Unmarried partners do not have the same inheritance position as spouses under Turkish law. This is the single most important starting point for anyone asking about cohabitation, long-term relationships, fiancés, religious-only unions, or partners who shared a home and life without a valid civil marriage. The Turkish Civil Code gives inheritance rights to the surviving […]
Family businesses in Turkey are often built around more than capital. They usually combine ownership, management, family expectations, and long-term control over assets such as factories, shops, contracts, real estate, goodwill, and voting rights. When the founder or a key shareholder dies, the legal problem is therefore not limited to “who inherits.” The real question […]
Lifetime gifts and equalization in Turkish inheritance law is one of the most important and most misunderstood areas of succession practice. Families often focus on the estate as it exists on the date of death, but Turkish law does not ignore what the deceased gave away during life. In some situations, an inter vivos transfer […]
When people think about inheritance law in Turkey, they often begin with a simple question: does a husband or wife still inherit after the marriage breaks down? In practice, that question is much more complex than it first appears. Turkish law draws sharp distinctions between a final divorce, a judicial separation, a pending divorce case, […]
Turkey has a structured and statute-driven inheritance system. In many families, people assume succession will be simple if everyone already “knows” who the heirs are. In practice, Turkish inheritance law is more formal than that. The inheritance opens automatically at death, but wills may need to be delivered and opened by the civil peace court, […]
Real estate inheritance disputes in Turkey are rarely about a single legal question. In practice, they usually combine several issues at once: who the heirs are, whether a will changes the normal succession order, whether one heir may continue using the property alone, whether the property should be transferred into the heirs’ names before any […]
Hidden assets are one of the most damaging problems in inheritance cases. A deceased person may leave behind property that one heir never discloses, a bank balance that is not mentioned during family discussions, a vehicle still registered in the deceased’s name, a receivable hidden behind an unfinished lawsuit, securities held through an intermediary account, […]
Partition of inherited property in Turkey is rarely just a technical step at the end of succession. In many estates, it is the real dispute. One heir wants to keep the family apartment, another wants an immediate sale, a third insists on maintaining joint ownership, and someone else argues that debts must be settled before […]
Protecting estate assets in Turkey begins long before heirs sit down to divide the estate. The most dangerous period is often the short window immediately after death, when ownership has already passed by law but the estate has not yet been documented, controlled, or stabilized. In that interval, real estate can remain unregistered in the […]
Inheritance disputes in Turkey often begin with a simple but legally difficult question: if a person dies without children, who inherits next? Many families assume the answer is obvious. In practice, Turkish law is more structured than family intuition. The Turkish Civil Code follows a class-based succession system. Descendants come first. If there are no […]