name: kb-family-law-ksa
description: Use when a matter involves marriage, divorce, custody, maintenance, or inheritance in Saudi Arabia. Covers the KSA Personal Status Law (Royal Decree 73/1443H, 2022) — the first codified personal status law in KSA — which maintains the Hanbali Sharia framework while introducing clearer procedural rules on talaq, khula, custody (hadana), maintenance (nafaqa), and Islamic inheritance (fara'id). Also covers the position of non-Muslims in KSA family matters. Triggers on Saudi divorce, mahr, custody KSA, inheritance Saudi, or talaq questions.
license: MIT
metadata:
id: kb.family-law-KSA
category: kb
practice_area: Family & Personal Status Law
jurisdictions: [KSA]
priority: P0
intent: [family-law, KSA, divorce, custody, inheritance, sharia, personal-status]
related: [kb-family-law-lb-personal-status, kb-family-law-uae-civil-personal-status, kb-employment-law-ksa, kb-shariah-finance-aaoifi, draft-prenup]
source: Louis — HAQQ Legal AI (github.com/sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal)
version: "1.0"
Knowledge Pack — KSA Family Law (Personal Status Law 2022)
Scope and Sources
Saudi Arabia's family law is historically grounded in Islamic Sharia (Sunni Hanbali school as the default for KSA Muslims). The Personal Status Law (Royal Decree 73/1443H, 2022) represents the Kingdom's first comprehensive codification of personal status matters — reducing judicial discretion while maintaining the Sharia framework.
| Source |
Role |
| Personal Status Law (RD 73/1443H, 2022) |
Primary codification — marriage, divorce, custody, maintenance, inheritance |
| Hanbali Fiqh |
Default gap-filler where the law is silent |
| Judicial Interpretations |
Increasing standardization through specialized family courts |
| Non-Muslim foreign law |
Permitted in limited matters for non-Muslim foreigners (see below) |
Applicable persons: Saudi nationals + foreign Muslims residing in KSA (by default). Non-Muslims may apply for foreign-law application in certain civil-status matters.
Marriage
Requirements
| Requirement |
Detail |
| Mutual consent (Ijab and Qabul) |
Both parties must expressly accept |
| Mahr (dower) |
Gift from husband to wife; may be prompt (muajjal) or deferred (mu'ajjal); not waivable |
| Wali (guardian) |
Wife requires a male guardian (typically father, then paternal relatives) to conclude the marriage contract |
| Witnesses |
At least two adult Muslim male witnesses (or one male and two female in some interpretations; codified rules apply) |
| Court registration |
Marriage must be registered with the court — 2022 law strengthens this requirement |
| Age |
Minimum age for marriage regulated; court approval required for marriages below prescribed age |
Polygamy
- A Muslim man may marry up to four wives simultaneously.
- 2022 law requires court permission to contract a second (or further) marriage, with assessment of the first wife's rights and husband's financial capacity.
Divorce
Types of Divorce
| Type |
Initiated by |
Mechanism |
| Talaq |
Husband |
Verbal or written pronouncement; 2022 law requires court documentation and notification to wife |
| Khula |
Wife |
Wife returns mahr or agrees compensation to husband; court-facilitated; does not require husband's agreement if court approves |
| Faskh (judicial dissolution) |
Wife |
Judicial divorce on specific grounds — non-support (nafaqa), cruelty, harm, impotence, absence, imprisonment, disease |
| Mutual divorce |
Both parties |
By agreement; simplified court process |
Talaq — Key Procedural Changes (2022 Law)
- Talaq must be notified to the court and registered; automatic operation on oral pronouncement alone no longer sufficient for full legal effect.
- Revocable talaq (raj'i): husband may revoke within the iddah period without needing a new marriage contract.
- Irrevocable talaq (bain): after three pronouncements, or after iddah if not revoked; remarriage requires an intervening marriage (muhalil) — a significant social and legal threshold.
Iddah (Waiting Period)
| Status |
Iddah Duration |
| Divorced, non-pregnant |
Three menstrual cycles |
| Divorced, pregnant |
Until delivery of child |
| Widowed |
4 months and 10 days |
- During iddah: husband must provide maintenance and housing.
- Revocable talaq: husband may revoke; wife cannot remarry until iddah completes.
Custody (Hadana)
The 2022 Personal Status Law modernizes custody rules, incorporating a best-interest standard alongside traditional Sharia rules.
| Principle |
Rule |
| Primary custody |
Mother has priority for young children post-divorce |
| Transfer to father |
Traditionally: boys ~9–10 years, girls at marriageable age; 2022 law allows courts to extend mother's custody under best-interest standard |
| Best-interest discretion |
Courts now explicitly weigh the child's welfare, including education, stability, and relationships with both parents |
| Visitation |
Non-custodial parent (typically father) has enforceable visitation rights |
| Relocation |
Custodian may not relocate child outside KSA without court approval |
Custody Termination Grounds
Mother loses custody rights if:
- She remarries a man not related to the child (in Hanbali rules — courts may now apply discretion)
- She is proven unfit (abuse, neglect, moral unfitness)
- She changes religion (in strict Hanbali interpretation — courts weigh best interest)
Maintenance (Nafaqa)
| Obligation |
Rule |
| During marriage |
Husband must provide adequate maintenance (food, clothing, housing, medical care) proportionate to his means |
| Iddah maintenance |
Continues at full level during iddah after revocable talaq; limited during irrevocable talaq |
| Child support |
Father responsible for child support regardless of custody arrangement |
| Duration (children) |
Males: until financially independent (adulthood); Females: until marriage |
| Enforcement |
Family courts enforce maintenance orders; non-compliance can lead to imprisonment in extreme cases |
Islamic Inheritance (Fara'id)
KSA inheritance is governed by Quranic fixed shares (fara'id) — mandatory for Muslims; courts apply these rules automatically.
Core Principles
- Fixed shares: Quran specifies exact proportions for certain heirs (spouse, parents, children in different configurations).
- Male double female rule: in the same class of heirs, a male typically receives twice the share of a female (e.g., son vs daughter).
- Residuaries (asaba): heirs not in fixed-share categories inherit the remainder proportionately.
- Non-Muslim exclusion: under classical Hanbali rules, a non-Muslim cannot inherit from a Muslim, nor vice versa.
- Bequest limit: testator may bequeath by will up to 1/3 of the estate to non-heirs; bequests to legal heirs beyond fara'id share are void.
- Debts first: all debts and funeral expenses are settled before inheritance distribution.
Common Spouse Shares
| Scenario |
Husband's Share |
Wife's Share |
| No children |
1/2 |
1/4 |
| With children |
1/4 |
1/8 |
Children's Shares
- Daughter only (no son): 1/2 (if one daughter); 2/3 (if multiple daughters, shared equally).
- Son only: inherits as residuary (remainder after other fixed shares).
- Son + daughter: son gets twice daughter's share from the residue.
Non-Muslims in KSA
- The 2022 Personal Status Law allows non-Muslim foreigners to elect foreign-law application for personal status matters in certain circumstances.
- Non-Muslims married under a foreign civil law may seek divorce / inheritance through foreign-law processes, provided both parties consent and the applicable foreign law can be proven.
- DIFC-style civil-personal-status courts do not exist in KSA — there is no free-zone equivalent.
- Cross-border marriages and divorces are recognized case-by-case; courts examine conformity with Sharia and public order.
Practical Drafting Notes
| Situation |
Advice |
| Pre-marital agreements (Aqd al-Zawaj addendum) |
Permissible to include additional conditions favorable to wife (e.g., right to work, right to education, conditions for talaq) — courts will enforce if not contrary to Sharia |
| Mahr specification |
Always specify: amount, currency, whether prompt or deferred; deferred mahr is payable on divorce or death |
| Divorce proceedings |
Require specialized family court lawyers; court-supervised documentation essential |
| Inheritance planning |
Wills limited to 1/3 of estate for non-heirs; coordinate with overseas assets (foreign assets may allow broader testamentary freedom) |
| Foreign nationals |
Confirm whether both parties are Muslim and whether foreign-law election is applicable |
Specialized Family Courts
- 2022 reform established dedicated family courts across KSA.
- Cases managed through Najiz (electronic court system).
- Judge has broader discretion to balance best-interest considerations under the new law.
- Legal representation increasingly the norm for contested matters.
Caveats & Currency
The 2022 Personal Status Law was a landmark reform; court implementation continues to develop. Judicial practice may vary between regions. Islamic inheritance rules require case-by-case computation as the final estate composition determines each heir's share. Cross-border recognition of KSA family-court orders varies by country — verify in any relevant foreign jurisdiction before advising on international aspects.
- [[kb-family-law-lb-personal-status]]
- [[kb-family-law-uae-civil-personal-status]]
- [[kb-shariah-finance-aaoifi]]
- [[kb-employment-law-ksa]]
- [[draft-prenup]]
- [[draft-will]]