Islamic Inheritance in the UK: Faraid & English Law Explained
Muslims in the UK: A Dual Legal Reality
The United Kingdom is home to approximately 3.9 million Muslims — around 6% of the population — making it one of the largest Muslim communities in Western Europe. The community is predominantly of South Asian origin (Pakistani, Bangladeshi, and Indian heritage, largely following the Hanafi madhab), alongside significant Arab, Somali, and convert communities following other schools.
British Muslims navigate the same fundamental tension as Muslims in any secular country: they are simultaneously subject to English civil law (which governs what is legally enforceable) and to Islamic Faraid (which governs what is religiously obligatory). The good news is that English law is uniquely accommodating — it gives testators broad freedom to distribute their estates as they choose, making it entirely possible for an Islamic will to be both Shariah-compliant and legally valid and enforceable in English courts.
The challenge is getting the will right — and understanding the specific UK legal risks that can undermine an otherwise correctly drafted Islamic will.
What Happens Without a Will: English Intestacy Rules
Dying without a valid will in England and Wales means the estate is distributed under the intestacy rules set out in the Administration of Estates Act 1925 (as amended). These rules differ fundamentally from Faraid:
| Scenario | English Intestacy | Islamic Faraid |
|---|---|---|
| Spouse + children | Spouse gets all chattels + £322,000; remainder split 50/50 between spouse and children equally | Spouse gets 1/8; children share residue in 2:1 ratio (son:daughter) |
| Spouse, no children | Spouse inherits entire estate | Spouse gets 1/4; remainder to parents/siblings |
| Children, no spouse | Children share equally regardless of gender | Sons get double daughters' share (2:1) |
| Parents | Inherit only if no spouse and no children | Father 1/6 + residue; mother 1/6 — always when children present |
| Islamic wives (Nikah only) | No legal right — receives nothing | Full spousal share (1/4 or 1/8, shared between all wives) |
Every point in the table above is a departure from Faraid. A British Muslim who dies intestate will have their estate distributed in a way that is Islamically invalid. The will is not optional — it is a religious obligation.
Making a Valid Islamic Will in the UK
English law gives testators wide testamentary freedom — the legal right to leave their estate to whoever they choose in whatever proportions they choose. This means a correctly drafted Islamic will directing distribution according to Faraid is fully enforceable in English law, with one important caveat discussed below.
Formal Requirements Under the Wills Act 1837
For a will to be legally valid in England and Wales, it must:
- Be in writing (typed or handwritten)
- Be signed by the testator (or by someone at their direction in their presence)
- Be signed in the presence of two witnesses present at the same time
- Both witnesses must sign the will in the testator's presence
- The testator must be 18 or older and of sound mind (testamentary capacity)
- Neither witness may be a beneficiary under the will (or their spouse)
An Islamic will meeting these requirements is as legally binding as any other will in England and Wales. The executor — ideally a Muslim or an Islamic organisation familiar with Faraid — carries out the distribution according to the Islamic instructions in the will.
What a UK Islamic Will Should Include
- A declaration of the testator's madhab (most commonly Hanafi for South Asian communities)
- Appointment of a Muslim executor or Islamic trustee organisation
- Direction to settle all debts including deferred Mahr before distribution
- The Wasiyyah (up to 1/3) — charitable bequests or bequests to non-heirs
- Clear instruction that the remainder be distributed per Faraid, referencing the madhab
- Explicit naming of any Nikah-only wife and her entitlement
- Guardianship provisions for minor children
The Biggest UK Legal Risk: The Inheritance Act 1975
This is the most important and most commonly misunderstood legal risk for Islamic wills in the UK. The Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependants) Act 1975 allows certain people to apply to court for "reasonable financial provision" from an estate — even if the deceased's valid will explicitly excludes them or provides them less than they believe they deserve.
Who can make a claim under the Inheritance Act 1975:
- A spouse or civil partner of the deceased
- A former spouse who has not remarried
- A cohabitant who lived with the deceased for at least 2 years before the death
- A child of the deceased (including adult children)
- A person treated as a child of the family
- Any person who was being financially maintained by the deceased
How This Affects Faraid Distribution
An Islamic will that follows Faraid — giving daughters half the share of sons — could theoretically be challenged by a daughter who believes she has not received "reasonable financial provision." Courts consider multiple factors including the size of the estate, the claimant's financial needs, the relationship with the deceased, and the competing needs of other beneficiaries.
In practice, successful Inheritance Act challenges to Islamic wills are uncommon but not unknown. The risk is higher for large estates and adult children who are in financial need. The best mitigation is:
- Including a letter of wishes alongside the will, explaining the religious basis for the distribution
- Making lifetime gifts to address any heir's particular financial needs outside the estate
- Using trusts for certain assets to remove them from the estate
- Consulting a solicitor experienced in Islamic estate planning who can structure the will to minimise Inheritance Act exposure
UK Inheritance Tax and Muslim Estates
UK Inheritance Tax (IHT) is charged at 40% on the value of the taxable estate above the nil-rate band. Understanding the key thresholds and exemptions is critical for estate planning:
| Relief / Exemption | Amount (2025/26) | Condition |
|---|---|---|
| Nil-rate band | £325,000 | Available to every UK domiciliary |
| Residence nil-rate band | £175,000 | Main residence passed to direct descendants |
| Combined maximum threshold | £500,000 | Single person with qualifying property |
| Spousal exemption | Unlimited | Assets to a UK-domiciled civil spouse — fully exempt |
| Transferred nil-rate band | Up to £1,000,000 | Unused NRB from deceased spouse transferred to survivor |
| Charitable giving relief | Reduces IHT rate to 36% | If ≥10% of net estate is left to charity |
IHT Interaction with Faraid Distribution
IHT is paid to HMRC from the estate before any distribution occurs. It is treated as a cost of the estate — like a debt — deducted before the net Faraid estate is calculated. Enter your estate value after estimated IHT into our calculator to get accurate Faraid share amounts.
The unlimited spousal IHT exemption creates an important planning consideration. Assets passed to a legally married spouse attract zero IHT, while the same assets passed to children or siblings attract 40% above the threshold. An estate planner may recommend maximising the spousal transfer on first death to defer IHT — but this must be balanced against the Faraid obligations to other heirs.
Note: A Nikah-only wife does not qualify for the spousal IHT exemption because the marriage is not legally recognised under English law.
Nikah-Only Wives: The Most Urgent UK Planning Gap
The most legally precarious situation for UK Muslims involves Nikah-only marriages. An Islamic marriage not registered as a civil marriage in England and Wales has no legal standing under English law. This means:
- The Nikah wife has no automatic inheritance rights under intestacy rules
- She does not qualify for the spousal IHT exemption
- She cannot apply for probate or challenge the estate as a legal spouse
- Her only protection is an explicit provision in a valid Islamic will
- She may have a claim under the Inheritance Act 1975 as a cohabitant (if she lived with the deceased for 2+ years), but this is uncertain and costly to pursue
The Law Commission of England and Wales published recommendations in 2022 to reform the law on cohabitation and marriage, which may eventually provide Nikah wives with legal protections. As of 2026, these reforms have not been enacted. Until they are, a valid Islamic will explicitly naming the Nikah wife is her primary legal protection.
Using Trusts in UK Islamic Estate Planning
UK Muslims with larger estates often use trusts as part of their Faraid planning. Trusts offer several advantages:
- Assets held in trust do not form part of the deceased estate — they are not subject to IHT (after 7 years for certain trust types) and are not distributed through the will
- Discretionary trusts allow trustees to distribute to a class of beneficiaries — which can be structured to match Faraid proportions while maintaining flexibility
- Life interest trusts can provide a surviving spouse with income during their lifetime while preserving the capital for distribution to children per Faraid on the spouse's death
Trusts in Islamic estate planning require careful structuring by a solicitor with both trust law expertise and Islamic finance knowledge. Poorly structured trusts can attract IHT charges, inadvertently divert assets from Faraid heirs, or create unintended Inheritance Act exposure.
Pensions and Life Insurance in UK Islamic Estates
Like South Africa, UK pensions and life insurance policies sit outside the estate for most purposes:
- Workplace pensions: Pension death benefits are typically paid at the discretion of pension trustees to nominees. Nominate Faraid-eligible heirs in the correct proportions using the pension nomination form — these forms are separate from and do not need to match your will.
- SIPPs and personal pensions: More control over nominations but still subject to trustee discretion. A letter of wishes to the pension provider explaining the Islamic basis of your nominations is advisable.
- Life insurance: Proceeds paid to named beneficiaries fall outside the estate and outside IHT (if written in trust). Nominate beneficiaries in Faraid-appropriate proportions where possible.
UK Islamic Estate Planning Organisations
Several UK organisations assist Muslims with Shariah-compliant estate planning:
- Islamic Finance Council UK (UKIFC) — promotes Islamic finance standards including estate planning
- Muslim Council of Britain (MCB) — guidance and community resources
- National Zakat Foundation (NZF) — Islamic finance and estate guidance
- Solicitors specialising in Islamic wills — firms such as Irwin Mitchell, Shakespeares, and specialist Islamic law practices offer Shariah-compliant will drafting
- Local mosques and Islamic centres — many have affiliated scholars who can advise on Faraid calculations for specific madhabs
Worked Example: UK Muslim Estate with IHT
Deceased: British Muslim man, Hanafi. Survived by: 1 civil wife, 1 son, 2 daughters. Gross estate: £900,000 (including £350,000 primary residence). No business assets. No prior nil-rate band transfer.
Step 1 — IHT calculation:
- Nil-rate band: £325,000
- Residence nil-rate band (property to children): £175,000
- Total threshold: £500,000
- Taxable estate: £900,000 − £500,000 = £400,000
- IHT at 40%: £160,000
- Net Faraid estate: £900,000 − £160,000 = £740,000
Step 2 — Faraid distribution (Hanafi, children present):
Wife: 1/8. Son + 2 daughters = 5 parts (son 2, daughter 1, daughter 1). Residue = 7/8.
| Heir | Share | Amount (£740,000) |
|---|---|---|
| Wife | 1/8 | £92,500 |
| Residue (7/8) | = £647,500 — split over 5 parts | £129,500 per part |
| Son | 2 parts | £259,000 |
| Daughter 1 | 1 part | £129,500 |
| Daughter 2 | 1 part | £129,500 |
| Total | 100% | £740,000 ✓ |
Verification: £92,500 + £259,000 + £129,500 + £129,500 = £610,500. Wait — residue 7/8 × £740,000 = £647,500 ÷ 5 parts = £129,500 per part. Son: £259,000. Each daughter: £129,500. Total: £92,500 + £259,000 + £129,500 + £129,500 = £610,500. That doesn't equal £740,000. Let me recheck: £92,500 + £259,000 + £129,500 + £129,500 = £610,500. The error is that 7/8 × 740,000 = 647,500, and 647,500 / 5 × (2+1+1) = 647,500 × 4/5 = 518,000, not 518,000. Correct calculation: Son 2/5 × 647,500 = £259,000; Daughter 1/5 × 647,500 = £129,500 each. Total: £92,500 + £259,000 + £129,500 + £129,500 = £610,500 ≠ £740,000. The issue: 2+1+1 = 4 parts not 5. Let me correct: 1 son + 2 daughters = 4 parts (son = 2, daughter = 1, daughter = 1). Residue = £647,500 ÷ 4 = £161,875 per part.
| Heir | Share | Amount (£740,000) |
|---|---|---|
| Wife | 1/8 | £92,500 |
| Residue (7/8 = £647,500) | 4 parts total | £161,875 per part |
| Son (2 parts) | 2/4 of £647,500 | £323,750 |
| Daughter 1 (1 part) | 1/4 of £647,500 | £161,875 |
| Daughter 2 (1 part) | 1/4 of £647,500 | £161,875 |
| Total | 100% | £740,000 ✓ |
Verification: £92,500 + £323,750 + £161,875 + £161,875 = £740,000 ✓
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