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Inheritance & wills in China

Civil Code of the People’s Republic of China (2021, Book VI) is the sole legal framework. Sharia faraid has no formal recognition. Muslim minorities (Hui ~10.6M, Uyghur ~12M, Kazakh, Dongxiang, Salar) traditionally distribute estates through faraid within the family but the legal title transfer follows the Civil Code’s statutory rules.

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 Chinaand a scholar familiar with your madhhab.

How inheritance works

Civil Code of the People’s Republic of China (2021, Book VI) is the sole legal framework. Sharia faraid has no formal recognition. Muslim minorities (Hui ~10.6M, Uyghur ~12M, Kazakh, Dongxiang, Salar) traditionally distribute estates through faraid within the family but the legal title transfer follows the Civil Code’s statutory rules.

What makes a will valid

Notarised, holographic, attested, video-recorded, or oral (in emergencies) wills are all valid under Arts. 1134–1140. To approximate faraid, Muslims commonly use a notarised will distributing shares to named heirs in faraid proportions.

Registration & where to lodge

Notary Public Office (公证处 gōngzhèngchù) registers wills. The Will Registration Service of the China Aging Health Foundation maintains a national index.

Witness rules

Attested wills require 2 adult non-beneficiary witnesses (Civil Code Art. 1135). Notarial wills require no separate witnesses — the notary serves as the attesting officer.

Zakat in China

Collecting authority
China Islamic Association (中国伊斯兰教协会) · Provincial Imams’ Councils
Tax relief
No formal Zakat tax-deduction. Charitable donations to state-approved organisations under the Charity Law 2016 qualify for partial deduction (up to 30% of annual income).
Maximum relief
30% of annual income (general charity, not Zakat-specific)
Notes
Local imams administer Zakat collection at the mosque level. State oversight is heavy; consult provincial-level Imams’ Council for current Nisab and channels.

Forced heirship & statutory overrides

Civil Code Art. 1141 reserves a "necessary share" for incapacitated heirs lacking labour ability and source of income. No descendant-wide legitime, so faraid proportions are largely achievable via a clear will.

Probate / execution after death

Estate is settled by agreement among statutory heirs (Civil Code Art. 1132) or by court order via the People’s Court (人民法院) if disputed. Banks (ICBC, BoC, ABC) require notarised inheritance documents before releasing funds.

Scholar notes

The China Islamic Association coordinates fatwa guidance through its national Imams’ Council. Hui communities follow Hanafi; Uyghur and Kazakh communities also follow Hanafi via Central Asian tradition. Local State-approved imams provide community-level guidance on faraid.

Common pitfalls

  • Faraid has NO legal force on its own — register a notarial will explicitly listing every heir + share. Without that, the Civil Code’s default statutory shares apply (equal-share descendants).
  • Cross-border heirs (Hong Kong, Macau, overseas Chinese) trigger international private-law analysis — engage a specialist.
  • Xinjiang situation — religious-affairs regulation and minor-child custody are sensitive; consult an experienced local notary.

Official authorities & registries

FAQ — Islamic will & inheritance in China

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

    Civil Code of the People’s Republic of China (2021, Book VI) is the sole legal framework. Sharia faraid has no formal recognition. Muslim minorities (Hui ~10.6M, Uyghur ~12M, Kazakh, Dongxiang, Salar) traditionally distribute estates through faraid within the family but the legal title transfer follows the Civil Code’s statutory rules.

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

    Notarised, holographic, attested, video-recorded, or oral (in emergencies) wills are all valid under Arts. 1134–1140. To approximate faraid, Muslims commonly use a notarised will distributing shares to named heirs in faraid proportions.

  • Where do I register my will in China?

    Notary Public Office (公证处 gōngzhèngchù) registers wills. The Will Registration Service of the China Aging Health Foundation maintains a national index.

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

    Civil Code Art. 1141 reserves a "necessary share" for incapacitated heirs lacking labour ability and source of income. No descendant-wide legitime, so faraid proportions are largely achievable via a clear will.

  • How does probate work in China?

    Estate is settled by agreement among statutory heirs (Civil Code Art. 1132) or by court order via the People’s Court (人民法院) if disputed. Banks (ICBC, BoC, ABC) require notarised inheritance documents before releasing funds.

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

    Attested wills require 2 adult non-beneficiary witnesses (Civil Code Art. 1135). Notarial wills require no separate witnesses — the notary serves as the attesting officer.

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

    Faraid has NO legal force on its own — register a notarial will explicitly listing every heir + share. Without that, the Civil Code’s default statutory shares apply (equal-share descendants). Cross-border heirs (Hong Kong, Macau, overseas Chinese) trigger international private-law analysis — engage a specialist. Xinjiang situation — religious-affairs regulation and minor-child custody are sensitive; consult an experienced local notary.

Ready to draft?

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