


Your assets are built over a lifetime. A Will and a clear succession plan cost far less than losing them to court proceedings, family disputes, or the wrong succession law.
Estate Planning: Our Advisory Services
A Will is the most fundamental estate planning instrument available in India. Under the Indian Succession Act 1925, a Will must be in writing, signed by the testator, and attested by at least two witnesses present at the time of signing. For Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, and Jains, the Hindu Succession Act 1956 governs intestate succession where there is no valid Will– creating a fixed statutory distribution that may bear no resemblance to the testator’s intentions. For Christians and Parsis, the Indian Succession Act 1925 governs intestate succession. For Muslims, personal law governs succession and testamentary disposition is more limited. A well-drafted Will covers the specific disposition of immovable and movable property, the appointment of an executor, the appointment of guardians for minor children, and any specific bequests, conditions, or trusts to be established. ATB Legal drafts Wills that are clear, correctly executed, and legally valid– and advises on periodic review as assets and family circumstances change.
Probate is the court process by which a Will is proved valid and an executor is authorised to administer the estate. In India, probate is legally required for Wills executed in certain cities– including Mumbai, Chennai, and Kolkata– and is strongly advisable elsewhere as it provides conclusive authority to the executor and prevents subsequent challenges to the estate. The process is initiated by filing a petition before the District Court or High Court in the jurisdiction where the testator was resident. The court issues a citation to known beneficiaries, publishes notice for a prescribed period, and then passes the probate order. Where there is no Will, Letters of Administration follow the same general procedure but are typically more contested and more time-consuming. ATB Legal manages the complete probate process from petition preparation and court filing through to the grant of probate and the executor’s subsequent estate administration obligations.
For NRIs with assets in India– immovable property, fixed deposits, shares, mutual funds, and bank accounts– the estate planning challenge is distinct from that of Indian residents. Indian assets are governed by Indian succession law regardless of where the NRI is resident or domiciled, and a foreign Will does not automatically extend to Indian assets without Indian probate proceedings. Many NRIs benefit from a separate India-specific Will covering their Indian assets, coordinated with any Will or trust instrument covering assets in their country of residence, to avoid the cost and delay of foreign Will probate in India. ATB Legal advises NRI clients on India-specific Will drafting, the probate of foreign Wills in India, and the coordination of succession arrangements across the India-UAE corridor– where many ATB Legal clients hold significant assets in both jurisdictions.
Gift deeds– transfers of property during the testator’s lifetime– are frequently used as part of an estate planning strategy to transfer specific assets to specific beneficiaries without probate delay, reduce the estate subject to succession proceedings, or restructure family asset ownership in an orderly way. In India, a gift of immovable property requires a registered gift deed executed before the Sub-Registrar. Gift transactions between close family members attract reduced stamp duty in most Indian states. ATB Legal advises on gift deeds as part of a broader estate planning strategy– drafting the deed, managing the registration process, and advising on the interaction with succession planning to ensure the overall plan is coherent and tax-considered.

Does every person in India need a Will?
Anyone who owns assets– property, bank accounts, investments, or business interests– and has views about how those assets should pass needs a Will. Without one, assets are distributed under the applicable intestate succession law. For NRIs with Indian assets, this is especially important: Indian law governs Indian assets regardless of the testator’s country of residence.
What happens to Indian assets if a person dies without a Will?
The applicable intestate succession law distributes the estate. For Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, and Jains, the Hindu Succession Act 1956 applies. For Christians and Parsis, the Indian Succession Act 1925 applies. Muslim succession is governed by personal law. Intestate distributions often differ significantly from the deceased’s intentions, and the process is typically slower and more contested than probate under a valid Will.
What is probate and when is it required?
Probate is the court process by which a Will is proved valid and the executor is granted authority to administer the estate. It is legally required in certain major cities in India and strongly advisable elsewhere. The process involves filing a petition before the District Court or High Court, publication of notice, and a probate order– typically taking several months from filing to grant.
Can an NRI’s foreign Will cover their Indian assets?
A foreign Will can extend to Indian assets, but it must first be granted probate in India. Most NRIs find it more practical to have a separate India-specific Will covering Indian assets, coordinated with their foreign estate arrangements.
What is a gift deed and how is it used in estate planning?
A gift deed transfers ownership of property from the donor to the donee as a voluntary gift during the donor’s lifetime. In estate planning, gift deeds are used to transfer specific assets to specific beneficiaries without probate, to reduce the estate subject to succession proceedings, or to restructure family asset ownership in an orderly way. A gift of immovable property in India must be registered before the Sub-Registrar to be valid.
How does ATB Legal coordinate India-UAE estate planning for NRIs?
ATB Legal’s dual India-UAE practice means NRI clients can coordinate estate planning across both jurisdictions from the same team. The India-specific Will covers Indian assets and is drafted for probate validity in India. UAE-side arrangements are coordinated to prevent conflict, ensure consistent treatment of joint assets, and reflect the testator’s intentions across both jurisdictions.

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