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11 November 2025How to Obtain a Certificate of Inheritance (Veraset İlamı) in Türkiye — Full Guide
Türeli & Ceylan Law Firm – Inheritance Law Services
1) What Is a Certificate of Inheritance?
A Certificate of Inheritance (“Veraset İlamı”) is an official document that identifies the lawful heirs of a deceased person and states each heir’s statutory share in the estate. Without this certificate, heirs generally cannot access bank accounts, register title transfers at the land registry, take possession of vehicles or company shares, or validly execute a distribution agreement.
Key points
- Issued by the Civil Court of Peace; notaries may also issue it to statutory heirs in straightforward cases.
- It serves as the starting point for almost all inheritance procedures (bank, title, and corporate records).
2) Legal Basis at a Glance
- Under Turkish Civil Code rules, inheritance passes to heirs automatically upon death; the certificate evidences this status to third parties (banks, land registry, registrars, etc.).
- Notaries can issue certificates to legal (statutory) heirs where no complex element exists; otherwise the court route is required.
3) Notary vs. Court: Which Route Should You Use?
Notary Route (fast-track, same day in many cases) — use when:
- All heirs are statutory heirs (spouse, children, parents, siblings as applicable).
- There is no will, no adoption complication, no foreign element (e.g., foreign nationality or death abroad), and no dispute.
Civil Court of Peace Route — use when:
- A will exists, there is an adopted heir, a foreign element (foreign heirs/decedent or death abroad), or any heirship dispute / complex family status (second marriage, recognition issues, etc.).
- You need the court to verify special relationships or to resolve uncertainty in the family registry.
- Representation by counsel is highly advisable to avoid procedural pitfalls and accelerate filings.
4) Step-by-Step Workflows
A) Notary Application (Statutory Heirs Only)
- Gather documents: population registry records (via e-Government or Population Directorate) + ID.
- Apply at any notary; request issuance for all heirs.
- Same-day issuance is common; review names/shares carefully.
- Obtain certified copies for subsequent transactions (banks, land registry, etc.).
B) Court Application (Civil Court of Peace)
- Prepare a petition (identifying decedent, date/place of death, heirs, and any special circumstances).
- Attach supporting documents (see Section 5).
- File at the competent Civil Court of Peace.
- The court examines civil registry data, wills, adoption or foreign documents; it may order additional inquiries.
- Decision is issued; collect the certificate from the court registry.
- Use certified copies for downstream procedures.
Timelines (practical ranges): Notary: same day–1 week. Court: typically 2–8 weeks depending on workload and complexity.
5) Required Documents
For Notary:
- National ID of the applicant heir.
- Population registry records (showing the family tree of the decedent and heirs).
- Death certificate information (usually visible in the registry extract).
For Court:
- Petition (application) signed by the applicant or attorney.
- Death certificate / population registry extracts for decedent and heirs.
- If any: copy of the will, adoption decision, marriage/divorce decisions, foreign civil status records.
- If foreign documents exist: certified translations and (where applicable) apostille/legalization.
6) What Can You Do with the Certificate?
Once issued, you may:
- Access bank accounts and request balance information; initiate release of funds.
- Commence title transfers at the land registry (intikal).
- Record transfers of vehicles with the relevant directorate.
- Apply to the trade registry for transfer of company shares.
- Request a tereke tespiti (estate inventory) and take legal action to collect receivables.
- Conclude a distribution agreement among heirs or file suits where agreement is not possible.
7) Special Situations & Practical Nuances
Will present: Notary route is not available. The court must examine the will’s validity and open it if not already opened.
Adopted children or recognition issues: Court must verify status from civil records or judgments.
Foreign heirs / decedent / death abroad:
- Court typically requires apostilled/legalized foreign records + sworn Turkish translations.
- Counsel can streamline reciprocity and document-trail issues.
Second marriages, predeceased heirs, stepchildren:
- Shares must be recalculated based on the statutory scheme; the court route prevents downstream contests.
Disputes among heirs:
- Even if one heir files, it is wise to notify others to minimize later objections; in contested settings, the court route is safer.
8) After the Certificate: Downstream Procedures Checklist
- Banks: Submit certificate + ID; request balances, account statements, and release forms.
- Land Registry: File intikal (inheritance transfer) with the certificate; coordinate inheritance tax prerequisites.
- Vehicles: Apply for transfer; ensure traffic insurance continuity.
- Companies: Update share ledgers; register at the trade registry if required; review articles for transfer mechanics.
- Estate Inventory (tereke tespiti): If assets/claims are uncertain, petition the Civil Court of Peace to identify and secure the estate.
- Inheritance tax: Plan filings and installments (see below).
9) Common Mistakes (and How to Avoid Them)
- Using the notary route despite a will: Causes rejection or later challenges — use the court.
- Ignoring foreign elements: Missing apostilles/translations delay proceedings — collect them early.
- Solo filing amid open disputes: Triggers objections later — document notifications and facts thoroughly.
- Overlooking special-status heirs (adopted child/second spouse): Leads to incorrect shares — verify the registry in detail.
- Relying on outdated registry data: Request the most recent extracts to capture marriages, divorces, births, deaths.
10) Frequently Asked Questions
Can a single heir obtain the certificate for everyone?
Yes. One heir may apply and obtain a certificate covering all heirs. Distribution, however, still requires consent of all heirs (or court-ordered partition).
Is a will compatible with a notary-issued certificate?
No. Any will mandates the court route.
Can a foreign-based heir complete the process remotely?
Yes. A power of attorney to a Turkish attorney enables remote completion, including court filings and post-certificate transfers.
What if the registry is wrong or incomplete?
The court can request corrections/clarifications; provide supporting judgments or evidence. Legal counsel is helpful here.
11) Sample Court Petition Skeleton (for Reference)
- Court: Civil Court of Peace of …
- Applicant: [Full name, ID, address]
- Decedent: [Full name, ID if known, date/place of death]
- Subject: Request for issuance of Certificate of Inheritance
- Facts: Family ties; death details; any special elements (will, adoption, foreign records).
- Legal basis: Relevant Civil Code provisions on heirship and issuance.
- Evidence: Population registry extracts, death certificate, will/adoption judgments (if any), translations/apostilles (if any).
- Request: Issuance of a certificate listing all lawful heirs and their statutory shares; issuance of certified copies.
12) Practical Timeline & Cost Notes (Indicative)
- Notary: Governmental fees + notary service fee; typically modest; issuance often same day.
- Court: Filing fees + service/postage + certified copies; timing 2–8 weeks depending on complexity/workload.
- Translations/apostilles: Budget separately for foreign documents.
13) How We Assist (End-to-End)
- Route selection: We determine whether notary or court is appropriate.
- File building: We obtain updated registry extracts, death records, and—where needed—foreign documents and translations.
- Representation: We prepare and file the petition, follow up with the court/registry, and collect certified copies.
- Downstream execution: We manage bank releases, land/vehicle/company transfers, inventory petitions, and coordinate inheritance tax filings.





