Saʽid Qomi (Persian: سعید قمی; 1639–1691) was an Iranian Shia philosopher closely associated with the Qom School.
Qazi furthered his education in Isfahan, studying under eminent scholars such as Rajab Ali Tabrizi, Muhsen Feyz, and Abd al-Razzaq Lahiji.
Under the influence of his teacher Rajab Ali, he composed a Persian treatise, Kalid-i bihisht (The Key of Paradise), exploring the theory of the equivocalness of being.
His works emphasized innate annihilation, a concept aligned with Sufi thought, and he integrated mysticism with philosophy and sharia.
His works were full of expressions of pure mystical monotheism, and he considered deviations from this path, as he perceived in some of Sadra's ideas, as entailing shirk (associating partners with God) and disbelief.