


India’s personal law framework — spanning Hindu, Muslim, and Christian succession statutes — requires clarity, cultural sensitivity, and precise legal navigation. Wherever you are in the world, your Indian estate deserves protection.
Comprehensive Guidance for Indian Families and Individuals
India does not have a single uniform succession statute. The applicable law depends on the religious community of the deceased: the Hindu Succession Act 1956 (as amended in 2005) governs Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, and Jains; the Indian Succession Act 1925 applies to Christians and Parsis; Muslim succession is governed by Islamic personal law applied through Indian courts. For NRIs, a validly executed India Will — registered with the relevant Sub-Registrar or deposited with a court — provides the clearest protection for Indian assets, bypasses intestacy disputes, and ensures that guardianship preferences are documented and enforceable.
Establishing entitlement to an Indian estate depends on whether a registered Will exists. Where a Will involves immovable property or is contested, probate is required from the relevant High Court. Where no Will exists, or where the estate includes movable assets such as bank accounts and investments, a Succession Certificate is sought from the District Court under the Indian Succession Act 1925. ATB Legal manages the complete estate administration process: court filings, sworn statements, coordination with banks and property registries, and distribution — across Indian jurisdictions and in coordination with foreign courts where required.
India offers multiple legal pathways for marriage registration. The Special Marriage Act 1954 provides a civil, religion-neutral framework available to all citizens and persons of Indian origin, including NRIs. The Foreign Marriage Act 1969 governs marriages solemnised outside India. ATB Legal advises NRIs on registration under the applicable statute, document preparation and legalisation for use abroad, and the drafting of pre-nuptial agreements under Indian law — including consideration of cross-border enforceability for couples with assets in India and the UAE or other jurisdictions.
Divorce proceedings in India are governed by the statute applicable to the parties’ religion — the Hindu Marriage Act 1955, the Special Marriage Act 1954, the Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act 1939, or the Indian Divorce Act 1869 for Christians. ATB Legal advises on the full spectrum of divorce-related matters before India’s Family Courts: mutual consent proceedings, contested divorce, financial maintenance, division of matrimonial assets, and recognition of foreign divorce orders. The team prioritises negotiated settlements to minimise conflict, particularly where children are involved and cross-border arrangements must remain workable.
Child custody matters involving Indian nationals are adjudicated under the Guardians and Wards Act 1890 and the applicable personal law statutes, with proceedings heard before Family Courts established under the Family Courts Act 1984. The governing standard is the welfare of the child. Where a child is relocated across international borders, coordination between Indian courts and foreign courts becomes essential — ATB Legal advises on cross-border custody enforcement, parental relocation applications, and structuring custody arrangements that can be recognised and implemented in multiple jurisdictions.
For Indian nationals with significant assets — real estate, private company stakes, investments, or family business interests — estate planning structures provide protection that a Will alone cannot guarantee. ATB Legal advises on private discretionary trusts under the Indian Trusts Act 1882 for holding and managing India assets across generations, family settlement agreements that prevent inheritance disputes among heirs, and corporate holding structures that preserve operational control through generational transition. For NRIs with assets in both India and the UAE, the team designs coordinated structures spanning both jurisdictions — ensuring that the India and UAE components operate coherently as a unified estate plan.
Personal status matters for NRIs frequently engage Indian law alongside the laws of other jurisdictions. ATB Legal advises on conflict-of-law issues, enforceability of Indian court orders abroad, recognition of foreign judgments in Indian courts under the Code of Civil Procedure, and the structuring of succession and family arrangements that hold across India, the UAE, the GCC, the United Kingdom, and other jurisdictions where clients have assets or family members.
Across every service category, ATB Legal provides a consistent, empathetic approach — whether drafting a Will, administering an estate, mediating custody, or structuring a family trust. Clarity, confidentiality, and strategic foresight allow Indian families, wherever they are, to navigate personal transitions with confidence.

The applicable succession law depends on the religious community of the deceased. The Hindu Succession Act 1956 governs Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, and Jains. The Indian Succession Act 1925 applies to Christians and Parsis. Muslim succession is governed by Islamic personal law applied through Indian courts. For NRIs, the location of assets and the nationality of heirs may also require coordination with foreign succession laws.
Will registration with the Sub-Registrar is not mandatory but strongly recommended. A registered Will creates a public record, is harder to challenge, and simplifies probate and succession proceedings. For NRIs with India-based immovable property, registration significantly reduces the risk of delays and disputes.
Probate is granted by the High Court to validate a Will and authorise the executor to administer the estate — typically required for immovable property in Presidency towns or where the Will is contested. A Succession Certificate is granted by the District Court under the Indian Succession Act 1925 and establishes the right of heirs to collect debts and movable assets — such as bank accounts, shares, and investments — from an intestate estate.
Yes, subject to conditions. Foreign divorce decrees are recognised under Section 13 of the Code of Civil Procedure if they were passed by a competent court, the proceedings were conducted correctly, and the decree does not conflict with Indian public policy or natural justice. ATB Legal advises on the conditions for recognition and manages enforcement proceedings in India.
Indian courts apply the welfare of the child as the paramount consideration under the Guardians and Wards Act 1890. Cross-border custody cases are complex because India is not a party to the 1980 Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction — Indian courts apply their own welfare analysis rather than the Convention’s automatic return mechanism. ATB Legal advises on structuring custody arrangements that are durable across the relevant jurisdictions.
Most personal status matters for NRIs in the UAE have both an India dimension and a UAE dimension — whether estate assets sit in both countries, custody arrangements must work across both jurisdictions, or succession structures need to coordinate Indian and UAE law. ATB Legal’s dual presence means a single advisory relationship covers both without duplication of instructions or conflicting advice.
ATB Legal combines deep technical expertise in Indian personal law with an empathetic, family-focused approach. Our lawyers understand the complexity of India’s multi-statute personal law framework and its application to Indian nationals living across the UAE, the GCC, Europe, and beyond — ensuring every solution is legally compliant under Indian law, practically workable across the relevant foreign jurisdictions, and sensitive to the personal circumstances each matter involves. We offer end-to-end support across documentation, court filings, negotiations, and execution, with a consistent advisory team throughout. Clients trust us for clear communication, genuine cross-border capability, and the ability to resolve sensitive personal matters with the discretion and care they deserve.

This website provides general information only, may not reflect current law, and should not be acted upon without professional advice.