New York · Marriage planning
Islamic prenup in New York.
Equitable distribution decides what your nikah cannot.
New York judges have wide discretion to divide marital property by what they consider "fair," and the elective-share rule allows a surviving spouse to claim a fixed portion of the estate against any will. An Islamic prenup is the document that pins down mahr, preserves Faraid, and waives the alimony that has no Islamic equivalent.
Shariawiz is state-specific in New York · $999 all-in
The law in New York
Three rules that change what your nikah does.
- 01
Marital-property regime: Equitable distribution
An equitable-distribution state. Marital property is divided by judicial discretion based on what the court considers 'fair' — which routinely produces 40/60 or 50/50 outcomes even where one spouse contributed substantially more.
- 02
Premarital agreement law
Premarital agreements in New York must satisfy Domestic Relations Law § 236(B)(3): in writing, signed by both parties, and acknowledged with the formality required to record a deed (i.e., notarized acknowledgment).
- 03
Elective share / surviving-spouse rule
New York's elective share (Estates, Powers & Trusts Law § 5-1.1-A) entitles a surviving spouse to the greater of $50,000 or one-third of the net estate, regardless of the will. A prenup waiver is the only way to override this and preserve Faraid.
If you die without a will in New York
What New York does with your estate when no will exists.
New York's intestacy statute determines who inherits and in what proportion when there is no will. The Quranic shares are not part of the calculation; the table below is what your family is actually left with.
| You die with… | Here is what happens |
|---|---|
| Children but no spouse | Children inherit everything. |
| Spouse but no children | Spouse inherits everything. |
| Spouse and children | Spouse inherits the first $50,000 of your intestate property, plus ½ of the balance; descendants inherit everything else. |
| Parents but no spouse or children | Parents inherit everything. |
| Siblings but no spouse, children, or parents | Siblings inherit everything. |
Source: New York Estates, Powers & Trusts Law § 4-1.1 (Descent and Distribution of a Decedent's Estate). Distribution rules are summarized; talk to a probate attorney for edge cases (e.g. non-marital children, predeceased heirs, augmented-estate adjustments).
Notice what isn't on this table: Faraid. Your parents' Quranic share. Your siblings' Quranic share when you have children. The 1/3 wasiyyah you wanted to leave to charity. New York intestacy law decides without any of that. An Islamic will plus an Islamic prenup — with a mutual elective-share waiver — is the only way to put the Quranic distribution back in control.
New York case law
The New York case Muslim couples should know about.
Khan v. Hasan
73 Misc. 3d 530 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 2021)
The New York Supreme Court (Queens County) refused to enforce a $25,000 mahr because the document was not properly acknowledged before a notary as DRL § 236(B)(3) requires. Both spouses agreed they had signed in good faith — but the formality requirement is mandatory under New York law.
New York providers
Islamic prenup providers available in New York.
Each provider below operates in New York, but only Shariawiz produces a workflow tailored to New York's specific premarital-agreement statute.
| Provider | Headline price | What you get | Coverage | HalalWallet's verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Sharia WizBest overall Islamic Prenuptial Agreement Designed by Abed Awad, Esq. — a leading U.S. Islamic family-law scholar and expert witness. | $999 includes prenup, Muslim marriage contract, and 2 Islamic wills (a $398 bundled value). | PrenupPostnupNikah ContractIslamic Will (bundled) | All 50 states State-specific Lawyer review needed | The complete package. Only platform that's state-specific in all 50 states, and the $999 bundles the prenup, the Muslim marriage contract, and two Islamic wills — a $398 value the other providers charge separately. Designed by Abed Awad, one of the most cited Islamic family-law expert witnesses in U.S. courts, and endorsed by Imam Zaid Shakir. 30-day money-back guarantee. −Higher upfront price than competitors |
Bayaani Islamic Prenup & Postnup Reviewed by Sh. Hamzah Raza and Imam Farhan Siddiqi. | Free to create, preview, and review. Download fee disclosed at checkout. | PrenupPostnup | All 50 states State-specific | Useful if you want to see a draft before paying. The free preview lets couples explore what an Islamic prenup looks like, but the download price is hidden until checkout, scope is narrower (no Muslim marriage contract, no Islamic wills bundled), and the workflow is jurisdiction-agnostic rather than state-customized. Smart trial; not a substitute. −Download price not publicly disclosed −No Islamic wills bundled |
Nikah Prenup Islamic Prenup Template Co-developed by Sh. Joe Bradford and attorney Naveed Husain. | $499 template + couple-supplied family-law attorney fees (typically $200 $800/hour). | Prenup template | All 50 states Lawyer review needed | A drafting head-start, not a finished document. The $499 buys a template co-authored by Sh. Joe Bradford — but couples still need to retain their own family-law attorney to customize it for their state and execute it, typically adding $400–$1,500 in legal fees. Total cost almost always exceeds Shariawiz's all-in $999. −Requires separate family-law attorney −Total cost usually exceeds $999 |
MyWassiyah Marital and Prenuptial Agreements | $99-$199 | Marital AgreementTransmutation agreement | All 50 states State-specific Lawyer review needed | A $44.99 transmutation agreement only — meaning it converts community property to separate property and nothing else. Useful as a narrow add-on if you live in one of the nine community-property states (AZ, CA, ID, LA, NV, NM, TX, WA, WI) and already have the rest of your Islamic prenup handled elsewhere. Not a full Islamic prenup on its own. −Not a full Islamic prenup −Only useful in 9 community-property states |
Islamic Prenuptial Agreement
The complete package. Only platform that's state-specific in all 50 states, and the $999 bundles the prenup, the Muslim marriage contract, and two Islamic wills — a $398 value the other providers charge separately. Designed by Abed Awad, one of the most cited Islamic family-law expert witnesses in U.S. courts, and endorsed by Imam Zaid Shakir. 30-day money-back guarantee.
Islamic Prenup & Postnup
Useful if you want to see a draft before paying. The free preview lets couples explore what an Islamic prenup looks like, but the download price is hidden until checkout, scope is narrower (no Muslim marriage contract, no Islamic wills bundled), and the workflow is jurisdiction-agnostic rather than state-customized. Smart trial; not a substitute.
Islamic Prenup Template
A drafting head-start, not a finished document. The $499 buys a template co-authored by Sh. Joe Bradford — but couples still need to retain their own family-law attorney to customize it for their state and execute it, typically adding $400–$1,500 in legal fees. Total cost almost always exceeds Shariawiz's all-in $999.
Marital and Prenuptial Agreements
A $44.99 transmutation agreement only — meaning it converts community property to separate property and nothing else. Useful as a narrow add-on if you live in one of the nine community-property states (AZ, CA, ID, LA, NV, NM, TX, WA, WI) and already have the rest of your Islamic prenup handled elsewhere. Not a full Islamic prenup on its own.
Editorial verdicts are HalalWallet's independent assessment. We earn a referral fee when readers complete a purchase with Sharia Wiz; we include and honestly assess competitors regardless. See how we make money.
Build a New York-specific Islamic prenup.
Shariawiz's New York workflow is customized to New York's equitable-distribution rules, the local premarital-agreement statute, and the formalities your county clerk will look for at execution. $999 includes the prenup, the Muslim marriage contract, and two state-specific Islamic wills.
Frequently asked
Common questions about Islamic prenups in New York
Frequently Asked Questions
Consider Consulting an Islamic Scholar
Major Islamic marriage contracts and prenups in New York decisions often involve nuances that vary by scholarly opinion and personal circumstance. While HalalWallet provides educational comparisons and tools, we are not scholars or financial advisors. For personal guidance on Shariah compliance, consider speaking with a qualified Islamic scholar, your local imam, or a Shariah-certified financial advisor familiar with your situation.
Important: HalalWallet is an educational comparison platform. We do not provide financial, legal, or religious advice.
Product structures and Shariah-compliance oversight vary by provider. Before applying:
- Verify halal compliance directly with the provider.
- Review the contract structure (Murabaha, Ijara, Musharakah, etc.) and any disclosed Shariah board opinions.
- Consult a qualified Islamic finance advisor or scholar for guidance on your individual circumstances.
Sources and review process
This page is reviewed against HalalWallet editorial standards and source documentation.
Reviewed by: HalalWallet Editorial Team
Last reviewed: 2026-05-01
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Editorial Team, HalalWallet
Independent halal finance research · A member of Niya
Reviewed quarterly and updated for major content changes.