Multiple Wives & Their Children: Inheritance Rights in Islam
How Faraid Handles Polygamous Estates
Islam explicitly permits a man to marry up to four wives, and where multiple marriages exist, the estate of a deceased husband must be distributed with complete fairness to all surviving wives and all children — regardless of which marriage they came from. Faraid provides a mathematically precise system for this that removes human subjectivity entirely.
The core principle is that Quranic inheritance rights are individual and cannot be compromised by another heir. A first wife cannot reduce a second wife's share. Children of the first marriage cannot reduce children of the second. Every heir's entitlement is determined solely by their relationship to the deceased — nothing else.
وَلَهُنَّ الرُّبُعُ مِمَّا تَرَكْتُمْ إِن لَّمْ يَكُن لَّكُمْ وَلَدٌ ۚ فَإِن كَانَ لَكُمْ وَلَدٌ فَلَهُنَّ الثُّمُنُ مِمَّا تَرَكْتُم
"And for wives is one fourth if you leave no child. But if you leave a child, then for them is one eighth of what you leave." (Surah An-Nisa 4:12)
Notice the Quran uses the plural "for them" (lahunna) — making it explicit that the spousal share is a collective entitlement shared among all wives, not a separate full portion for each wife.
How the Spousal Share Is Divided Among Multiple Wives
When a man dies with multiple surviving wives, all wives together receive one collective spousal share divided equally between them:
| Number of Wives | No Children Present | Children Present | Per Wife (no children) | Per Wife (children) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 wife | 1/4 | 1/8 | 25% | 12.5% |
| 2 wives | 1/4 shared | 1/8 shared | 12.5% each | 6.25% each |
| 3 wives | 1/4 shared | 1/8 shared | 8.33% each | 4.17% each |
| 4 wives | 1/4 shared | 1/8 shared | 6.25% each | 3.13% each |
The key point: wives share the spousal portion — not the entire estate. After their collective share is allocated, the remaining estate goes to children, parents, and other heirs per Faraid rules.
Children From Different Marriages — Equal Inheritance Rights
All children of the deceased — regardless of which wife they were born to — have identical Faraid rights. The rules are:
- All sons inherit equally from the residue after fixed-share heirs are paid
- All daughters inherit equally — each daughter gets half what each son gets (2:1 ratio) when sons and daughters inherit together
- The mother's identity is irrelevant — a son from the first wife and a son from the third wife receive identical shares
- The number of each wife's children is irrelevant — a wife with six children has no more claim than a wife with one child; the children's shares are determined individually
Worked Example: Two Wives, Children from Both — Net Estate R 1,200,000
Deceased husband, Hanafi. Survived by: Wife A (civil), Wife B (Nikah, named in will), Son from Wife A, Daughter from Wife A, Son from Wife B, Mother of deceased.
| Heir | Share | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Wife A + Wife B combined | 1/8 (children present) | R 150,000 total |
| Wife A (half of 1/8) | 1/16 | R 75,000 |
| Wife B (half of 1/8) | 1/16 | R 75,000 |
| Mother | 1/6 (children present) | R 200,000 |
| Residue for children | 1 − 1/8 − 1/6 = 17/24 | R 850,000 (split 2:1:2:1) |
| Son (Wife A) — 2 parts of 6 | 2/6 of R 850,000 | R 283,333 |
| Daughter (Wife A) — 1 part of 6 | 1/6 of R 850,000 | R 141,667 |
| Son (Wife B) — 2 parts of 6 | 2/6 of R 850,000 | R 283,333 |
| Daughter (Wife B) — 1 part of 6 | 1/6 of R 850,000 | R 141,667 |
| Total | 100% | R 1,200,000 ✓ |
Verification: 75,000 + 75,000 + 200,000 + 283,333 + 141,667 + 283,333 + 141,667 = R 1,200,000 ✓. Both sons receive identical shares. Both daughters receive identical shares. Wife A and Wife B receive identical spousal shares.
Mahr: Each Wife's Separate Debt
Deferred Mahr is a legally enforceable debt owed by the husband to each wife individually. When a husband with multiple wives dies, each wife's deferred Mahr is a separate debt that must be fully settled from the gross estate before any Faraid distribution begins.
Critically, these are independent debts — Wife A's Mahr is not affected by Wife B's Mahr, and neither wife's Mahr reduces the other's inheritance share. Both debts are paid in full first, then the net estate is distributed by Faraid.
Example: Mahr Deductions with Two Wives
- Gross estate: R 1,500,000
- Deferred Mahr — Wife A: R 80,000
- Deferred Mahr — Wife B: R 60,000
- Other debts: R 40,000
- Net Faraid estate: R 1,500,000 − R 180,000 = R 1,320,000
Wife A benefits twice: she receives her R 80,000 Mahr as a creditor, then her spousal Faraid share from the R 1,320,000 net estate.
Half-Siblings and Their Inheritance Rights
Children from different wives are half-siblings to each other. In Faraid terminology, children who share the same father but different mothers are paternal half-siblings (ikhwa li ab). Their inheritance relationship is important in two scenarios:
When There Are No Full Siblings
Paternal half-siblings (same father, different mother) inherit in the same way as full siblings in most scenarios — they act as Asabah (residuary heirs) and take the residue. They are only distinguished from full siblings in specific blocking scenarios involving uterine (maternal half) siblings.
Blocking Between Sibling Categories
| Sibling Type | Relationship | Blocking Rule |
|---|---|---|
| Full siblings | Same father AND mother | Block paternal half-siblings from Asabah; block uterine siblings when father present |
| Paternal half-siblings | Same father, different mother | Block uterine siblings when present |
| Uterine (maternal) half-siblings | Same mother, different father | Only inherit when no children, no father, and no full/paternal siblings exist |
In practice, when the deceased leaves children (sons or daughters), all siblings — full and half — are completely blocked from any inheritance regardless of how many there are.
Practical Steps for Polygamous Estate Planning
- Document all Nikah marriages — ensure every wife is named in a valid Islamic will. In most countries, only the civil wife has automatic legal recognition.
- Record each wife's deferred Mahr in writing — a signed Nikah contract, separate agreement, or clause in the Islamic will. Undocumented Mahr may be difficult to enforce.
- Name all children in the Islamic will — specify each child's mother and relationship to the deceased to avoid any dispute about paternity during estate administration.
- Appoint a Muslim executor — ideally one familiar with polygamous estate complexities and the specific madhab's rules.
- Calculate using our Faraid Calculator — enter all wives and all children; the engine applies the collective spousal share and the 2:1 son/daughter ratio automatically.
Calculate Your Estate with Multiple Wives
Add up to 4 wives and all children from every marriage. Our engine divides the spousal share correctly and applies the 2:1 ratio automatically.
Open Inheritance Calculator →