If your marriage is over under Muslim law, you have options
If you’re reading this at midnight, probably after another hard conversation at home, I want you to know the law gives you more than one way out. A Syariah divorce isn’t only a talak said in anger. There are several routes, and the right one depends on your facts.
I’m Wahab. I run A.W. Law LLC in Chinatown, and I’ve sat with many Muslim couples at both ends of this decision: husbands who have already said the word and want to register it properly, and wives who thought they had no way out.
This page is for you if you’re Muslim, married under Muslim law, and trying to understand what a Syariah divorce actually looks like in Singapore. The first 10 minutes are free, and nothing commits you.
What a Syariah divorce in Singapore actually is
A Syariah divorce ends a Muslim marriage legally. It’s handled by the Syariah Court of Singapore, which sits at Lengkok Bahru, not the Family Justice Courts. The main law is the Administration of Muslim Law Act (AMLA), which sets out the rules and the court’s powers.
If you’re not Muslim, or if one of you is not Muslim, the case goes to the Family Justice Courts instead. See our civil divorce page.
There are four main ways a Syariah divorce is filed:
- Talak. The husband pronounces divorce. In Singapore, talak is only legally valid once registered with and confirmed by the Syariah Court. A talak said at home or over text does not end the marriage on its own.
- Fasakh. The wife asks the court to dissolve the marriage on specific grounds: non-maintenance, cruelty, desertion, imprisonment, impotence, or other serious failures in the husband’s duties.
- Cerai taklik. The wife applies to enforce a taklik, a condition the husband agreed to at the nikah (usually about maintenance or absence). If he’s broken it, the divorce takes effect.
- Khuluk. The wife offers to return the mas kahwin (the dowry) or a similar amount in exchange for the divorce, usually when the husband won’t say talak.
Most cases also deal with what Syariah law calls the ancillary matters: the practical decisions that follow.
- Iddah: the 3-month waiting period after divorce during which the wife cannot remarry.
- Nafkah iddah: maintenance the husband pays the wife during the iddah.
- Mutaah: a consolatory payment from the husband to the wife, calculated per day of the marriage.
- Custody and hadanah: who cares for the children.
- Division of the HDB flat and other shared property.
When to file for a Syariah divorce and when not yet
Before I take on any Syariah matter, I walk through a few questions.
- Has counselling happened? The Syariah Court will usually direct you to INSAN or PPIS for Marriage Counselling before it hears the case, except in urgent cases like serious abuse. It’s not about pushing you to stay. It’s about making the decision calmly.
- Is it safe at home? If there is hitting, threats, or financial control, tell me at the first meeting. A Personal Protection Order from the Family Justice Courts may come first, even for a Muslim couple. The two courts run in parallel on safety issues.
- Is this a divorce or an annulment? If the marriage was never valid from the start (e.g. fraud, underage, already married to someone else), you may want an annulment instead. See our annulment page.
- Are you under the 3-year mark? Unlike civil divorce, Syariah divorce doesn’t have a strict 3-year wait. You can file sooner, but the court will still direct you through counselling first.
The three situations we see most often:
- Both agree. Fastest route. Often resolved at Mediation in a few sessions.
- He has said talak and she wants it registered. Usually straightforward. The court confirms the talak and sorts out iddah, mutaah, and the flat.
- She wants out, he refuses. Fasakh, cerai taklik, or khuluk. Longer, more hearings, but the law is clear that she has a route.
For a deeper look, see our guides on understanding Syariah divorce and 6 things husbands should know about Syariah divorce in Singapore.
What to expect from a Singapore Syariah divorce, honestly
I’d rather be straight with you now than have you surprised six months in.
How long it takes.
A simple, agreed Syariah divorce usually takes 6 to 10 months from filing to the Certificate of Divorce. A contested case, where iddah money, mutaah, custody, or the HDB flat are in dispute, runs 10 to 18 months. The Syariah Court requires counselling and at least one Case Conference and Mediation before a hearing. You can’t skip these stages.
How much it costs.
An uncontested Syariah divorce runs S$2,000 to S$3,800 all-in, including the court’s filing fees. A contested case runs S$4,500 to S$9,000 depending on how hard the ancillary matters are fought. We give you a written price cap before any paid work begins. The 10-min Syariah Divorce Discovery Session is always free. If your income qualifies, the Legal Aid Bureau can help pay for part of the work. I’ll flag it during the session if it applies.
What’s the hard part.
Two things, usually.
One, showing the figures. To work out mutaah and nafkah iddah, you’ll both need to show payslips, CPF, and bank statements. It feels invasive. That’s normal, and we only share what the court needs.
Two, if you have children, counselling and the waiting can wear you down. Both INSAN and PPIS know this, and they move through it as gently as they can. If you need a counsellor of your own outside the Syariah Court process, we know good ones and can introduce you.
How we handle Syariah divorce at A.W. Law
A few things we do differently:
- One lawyer, from start to end. Whoever takes your first meeting handles the case through to the Certificate of Divorce and the ancillary orders.
- Bahasa when you need it. Malay throughout, whether in the office, on the phone, or in court. Wahab and Hasif both speak it.
- Letters in simple terms — in English or Malay. Every document explained before you sign.
- WhatsApp until 10pm on weekdays. Family matters don’t respect office hours, especially right after a hard conversation at home.
- No pushing. If I think the marriage can still be worked on, or if an annulment fits better than divorce, I’ll say so.
We’re at 133 New Bridge Road, #20-03 Chinatown Point. Two minutes’ walk from Chinatown MRT, Exit E. Walk in most afternoons between 2pm and 5pm on weekdays.
What happens next
If the marriage is over under Muslim law, the next step is simple. Book a free 10-min Syariah Divorce Discovery Session using the form on this page, or message us on WhatsApp using the button anywhere on the screen.
You’ll leave knowing which type of Syariah divorce fits your facts, a likely timeline, a cost range, and a short list of things to gather. Nothing commits you.