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Inheritance & wills in Afghanistan

The Civil Code of Afghanistan 1977 (still in force in substance) codifies classical Sunni Hanafi faraid for the Sunni majority; Shia (mostly Hazara) follow Jaʿari faraid under the Shia Personal Status Law 2009. Tribal jirga adjudication remains common in rural areas.

Informational — not legal advice

Statutes change; statements here reflect publicly available references as of 2025. For specific drafting and probate, consult a qualified lawyer admitted in Afghanistanand a scholar familiar with your madhhab.

How inheritance works

The Civil Code of Afghanistan 1977 (still in force in substance) codifies classical Sunni Hanafi faraid for the Sunni majority; Shia (mostly Hazara) follow Jaʿari faraid under the Shia Personal Status Law 2009. Tribal jirga adjudication remains common in rural areas.

What makes a will valid

Written wasiyyah valid up to one-third of the estate, signed and witnessed by 2 trustworthy adult Muslim males (Civil Code Arts. 1992 ff.). Oral wasiyyah is recognised but harder to prove.

Registration & where to lodge

Optional registration at the Notary Public (Mahkama-i ʿAdli) or at the local Primary Court (Mahkama-i Ibtidai'i). Mosque-level imams often serve as informal custodians of family wills.

Witness rules

2 adult Muslim male witnesses, or 1 male + 2 female. Beneficiary witnesses void their own portion.

Zakat in Afghanistan

Collecting authority
Ministry of Hajj & Religious Affairs · Local mosque ʿulama councils
Tax relief
No formal income-tax deduction; voluntary individual giving distributed through mosques.
Maximum relief
N/A (no formal tax framework currently in force)
Notes
Zakat collection has historically been informal and mosque-led. The Ministry of Hajj publishes annual Nisab guidance in AFN. Significant remittance inflows from the diaspora are typically routed via the Da Afghanistan Bank or hawala networks.

Forced heirship & statutory overrides

Classical Sunni Hanafi faraid (or Jaʿari for Shia) — no civil-code override.

Probate / execution after death

Heirs apply to the Primary Court for a Certificate of Heirship (Wathiqa-i Hasr-i Wirathat). The court issues distribution orders to banks, registry offices and land courts.

Scholar notes

The Council of Ulama (Shora-i ʿUlama) issues binding fatwas on disputed cases. Hanafi muftis at Dar al-Ifta Kabul regularly publish answers on inheritance questions for the general public.

Common pitfalls

  • Rural jirga rulings may exclude women in contravention of the Civil Code — Quranic shares (daughter, wife, mother) must be specifically asserted.
  • Land title disputes after 1979 are common — verify any inherited land claim against the modern Land Authority (ARAZI) records.
  • Cross-border refugees: register a will in your country of residence in addition to any Afghan-side document.

Official authorities & registries

FAQ — Islamic will & inheritance in Afghanistan

  • Is Islamic inheritance (faraid) legally recognised in Afghanistan?

    The Civil Code of Afghanistan 1977 (still in force in substance) codifies classical Sunni Hanafi faraid for the Sunni majority; Shia (mostly Hazara) follow Jaʿari faraid under the Shia Personal Status Law 2009. Tribal jirga adjudication remains common in rural areas.

  • What makes an Islamic will (Wasiyyah) legally valid in Afghanistan?

    Written wasiyyah valid up to one-third of the estate, signed and witnessed by 2 trustworthy adult Muslim males (Civil Code Arts. 1992 ff.). Oral wasiyyah is recognised but harder to prove.

  • Where do I register my will in Afghanistan?

    Optional registration at the Notary Public (Mahkama-i ʿAdli) or at the local Primary Court (Mahkama-i Ibtidai'i). Mosque-level imams often serve as informal custodians of family wills.

  • Does Afghanistan have forced-heirship rules that override an Islamic will?

    Classical Sunni Hanafi faraid (or Jaʿari for Shia) — no civil-code override.

  • How does probate work in Afghanistan?

    Heirs apply to the Primary Court for a Certificate of Heirship (Wathiqa-i Hasr-i Wirathat). The court issues distribution orders to banks, registry offices and land courts.

  • How many witnesses do I need for a will in Afghanistan?

    2 adult Muslim male witnesses, or 1 male + 2 female. Beneficiary witnesses void their own portion.

  • What are the most common Islamic-will pitfalls in Afghanistan?

    Rural jirga rulings may exclude women in contravention of the Civil Code — Quranic shares (daughter, wife, mother) must be specifically asserted. Land title disputes after 1979 are common — verify any inherited land claim against the modern Land Authority (ARAZI) records. Cross-border refugees: register a will in your country of residence in addition to any Afghan-side document.

Ready to draft?

Apply this knowledge in the Wasiyyah writer or run the inheritance numbers.