The Succession Act 1965 governs Irish estates. Muslim community ~80,000 (largely Pakistani, Nigerian, Somali, Malaysian, Egyptian professionals concentrated in Dublin, Cork, Galway). Ireland has opted OUT of the EU Succession Regulation 650/2012, so Irish rules apply to any property situated in Ireland regardless of nationality.
Statutes change; statements here reflect publicly available references as of 2025. For specific drafting and probate, consult a qualified lawyer admitted in Irelandand a scholar familiar with your madhhab.
The Succession Act 1965 governs Irish estates. Muslim community ~80,000 (largely Pakistani, Nigerian, Somali, Malaysian, Egyptian professionals concentrated in Dublin, Cork, Galway). Ireland has opted OUT of the EU Succession Regulation 650/2012, so Irish rules apply to any property situated in Ireland regardless of nationality.
Written, signed by testator at the foot/end + witnessed by 2 adults present at the same time. Handwritten will valid if signed + witnessed. No mandatory notarisation.
No mandatory register. Optional lodgment at the Probate Office or with a solicitor. The Islamic Centre of Ireland offers free will-review consultations for Muslim residents.
2 witnesses present together with testator at signing. Witnesses cannot be beneficiaries or their spouses — doing so voids the gift to them (but not the will itself).
Section 111 of the 1965 Act: surviving spouse's legal right share is 1/2 of the estate if no children, 1/3 if children. Children have NO fixed share but may apply under Section 117 if the parent "failed in moral duty" — courts sometimes grant.
Executor applies for Grant of Probate at the Probate Office (part of the High Court). Estates under €25k may use a simplified process. Standard grant typically issued in 3–6 months.
ICCI Clonskeagh (Shaykh Dr. Ali Al-Saleh / European Council for Fatwa & Research) provides Ireland-specific will templates that comply with Section 111 while maximising the wasiyyah portion for scholarly-approved Muslim inheritance flow.
Is Islamic inheritance (faraid) legally recognised in Ireland?
The Succession Act 1965 governs Irish estates. Muslim community ~80,000 (largely Pakistani, Nigerian, Somali, Malaysian, Egyptian professionals concentrated in Dublin, Cork, Galway). Ireland has opted OUT of the EU Succession Regulation 650/2012, so Irish rules apply to any property situated in Ireland regardless of nationality.
What makes an Islamic will (Wasiyyah) legally valid in Ireland?
Written, signed by testator at the foot/end + witnessed by 2 adults present at the same time. Handwritten will valid if signed + witnessed. No mandatory notarisation.
Where do I register my will in Ireland?
No mandatory register. Optional lodgment at the Probate Office or with a solicitor. The Islamic Centre of Ireland offers free will-review consultations for Muslim residents.
Does Ireland have forced-heirship rules that override an Islamic will?
Section 111 of the 1965 Act: surviving spouse's legal right share is 1/2 of the estate if no children, 1/3 if children. Children have NO fixed share but may apply under Section 117 if the parent "failed in moral duty" — courts sometimes grant.
How does probate work in Ireland?
Executor applies for Grant of Probate at the Probate Office (part of the High Court). Estates under €25k may use a simplified process. Standard grant typically issued in 3–6 months.
How many witnesses do I need for a will in Ireland?
2 witnesses present together with testator at signing. Witnesses cannot be beneficiaries or their spouses — doing so voids the gift to them (but not the will itself).
What are the most common Islamic-will pitfalls in Ireland?
A surviving spouse can renounce her legal right share (Section 113) in favour of faraid — must be an EXPLICIT written renunciation. Section 117 claims by adult children are increasingly successful — plan personal-message letters explaining any unequal distribution.
Apply this knowledge in the Wasiyyah writer or run the inheritance numbers.