upright|Comedian [[Negin Farsad]]

  • Ahmed Ahmed – standup comedian, actor
  • Mohammed Amer – standup comedian
  • Dave Chappelle – standup comedian (converted in 1998)
  • Negin Farsad – comedian, actress, writer, filmmaker
  • Maz Jobrani – standup comedian, actor
  • Aasif Mandvi – comedian, actor
  • Hasan Minhaj – comedian, Daily Show correspondent
  • Preacher Moss – standup comedian, comedy writer
  • Maysoon Zayid – standup comedian, actress
  • Hesham Mohamed Hadayet – Egyptian-American who killed 2 people at the El Al counter at Los Angeles International Airport
  • Wadih el-Hage – al-Qaeda member serving life imprisonment in the US for his part in the 1998 United States embassy bombings
  • Mujahid Abdul Halim – Served 45 years in prison for taking part in the assassination of Malcolm X; Long-time member of the Nation of Islam but converted to traditional Islam while in prison.
  • Nidal Hasan – former soldier convicted of the 2009 Fort Hood shooting
  • Muzzammil Hassan – founder of Bridges TV, a Muslim television network; received sentence of 25 to life for killing his wife
  • Mir Aimal Kansi – Pakistani-American convicted and executed for the shootings at the Central Intelligence Agency headquarters
  • John Walker Lindh – member of the Taliban
  • John Allen Muhammad – executed beltway sniper
  • José Padilla – convicted of aiding terrorists and litigant before the United States Supreme Court in Rumsfeld v. Padilla
  • Dzhokhar Tsarnaev – Kyrgyzstani-American citizen who was convicted of planting bombs at the Boston Marathon on April 15, 2013, together with his brother Tamerlan Tsarnaev.
  • Bryant Neal Vinas – convicted of participating in and supporting al-Qaeda plots in Afghanistan and the U.S.

Film

thumb|upright|Actress [[Shohreh Aghdashloo]]

  • Nabil Abou-Harb – filmmaker; writer and director of Arab in America
  • Shohreh Aghdashloo – Academy Award-nominated Iranian-born actress
  • Moustapha Akkad – film director, producer
  • Mahershala Ali – Oscar-winning actor.
  • Lewis Arquette – film actor, writer, and producer
  • Sayed Badreya – actor, filmmaker
  • Saïd Taghmaoui – actor
  • Faran Tahir – actor

Modeling

thumb|upright|Supermodel [[Iman (model)|Iman]]

  • Halima Aden – Somali-American fashion model
  • Iman – supermodel and widow of David Bowie
  • Bella Hadid – fashion model and daughter of real-estate developer Mohamed Hadid and former model Yolanda Hadid

Music

thumb|upright|Rapper [[Ice Cube performing in 2006]]

  • Ahmad Jamal – jazz pianist
  • Ahmet Ertegün – Songwriter and founder of Atlantic Records
  • Akon – R&B and hip-hop artist
  • Ali Shaheed Muhammad – producer, DJ and rapper, formerly of A Tribe Called Quest; Sunni Muslim
  • Art Blakey – jazz drummer and bandleader
  • Beanie Sigel – rapper
  • Brother Ali – rapper; converted to Islam
  • Chali 2na – rapper, formerly of the alternative hip-hop group Jurassic 5, and of Ozomatli
  • DJ Khaled – rap artist and DJ
  • Everlast – rapper from the Irish-American hip-hop group House of Pain; converted to Islam
  • Freeway – rapper; Sunni Muslim
  • Ghostface Killah – rapper, member of the hip-hip group the Wu-Tang Clan
  • Ice Cube – rapper and producer
  • Jermaine Jackson – singer, bass guitarist
  • Kevin Gates – rapper
  • Lupe Fiasco – rapper; Sunni Muslim
  • MC Ren – rapper
  • Mona Haydar rapper; Sunni Muslim
  • Mos Def – rapper; initially joined the Nation of Islam before converting to Islam
  • Napoleon – former member of Tupac Shakur's rap group the Outlawz, now a motivational Muslim speaker
  • Native Deen – rap group
  • Q-Tip – rapper, formerly of A Tribe Called Quest; Sunni Muslim
  • Raekwon – rapper, member of the hip-hip group the Wu-Tang Clan
  • Rhymefest – Grammy Award-winning hip-hop artist; co-writer of the single "Jesus Walks"
  • Richard Thompson – British folk rock singer, Sufi Muslim since 1974
  • Scarface – rapper
  • Vinnie Paz – rapper in the hip-hop group Jedi Mind Tricks
  • Yusef Lateef – jazz musician and Grammy Award winner

Religion

thumb|The [[Islamic Center of America located in Dearborn, Michigan near Detroit is the largest mosque in the United States.]]

[[File:Muslim Americans by state.svg|thumb|<div style="text-align: center">

Estimated proportion of Muslim Americans in each U.S. state, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico as of the 2020 U.S. Religion Census</div>]]

thumb|upright|Muslim scholar [[Suhaib Webb]]

  • Abu Ammar Yasir Qadhi – Muslim Scholar.
  • Omar Suleiman – Muslim activist and Imam.
  • Dalia Mogahed – Muslim speaker and activist.
  • Yasmin Mogahed – Muslim speaker and activist.
  • Ismail al-Faruqi – Muslim philosopher and scholar
  • Jonathan A C Brown – Muslim lecturer and scholar.
  • Amina Wadud - Islamic scholar and activist
  • Suhaib Webb – Muslim lecturer and activist; Imam of the Islamic Society of Boston Cultural Center, the largest mosque in the New England area
  • Hamza Yusuf – Muslim scholar
  • Hassan Hathout – Muslim scholar
  • Hassan Al-Qazwini – Muslim scholar
  • Hisham Kabbani – Muslim sufi scholar and shaykh
  • Yusuf Estes – Muslim preacher
  • Souleiman Ghali – Founder of the Islamic Society of San Francisco
  • Sherman Jackson – Muslim scholar
  • Nouman Ali Khan – Muslim speaker and founder, CEO and lead instructor at Bayyinah, the Institute for Arabic and Qur'anic Studies.
  • Sadullah Khan – Muslim scholar
  • Ingrid Mattson – Muslim scholar
  • Warith Deen Mohammed – former leader of the largest Muslim organization, the American Society of Muslims (son of Nation of Islam leader)
  • Daniel Haqiqatjou - Muslim polemicist, debator, and Da'ee
  • Louay M. Safi – Muslim scholar
  • Zaid Shakir – Muslim scholar
  • Siraj Wahhaj – Muslim scholar
  • Omar Khalidi – Muslim scholar
  • Amir Hussain – Muslim scholar, editor of the Journal of the American Academy of Religion
  • Asifa Quraishi - Muslim legal scholar
  • Azizah al-Hibri - Muslim legal scholar
  • Laleh Bakhtiar - translator of the Quran

Science

  • Shereef Elnahal – commissioner, New Jersey Department of Health, transitioning to CEO of University Hospital, Newark in July 2019
  • Fazlur Khan – structural engineer (designed the Sears Tower, John Hancock Center)
  • Ayub K. Ommaya – neurosurgeon, inventor of the Ommaya reservoir
  • Ahmed Zewail – Nobel Prize winner in Chemistry, 1999 for his work on femtochemistry
  • Aziz Sancar – Nobel Prize winner in Chemistry, 2015 along with Tomas Lindahl and Paul L. Modrich for their mechanistic studies of DNA repair
  • Anousheh Ansari - engineer and first person of Iranian descent in space

Sports

Boxing

thumb|upright|Boxer [[Muhammad Ali in 1978]]

  • Muhammad Ali – became a member of the Nation of Islam in 1964, converted to Sunni Islam in 1975
  • Bernard Hopkins – former Middleweight and Light Heavyweight world champion
  • Eddie Mustafa Muhammad – former Light Heavyweight Champion
  • Matthew Saad Muhammad – former Light Heavyweight Champion
  • Dwight Muhammad Qawi – former Light Heavyweight and Cruiserweight Champion
  • Hasim Rahman – former Heavyweight champion
  • Mike Tyson – Undisputed Heavyweight Champion in 1987; converted in 1994 (influenced by preacher in prison)
  • Gervonta Davis – former Super Featherweight and Light Welterweight champion, Lightweight world champion as of January 2024, converted to Islam in 2023

Basketball

thumb|upright|NBA player [[Shaquille O'Neal]]

  • DeSagana Diop – Senegalese basketball player for the Charlotte Bobcats
  • Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – converted to Islam from Catholicism in 1968, initially joining the Nation of Islam before retaking the Shahada and converting to Sunni Islam that very summer
  • Enes Kanter – Turkish basketball player for the Portland Trail Blazers
  • Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf – former player for Denver Nuggets (converted in 1991, formerly Chris Jackson)
  • Shareef Abdur-Rahim – retired player, named NBA All-Star in 2001–02 season
  • Hassan Adams – drafted by and played for the New Jersey Nets, later the Cleveland Cavaliers, then KK Vojvodina (in Serbia).
  • Larry Johnson – retired player, played for the Charlotte Hornets and New York Knicks
  • Nazr Mohammed – player for the Charlotte Bobcats
  • Mehmet Okur – Turkish player of the Utah Jazz
  • Shaquille O'Neal – former player for the Los Angeles Lakers; rapper and actor
  • Hakeem Olajuwon – former player for the Houston Rockets
  • Rasheed Wallace – former player for the Detroit Pistons
  • Kyrie Irving - player for Brooklyn Nets

NFL

thumb|upright|NFL player turned sportscaster [[Ahmad Rashad]]

thumb|upright|NFL player [[Mohamed Sanu]]

  • Ameer Abdullah – running back, drafted by the Detroit Lions in 2015, currently with the Minnesota Vikings
  • Oday Aboushi – guard, drafted by the New York Jets in 2013, currently with the Detroit Lions.
  • Dominique Easley – linebacker, drafted by the New England Patriots in 2014, currently a free agent.
  • Mohamed Sanu – wide receiver, drafted by the Cincinnati Bengals in 2012, currently with the San Francisco 49ers
  • Muhammad Wilkerson – defensive end, drafted by the New York Jets in 2011, currently a free agent.
  • Hamza Abdullah – former safety for the Cleveland Browns
  • Husain Abdullah – former safety for the Minnesota Vikings
  • Az-Zahir Hakim – former wide receiver for the St. Louis Rams
  • Ryan Harris – former offensive tackle for the Pittsburgh Steelers.
  • Abdul Hodge – former linebacker for the Carolina Panthers
  • Josh Palmer – Wide receiver for the Los Angeles Chargers
  • Ahmad Rashad – former wide receiver for Minnesota Vikings, award-winning sportscaster (converted in 1972)
  • Ephraim Salaam – former offensive tackle for the Detroit Lions
  • Robert Saleh – Defensive coordinator for the San Francisco 49ers former Head Coach for the New York Jets.

Track and field

  • Khalid Khannouchi – marathon runner
  • Dalilah Muhammad - Olympic gold and silver medalist

Wrestling

  • Adeel Alam – Pakistani American, wrestler in WWE
  • Khosrow Vaziri – Retired Iranian American wrestler, former WWE Champion

Mixed martial arts

  • Muhammed Lawal – former Strikeforce Light Heavyweight World Champion
  • Kamaru Usman – current UFC Welterweight Champion

Television

thumb|upright|[[Mehmet Oz at the 2010 Time 100 Gala]]

  • Mara Brock Akil – screenwriter, producer
  • Usman Ally – actor
  • Ahmed Shihab-Eldin – reporter for national news channels
  • Zehra Fazal - actress and comedienne
  • Rizwan Manji – actor
  • Ayman Mohyeldin – reporter for national news channels
  • Isaiah Mustafa – actor
  • Mehmet Oz – medical doctor, talk show host
  • Kamran Pasha – screenwriter, producer
  • Tahera Rahman – Newscaster for WHBF-TV and KLJB. Widely covered by the media for being the first American hijabi Muslim newscaster.
  • Iqbal Theba – actor
  • Ali Velshi – Reporter and anchor for national U.S. news channels, from Canada
  • Ramy Youssef - Actor and comedian

Writing

thumb|upright|[[Fareed Zakaria, head of Newsweek International]]

  • Wael Abdelgawad – author
  • Saladin Ahmed – author
  • Reza Aslan – author, religious scholar
  • Mona Eltahawy – columnist
  • Yahiya Emerick – author
  • Hafsah Faizal – Author of youth literature, of Sri Lankan and Arab descent.
  • Khaled Hosseini – Novelist, physician
  • Suad Abdul Khabeer - author
  • Laila Lalami – author and essayist
  • Melody Moezzi – author and activist
  • Ayman Mohyeldin – Al-Jazeera English journalist
  • Etaf Rum - Novelist
  • Lulu Schwartz – journalist
  • Ambreen Tariq – American author, activist and founder of @BrownPeopleCamping
  • G. Willow Wilson - comics writer and author
  • Michael Wolfe – journalist
  • Fareed Zakaria – author, commentator, and host of CNN's Fareed Zakaria GPS

See also

  • Glossary of Islamic terms in Arabic
  • List of converts to Islam
  • List of Islamic and Muslim related topics
  • Lists of Muslims
  • Lists of people by belief
  • Taqwacore

References

;Bibliography