For Muslim citizens, the Federal Personal Status Law (Law No. 28/2005, amended) applies classical Sunni faraid. Since 2020 (Federal Decree-Law 5/2020 and 41/2022), non-Muslims and Muslim expats may opt for the law of their nationality via a registered will.
Statutes change; statements here reflect publicly available references as of 2025. For specific drafting and probate, consult a qualified lawyer admitted in United Arab Emiratesand a scholar familiar with your madhhab.
For Muslim citizens, the Federal Personal Status Law (Law No. 28/2005, amended) applies classical Sunni faraid. Since 2020 (Federal Decree-Law 5/2020 and 41/2022), non-Muslims and Muslim expats may opt for the law of their nationality via a registered will.
A Muslim resident’s wasiyyah is limited to one-third and must be in writing, signed and witnessed. Expat Muslims may register an Islamic will with the Sharia Court or — for non-Muslim distribution — with the DIFC Wills Service Centre or Abu Dhabi Civil Family Court Registry.
Three primary registries: (1) Dubai Sharia Court for Muslim wills, (2) DIFC Wills Service Centre (non-Muslims), (3) Abu Dhabi Judicial Department Civil Family Court Registry. Fees range AED 950 – AED 10,000 depending on registry.
Two adult witnesses are required at registration; the registrar performs verification of identity and capacity.
Only for Muslim nationals (faraid). Non-Muslims and expat Muslims registering at DIFC/ADJD may distribute freely.
Heirs apply to the relevant court for a Certificate of Inheritance. Bank and real-estate transfers follow that certificate.
AMJA and IFG both publish UAE-specific guidance for expats; expats are strongly advised to register both an Islamic will at the Sharia Court AND a DIFC/ADJD instrument for clean cross-border execution.
Is Islamic inheritance (faraid) legally recognised in United Arab Emirates?
For Muslim citizens, the Federal Personal Status Law (Law No. 28/2005, amended) applies classical Sunni faraid. Since 2020 (Federal Decree-Law 5/2020 and 41/2022), non-Muslims and Muslim expats may opt for the law of their nationality via a registered will.
What makes an Islamic will (Wasiyyah) legally valid in United Arab Emirates?
A Muslim resident’s wasiyyah is limited to one-third and must be in writing, signed and witnessed. Expat Muslims may register an Islamic will with the Sharia Court or — for non-Muslim distribution — with the DIFC Wills Service Centre or Abu Dhabi Civil Family Court Registry.
Where do I register my will in United Arab Emirates?
Three primary registries: (1) Dubai Sharia Court for Muslim wills, (2) DIFC Wills Service Centre (non-Muslims), (3) Abu Dhabi Judicial Department Civil Family Court Registry. Fees range AED 950 – AED 10,000 depending on registry.
Does United Arab Emirates have forced-heirship rules that override an Islamic will?
Only for Muslim nationals (faraid). Non-Muslims and expat Muslims registering at DIFC/ADJD may distribute freely.
How does probate work in United Arab Emirates?
Heirs apply to the relevant court for a Certificate of Inheritance. Bank and real-estate transfers follow that certificate.
How many witnesses do I need for a will in United Arab Emirates?
Two adult witnesses are required at registration; the registrar performs verification of identity and capacity.
What are the most common Islamic-will pitfalls in United Arab Emirates?
Joint bank accounts are frozen at death until probate — designate a co-signatory or use a registered will to expedite release. Real estate in Dubai freehold areas may require the DIFC route to avoid faraid-default distribution.
Apply this knowledge in the Wasiyyah writer or run the inheritance numbers.