Divorce aux EAU 2026 : Lois, procédure et garde des enfants pour expatriés
Cet article fournit une analyse juridique sur ce sujet et son impact pour les r’esidents et entreprises aux EAU. Pour l’analyse d’etaill’ee, veuillez consulter la version anglaise.
For Muslim couples, divorce is handled by the UAE Personal Status Court under Sharia principles. A husband can initiate talaq (unilateral divorce) subject to mandatory court-supervised reconciliation. A wife can seek khul’ (divorce by returning the mahr/dowry) or fask (judicial dissolution on grounds of harm or non-maintenance). Courts typically require two reconciliation sessions before granting a divorce. Child custody defaults to mothers for young children — boys until age 13, girls until age 15 — after which custody may transfer to the father, though courts have full discretion.
For non-Muslim expatriates, Federal Decree-Law No. 41 of 2022 provides a civil divorce framework: no fault needs to be established, marital assets are divided equally by default, and custody is determined purely on the child’s best interests without religious considerations. Non-Muslims can alternatively elect to apply their home country’s law if both parties agree. Our family law team handles divorce proceedings for all nationalities and assists with cross-border asset division and international child relocation disputes.
Key Legal Points to Know
- Non-Muslim expats can now divorce under UAE civil law with equal asset division and best-interests custody
- Muslim divorce requires court-supervised reconciliation sessions before the divorce is granted
- Child custody defaults follow Sharia age thresholds but courts have full discretion in the child's best interests
- International asset division and child relocation orders are enforceable under UAE court orders
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Source: UAE Legal News — View original article | This article is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice.
