A Turkish inheritance lawyer is a legal professional who represents heirs, beneficiaries, and estate holders in succession matters governed by the Turkish Civil Code and the International Private and Civil Procedure Law. At Oznur & Partners, our Turkish inheritance lawyers guide international families through the full arc of an inheritance case, from obtaining the Certificate of Inheritance to resolving disputes that cross jurisdictions. Most foreign heirs assume that a property deed tells the full story. It rarely does.
Inheritance looks like a transfer of title, but it is a transfer of legal history. Every Turkish property carries a chain behind it: past heirs, unfiled claims, undocumented transfers, forced heirship shares that were never formally closed. A foreign heir who arrives only to complete a sale often discovers that the visible deed and the underlying legal reality are not the same document. This is precisely why sophisticated foreign investors increasingly ask, “Who actually owns the property I am about to inherit?” The answer lives in the inheritance chain, not the current title.
There is a paradox at the center of Turkish succession for non-resident heirs: the faster you act, the more you preserve, yet acting without the correct procedural sequence can forfeit rights that would otherwise have been protected. Speed and precision are not opposites here, they are the same discipline. Our Turkish inheritance lawyers structure inheritance work so that early steps protect later options, and every procedural decision is made with the end outcome already mapped.
⚖️ What Does a Turkish Inheritance Lawyer Actually Do?
A Turkish inheritance lawyer manages every procedural and substantive step that transforms a legal right of succession into enforceable ownership. This includes obtaining the Certificate of Inheritance (mirasçılık belgesi) from a notary or civil court, calculating statutory shares under Articles 495–501 of the Turkish Civil Code, filing or defending inheritance disputes, coordinating with the Land Registry Directorate (Tapu ve Kadastro Genel Müdürlüğü) for title transfers, and managing inheritance and transfer tax obligations (Veraset ve İntikal Vergisi) with tax authorities.
For foreign heirs, the role expands significantly. Cross-border cases involve document authentication through the Apostille Convention, certified Turkish translation by sworn translators, consular attestation for non-Apostille jurisdictions, and coordination with foreign probate proceedings already in progress. Under Article 20 of the International Private and Civil Procedure Law (Law No. 5718), the inheritance of immovable property located in Turkey is subject strictly to Turkish law, regardless of the deceased’s nationality or domicile. This single provision reshapes how every international estate must be handled, and it is the reason a Turkish inheritance lawyer with cross-border experience is not interchangeable with general-practice representation.
Beyond procedure, a Turkish inheritance lawyer performs a diagnostic function that most heirs underestimate. Before any transfer is filed, the lawyer traces the property’s ownership history backward, identifies unresolved claims from prior successions, verifies that no forced heirship rights have been silently breached, and confirms that the current deed reflects the legal truth and not merely the administrative surface. This diagnostic work is invisible on the title but decisive in litigation.
⚖️ Why Do Foreign Heirs Need a Turkish Inheritance Lawyer Specifically?
Foreign heirs need a Turkish inheritance lawyer because Turkish succession law is jurisdiction-bound in ways that surprise most international clients. A will validly drafted in London, New York, or Dubai does not automatically override Turkish rules for immovable property located in Turkey. Even a notarized foreign will, duly probated abroad, may be challenged or partially set aside in a Turkish court if it conflicts with mandatory reserved-share provisions (saklı pay) of the Turkish Civil Code.
Turkey sits at a jurisdictional intersection that few comparable markets occupy. It is a major real estate destination for Gulf investors, European retirees, Central Asian families, and Russian-speaking entrepreneurs. Istanbul alone registers a significant share of foreign property ownership nationally, and properties are frequently held across multiple heirs, family members, or corporate entities. When the owner passes, the resulting estate is rarely simple, rarely single-jurisdiction, and rarely without competing claims.
The practical consequence is that foreign heirs face three simultaneous legal environments: the law of their home jurisdiction, the law of the deceased’s nationality for movable assets, and Turkish law for immovable assets located in Turkey. Coordinating these three layers is not a translation task, it is a legal architecture task. A general-practice foreign lawyer cannot complete it alone, and a Turkish lawyer without cross-border experience cannot either. The work requires a Turkish inheritance lawyer who lives at the intersection of these systems. International families regularly ask, “What is the single most important thing a Turkish inheritance lawyer does that a foreign lawyer cannot?” The answer is reading the Turkish inheritance chain, not the translated document.

⚖️ Specialist Turkish Inheritance Lawyer vs General Practice Representation
Not every lawyer in Turkey who accepts inheritance cases is an inheritance specialist. The distinction matters because Turkish succession law carries procedural traps that general practitioners routinely miss. The difference between a specialist Turkish inheritance lawyer and a generalist is not reputation or billing rate. It is the number of cases per year, the depth of cross-border exposure, and the ability to anticipate outcomes rather than react to them.
A generalist handling a foreign heir’s file typically learns on the case. The Certificate of Inheritance is obtained, the tax declaration is filed, the title is transferred. On paper, the work is complete. In practice, the heir may have lost rights that were never surfaced: an unfiled claim from a co-heir abroad, a reserved-share violation in the deceased’s prior dispositions, a municipal zoning issue that changes the property’s value at sale. These are not hypothetical risks. They appear in a meaningful percentage of cross-border inheritance files where the lawyer lacked specialist depth.
A specialist Turkish inheritance lawyer operates differently. The file is not a sequence of forms to complete, it is a risk map to close. Before filing anything, the specialist traces the inheritance chain for at least two prior ownership transfers, cross-checks the deceased’s financial and property records for hidden assets, verifies that all potential heirs have been identified under Turkish statutory rules, and structures the case so that tax obligations, court deadlines, and Land Registry procedures align rather than conflict.
Comparison: General Practice vs Specialist Turkish Inheritance Lawyer
| Dimension | General Practice Lawyer | Specialist Turkish Inheritance Lawyer |
|---|---|---|
| Inheritance cases per year | 5–15, mixed practice | 50+, concentrated practice |
| Cross-border experience | Occasional, reactive | Regular, proactive structuring |
| Inheritance chain verification | Current title only | Minimum 2 prior transfers traced |
| Forced heirship analysis | Applied when raised | Pre-assessed before filing |
| Document authentication | Per-case inquiry | Apostille / consular workflow standardized |
| Language capacity | Turkish primary | English working, cross-border drafting |
| Timeline accuracy | Estimates based on averages | Case-specific, risk-adjusted |
⚖️ How to Select a Turkish Inheritance Lawyer for a Cross-Border Case
Selecting the right Turkish inheritance lawyer for a cross-border matter is not primarily a question of reputation or pricing. It is a question of procedural fit. The following criteria separate lawyers who can handle international inheritance from those who should not.
Cross-border case load. The lawyer should handle cross-border inheritance matters as a regular, not occasional, part of their practice. Ask directly how many foreign-heir cases the lawyer has completed in the past twelve months and what jurisdictions were involved.
Language infrastructure. Working English capacity is essential, not merely translation support. The lawyer drafting the submissions, communicating with the heir, and representing in court should be able to operate in both Turkish legal terminology and cross-border legal concepts without an intermediary.
Document authentication workflow. A lawyer accustomed to international cases has a standardized workflow for Apostille authentication, consular attestation for non-Apostille jurisdictions, and sworn translation. If these elements are treated as case-by-case novelties, the lawyer is not a regular international practitioner.
Remote engagement capacity. A foreign heir should not be required to travel to Turkey to initiate or complete most aspects of an inheritance case. Power of Attorney procedures, digital documentation, and remote communication protocols should be established. Certificate of Inheritance applications, tax declarations, Land Registry transfers, and most court filings can be handled under Power of Attorney without the heir’s physical presence.
Multi-disciplinary coordination. Inheritance cases rarely stay in a single legal discipline. They touch real estate, tax, corporate, and occasionally criminal law. A lawyer with access to integrated practice areas can coordinate these internally. Outsourcing introduces friction and cost.
Transparent fee structure. Fee arrangements should be clear before engagement. For complex inheritance matters, hybrid structures combining fixed fees for predictable procedures and hourly or success-based fees for litigation often serve both parties. Avoid lawyers who quote only hourly without scope definition.
Foreign heirs regularly ask, “How do I know if a Turkish inheritance lawyer has handled cases from my jurisdiction before?” The direct answer is to ask, and to evaluate whether the lawyer’s response reflects genuine procedural familiarity or general reassurance. Pattern recognition is not transferable from one legal system to another.
⚖️ Common Mistakes in Turkish Inheritance Cases
Most foreign heirs who lose money or rights in a Turkish inheritance matter do not lose them through poor representation. They lose them through good representation that arrived too late, or through procedural decisions made in the wrong sequence. The patterns below appear consistently in files that reach our Turkish inheritance lawyers after damage has already been done.
Mistake 1: Treating the title deed as the full legal picture. A current deed shows who owns the property today. It does not show who has an unresolved claim against that ownership from a prior succession. A property that appears clean may carry a dormant inheritance claim from twenty years ago, reactivated by the current sale or death.
Mistake 2: Relying on a foreign will for Turkish immovable property. A will drafted and probated in a foreign jurisdiction may govern movable assets, but Turkish immovable property is governed by Turkish law under IPCP Article 20. Foreign heirs who arrive with a notarized foreign will often discover that reserved-share heirs under Turkish law can challenge specific dispositions, regardless of the will’s foreign validity.
Mistake 3: Underestimating the inheritance tax timeline. Turkish inheritance tax (Veraset ve İntikal Vergisi) must be declared within four months if the deceased and the heir are both in Turkey, and within six months if the heir resides abroad. The tax rate ranges from 1% to 10% depending on the degree of kinship and asset value. Heirs who delay declaration face late-filing penalties and interest charges that accumulate independently of the main case.
Mistake 4: Accepting joint inheritance without a structural plan. When multiple heirs jointly inherit a Turkish property, they hold it as a community of heirs (miras ortaklığı). Any co-heir can force dissolution of this community through an İzale-i Şuyu partition lawsuit, which typically results in a court-ordered public auction at below-market value.
Mistake 5: Missing the statute of limitations on inheritance disputes. Certain inheritance claims in Turkey are subject to strict deadlines. Challenges to a will based on incapacity, for instance, must be brought within one year from the discovery of the grounds and within a maximum period defined by law. Heirs who spend months in informal negotiation often lose the right to litigate entirely.
Mistake 6: Completing a title transfer before confirming the inheritance chain. Once a foreign heir receives the Certificate of Inheritance and transfers the title into their own name, a later-discovered claim from another heir becomes significantly harder to resolve. The correct sequence is diagnostic first, transfer second. The reverse sequence creates avoidable litigation exposure.
⚖️ Legal Protection Mechanisms Your Turkish Inheritance Lawyer Will Use
Turkish inheritance law provides a structured framework of protection mechanisms for heirs, beneficiaries, and estate holders. Understanding which mechanism applies to which situation is the core of effective representation. Each requires correct procedural invocation within specific deadlines. None operate automatically.
Certificate of Inheritance (Mirasçılık Belgesi)
The foundational document for any succession matter in Turkey. It identifies the legal heirs and their proportional shares under Turkish law. Foreign heirs can obtain it from a Turkish civil peace court (Sulh Hukuk Mahkemesi) or, in simpler cases, from a Turkish notary. Without this certificate, no property transfer, bank account access, or asset realization is legally possible.
Forced Heirship Protection (Saklı Pay)
Turkish law protects descendants, the surviving spouse, and under specific conditions parents, through mandatory reserved shares that cannot be bypassed by will. The reserved share is calculated as a fraction of the heir’s statutory share. If a will violates reserved-share rights, the affected heir may file a Tenkis Davası to restore their protected portion.
Partition Lawsuit (İzale-i Şuyu)
When co-heirs cannot agree on how to divide or use jointly inherited property, any co-heir may initiate a partition lawsuit. The court may order physical partition if feasible, or public auction if not. Strategic timing of this action, and defense against it, frequently determines the value realized from the inheritance.
Will Contest (Vasiyetnamenin İptali)
Heirs may challenge a will on grounds including lack of mental capacity, undue influence, formal defects in execution, or violation of reserved-share rules. Each ground carries its own evidentiary burden and deadline. A specialist Turkish inheritance lawyer assesses the viability of grounds before filing, because unsuccessful challenges can carry cost consequences.
Annulment of Fraudulent Transfers (Muvazaa Davası)
If the deceased made transfers during their lifetime designed to deprive heirs of statutory or reserved shares, heirs may challenge such transfers through a simulation lawsuit. The court evaluates intent and effect on heirs’ rights. Asset tracing, often overlooked by generalists, is decisive in these cases.
⚖️ When to Engage a Turkish Inheritance Lawyer
The question of timing is more consequential in Turkish inheritance matters than most heirs realize. Engaging a Turkish inheritance lawyer at the wrong moment does not merely delay the process. It can close procedural doors that were open at an earlier stage.
Before the death of a Turkish property owner. Proactive engagement allows structured estate planning. A Turkish will, coordinated with foreign estate planning, reduces the likelihood of cross-border conflict. Reserved-share obligations can be anticipated and accommodated. Asset transfer structures such as lifetime gifts or corporate holdings can be designed for tax and succession efficiency.
Immediately after death. The first two weeks are critical. The Certificate of Inheritance application should be initiated, inheritance tax deadlines calculated, and a hold placed on any asset disposal by other heirs until the full estate picture is mapped. Heirs who wait three or six months often find that decisions have been made, or positions taken, that are difficult to reverse.
When a dispute is emerging. Most inheritance disputes go through a pre-litigation phase where tension accumulates but positions are not yet fixed. Engaging a Turkish inheritance lawyer at this stage allows negotiation leverage, evidence preservation, and procedural positioning. Waiting until litigation is filed surrenders strategic initiative to the other party.
When a sale or transfer is contemplated. If an heir intends to sell inherited Turkish property, or to consolidate shares among co-heirs, pre-transaction legal review closes risks that post-transaction litigation cannot undo. This is especially true for properties with complex inheritance chains or multiple prior ownership transfers.
International investors routinely ask, “When is the right moment to bring in a Turkish inheritance lawyer?” The operational answer is always the same: earlier than feels necessary. The cost of early legal review is a fraction of the cost of late-stage correction.
⚖️ Why International Families Choose Our Turkish Inheritance Lawyers
Oznur & Partners is an Istanbul-based legal practice with a dedicated inheritance team serving foreign heirs, international families, and cross-border estate holders. Our Turkish inheritance lawyers operate as part of a fully integrated practice covering real estate, tax, corporate, and dispute resolution, allowing complex succession matters to be handled without external referrals.
Our inheritance practice is built around three principles. First, diagnostic depth before procedural action, because the quality of the eventual outcome is determined by what is identified in the first thirty days. Second, language and jurisdictional fluency, because a cross-border inheritance case breaks down when counsel cannot operate in both legal cultures simultaneously. Third, remote-first engagement, because foreign heirs should not be required to travel to Turkey to resolve a Turkish succession matter, except when specific personal-presence requirements mandate it.
We serve clients across Turkey, including Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir, Antalya, Bodrum, and other regions where foreign-owned property is concentrated. Our working languages include English and Turkish, and we coordinate regularly with foreign counsel in the United Kingdom, Germany, the Gulf Cooperation Council, Central Asia, and the Russian-speaking jurisdictions.
⚖️ How Our Remote-First Practice Works
Our Turkish inheritance lawyers are structured to handle cases for clients who may never set foot in Turkey during the entire process. The operational model below reflects how most of our international inheritance files are executed in practice.
Initial consultation. Remote consultation via video call or secure written exchange. Document review, preliminary risk assessment, and scope definition typically completed within the first week.
Power of Attorney. The foreign heir executes a Power of Attorney in their home jurisdiction before a local notary, authenticates it through the Apostille Convention or the relevant Turkish consulate for non-Apostille jurisdictions, and the document is translated by a sworn translator in Turkey. This single document enables remote execution of most subsequent steps.
Certificate of Inheritance. Obtained from a Turkish notary or civil peace court, depending on case complexity. Our lawyers file the application, represent the heir, and deliver the certificate without the heir’s physical presence.
Inheritance tax declaration. Filed with the relevant tax office within statutory deadlines. Tax calculation, declaration, and payment coordinated through the Power of Attorney structure.
Title transfer or dispute management. Depending on case type, our lawyers handle Land Registry transfer, dispute negotiation, or court representation. All procedural filings are executed locally while the heir remains abroad.
Progress reporting. Structured reporting on a defined cadence. Foreign heirs receive written updates with case status, next steps, and decision points requiring their input.
The only step that may require physical presence in Turkey is biometric registration for citizenship-related procedures, which applies to a narrow subset of inheritance matters. For pure inheritance files, no physical presence is typically required.
⚖️ Who Our Turkish Inheritance Lawyers Represent
Our inheritance practice serves three primary client segments, each with distinct procedural patterns and strategic needs.
Foreign heirs with inherited Turkish property. Our largest client segment. Non-resident heirs, often second-generation family members or surviving spouses of deceased property owners, who need to navigate Turkish succession procedures from abroad. Case complexity ranges from single-property residential inheritance to multi-asset commercial portfolios. Our typical client in this segment resides in the United Kingdom, Germany, the Gulf states, Central Asia, or North America.
Foreign property investors planning succession. Non-Turkish nationals who own property or other assets in Turkey and want to structure succession proactively. Typical concerns include coordination between home-jurisdiction estate planning and Turkish legal requirements, reserved-share implications under Turkish law, and tax-efficient transfer structures.
Turkish estate holders with foreign heirs. Turkish nationals, often high-net-worth individuals or family business owners, whose heirs are non-resident or hold foreign nationality. Strategic questions include how to ensure that foreign heirs can efficiently inherit Turkish assets, how to coordinate with foreign tax and legal systems, and how to minimize cross-border succession friction.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions About Turkish Inheritance Lawyers
✅ Can a foreigner inherit property in Turkey?
Yes, foreigners can inherit both movable and immovable property located in Turkey. Under Article 20 of the International Private and Civil Procedure Law (IPCP), the inheritance of immovable property in Turkey is governed exclusively by Turkish law, regardless of the deceased’s or heir’s nationality. Movable assets are typically governed by the law of the deceased’s nationality.
✅ What is the inheritance tax rate in Turkey for foreigners?
Turkish inheritance tax ranges from 1% to 10%, depending on the degree of kinship between the heir and the deceased and the value of the inherited asset. The tax must be declared within four months if the heir resides in Turkey, and within six months if the heir resides abroad. Late declaration triggers penalties and interest that accumulate independently of the main case.
✅ How long does the Turkish inheritance process take?
A straightforward Turkish inheritance case involving a single uncontested property and clearly identified heirs typically takes 3 to 6 months from Certificate of Inheritance application to completed title transfer. Contested cases, including partition disputes or will challenges, generally extend to 18 to 30 months. Cases reaching the Court of Cassation may take longer. Timeline depends on case complexity, heir coordination, and court caseload.
✅ Does a foreign will apply to Turkish property?
A foreign will does not automatically govern Turkish immovable property. Under Article 20 IPCP, Turkish law applies to immovable assets in Turkey regardless of where the will was drafted. A foreign will may be introduced as evidence of the deceased’s intent, but dispositions that violate Turkish reserved-share rules (saklı pay) can be reduced or set aside by a Turkish court.
✅ What is the Certificate of Inheritance and why is it essential?
The Certificate of Inheritance (mirasçılık belgesi) is an official document issued by a Turkish notary or civil peace court identifying the legal heirs and their proportional shares. It is essential for any inheritance action in Turkey, including property transfer, bank account access, and asset realization. Without it, heirs cannot legally act on the inheritance.
✅ Can I manage a Turkish inheritance case remotely without traveling to Turkey?
Yes, most Turkish inheritance cases can be managed remotely through a Power of Attorney. The heir executes the POA before a local notary, authenticates it through Apostille or Turkish consulate, and a Turkish inheritance lawyer handles all procedural steps locally. Physical presence is generally not required for Certificate of Inheritance applications, tax declarations, Land Registry transfers, or most court proceedings.
✅ What happens if co-heirs cannot agree on how to divide Turkish property?
Any co-heir may file a partition lawsuit (İzale-i Şuyu) to dissolve the community of heirs. The court may order physical partition if feasible, or public auction if not. Because public auctions typically result in below-market prices, strategic pre-litigation negotiation usually produces better outcomes for all parties.
✅ Can a foreign heir contest a Turkish will?
Yes, foreign heirs have standing to contest a Turkish will on grounds including lack of mental capacity, undue influence, formal defects, or violation of reserved-share rules. Each ground has its own evidentiary standards and deadlines. A specialist Turkish inheritance lawyer evaluates the viability of a contest before filing, because unsuccessful challenges can carry cost consequences.
✅ What are reserved shares under Turkish inheritance law?
Reserved shares (saklı pay) are mandatory minimum inheritance portions protected for specific heirs, primarily descendants, the surviving spouse, and under certain conditions parents. These shares cannot be overridden by will. If a will or lifetime transfer violates reserved-share rights, affected heirs may file a Tenkis Davası to restore their protected portion.
✅ How are inheritance disputes resolved in Turkey?
Inheritance disputes in Turkey may be resolved through negotiation, structured mediation, or litigation before civil courts. Many disputes are resolved before formal proceedings through legal negotiation. When litigation is necessary, cases proceed through the civil peace court or civil court of first instance, with appeals available to regional courts and the Court of Cassation. Early legal intervention often produces faster and less costly outcomes than reactive litigation.
⚖️ Related Legal Resources
🔹 Inheritance Law Framework
Inheritance Law in Turkey, our hub resource covering the full legal framework of Turkish succession, including the Turkish Civil Code, IPCP Article 20, the Certificate of Inheritance process, inheritance tax obligations, and the procedural sequence from death to completed title transfer.
🔹 Foreign Heir Guides
Inheritance Law for Foreigners in Turkey, a dedicated resource for non-resident heirs covering Certificate of Inheritance procedures, inheritance tax rates (1–10%), cross-border documentation, and common procedural pitfalls.
How Foreigners Inherit Property in Turkey, a scenario-focused guide addressing real estate inheritance specifically, including Apostille requirements, sworn translation workflow, and Land Registry procedures for foreign heirs.
Foreign Will and Turkish Property, an analysis of how a will drafted and probated abroad interacts with Turkish immovable property under Article 20 IPCP, including reserved share conflicts and procedural steps for introducing a foreign will in Turkish proceedings.
🔹 Dispute Resolution and Litigation
Inheritance Dispute Resolution in Turkey, our specialist page on inheritance litigation covering will contests, reserved-share restoration, partition proceedings, and fraudulent transfer annulment for cross-border cases.
Muris Muvazaası and Inheritance Fraud, a detailed analysis of simulation lawsuits used to annul pre-death transfers designed to deprive heirs of statutory or reserved shares.
🔹 Legal Framework Reference
Turkish Inheritance Law, a statutory reference covering the Turkish Civil Code Articles 495 through 682, heir classes, reserved share calculations, and the interaction between Turkish succession law and foreign legal systems.
Schedule a Legal Consultation
If you are a foreign heir navigating a Turkish inheritance matter, planning succession for Turkish-based assets, or managing a cross-border estate with heirs abroad, our Turkish inheritance lawyers in Istanbul are available for an initial consultation.
⚖️ The Role of a Turkish Inheritance Lawyer in Preserving Legal History
A Turkish inheritance case is not a transfer of property. It is a transfer of legal history. What a foreign heir inherits is not merely a deed or a bank balance, it is the full legal biography of every asset, including every unresolved claim that the prior generation left behind. The property looks simple on the surface. The inheritance chain beneath it rarely is.
This is why timing, precision, and diagnostic depth matter more than any single procedural step. A Turkish inheritance lawyer who understands cross-border succession does not arrive to complete a form. They arrive to read a history, identify what was never closed, and structure the path forward so that the heir receives not only the asset but the legal clarity that makes the asset usable, transferable, and secure. The visible transfer is the last step. The real work happens before it.
The authoritative text of the Turkish Civil Code (Law No. 4721) is available through the Republic of Turkey Ministry of Justice legislation portal at mevzuat.gov.tr, and the International Private and Civil Procedure Law (Law No. 5718) through the same source.

