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Understanding how is a Turkish title inherited is essential for any heir, domestic or foreign, who needs to transfer a deceased person’s immovable property into their own name at the land registry. Turkey’s inheritance framework rests on a multi-stage process: obtaining a certificate of inheritance (veraset ilamı), filing an inheritance tax declaration with the Revenue Administration, securing a tax-clearance certificate, and finally completing the title deed transfer at the local Tapu Müdürlüğü. With 2026 bringing renewed legislative attention to inheritance and gift-tax thresholds, including discussion of a possible flat-rate levy, heirs who delay or misunderstand any step risk penalties, frozen assets and costly court proceedings.
Yes. Under the Turkish Civil Code, immovable property passes to legal heirs automatically upon the owner’s death through the principle of universal succession. No heir needs to “accept” the title for it to vest, but they must complete a formal transfer at the Tapu office before they can sell, mortgage or otherwise deal with the property in their own right.
If you have recently lost a relative who owned property in Turkey, here is what to do within the first 30 days:
Turkey’s succession regime is codified in Book III of the Turkish Civil Code (Türk Medeni Kanunu), accessible through the official legislation repository at mevzuat.gov.tr. The code establishes a system of universal succession: on death, all rights and obligations of the deceased transfer to heirs as an undivided whole. Heirs may include the surviving spouse, children and, where applicable, parents or more remote blood relatives, in a defined order of priority.
A valid will (vasiyetname) can alter the statutory distribution, but it cannot completely override forced-heirship rights (saklı pay). The Civil Code reserves a minimum share for the surviving spouse and descendants. Where no will exists, property is divided among legal heirs according to the statutory formula. Any will, whether handwritten, notarised or oral (the last being extremely rare and subject to strict conditions), must be opened by the competent Turkish court before the title deed transfer can proceed.
The certificate of inheritance, known as the veraset ilamı (also called mirasçılık belgesi), is the document that officially identifies each heir and their share. A Turkish civil court of peace (sulh hukuk mahkemesi) issues it upon application by any heir. For foreign nationals inheriting Turkish property, two pathways exist:
Heirs who need to coordinate wills for assets across multiple countries should plan for both jurisdictions simultaneously to avoid procedural bottlenecks.
A Turkish title is inherited through a sequential, seven-step workflow that moves from document assembly through tax clearance to final registration at the land registry. Skipping or re-ordering any step will stall the entire process. Below is the definitive title deed transfer Turkey procedure for 2026.
Before approaching any authority, gather the following core documents:
Where documents originate outside Turkey, each must be apostilled under the Hague Convention (or consularly legalised for non-Convention countries) and translated into Turkish by a sworn translator (yeminli tercüman). Translations are typically notarised at a Turkish notary or consulate.
Any heir, or their authorised representative, applies to the Turkish civil court of peace in the district where the deceased was last registered or, alternatively, in the district where the property is located. The application should include the death certificate, family-tree extract and identity documents listed above. If a will exists, the court opens and reads it as part of the same proceeding.
The court reviews the evidence and, once satisfied, issues the veraset ilamı. This document names every heir and states their fractional share. Processing times vary by court, but heirs should expect four to twelve weeks from filing to issuance. Courts in major cities such as Istanbul and Ankara often carry heavier dockets.
With the veraset ilamı in hand, each heir must file a Veraset ve İntikal Vergisi Beyannamesi (inheritance and transfer tax declaration) with the local tax office (vergi dairesi) in the jurisdiction where the property is situated. According to the Turkish Revenue Administration (Gelir İdaresi Başkanlığı, gib.gov.tr), heirs have a strict filing deadline:
Late filing attracts penalties and interest. The declaration reports the appraised value of each inherited asset. The tax office may accept the property’s declared value or commission its own valuation.
After processing the declaration, the tax office issues a formal assessment notice (vergi ihbarnamesi). The Veraset ve İntikal Vergisi is a progressive tax, and the rate applied depends on the total value of the estate received by each heir. Heirs may pay the assessed amount in a lump sum or, in many cases, arrange instalment payments over up to three years. The key point for property transfer after death in Turkey is that payment, or at minimum proof of a binding payment arrangement, must be confirmed before the Tapu office will proceed.
Once the inheritance tax is settled (or formally deferred under an approved plan), the heir requests a tax clearance certificate, colloquially known as the “no debt” or vergi borcu yoktur certificate, from the same tax office. This certificate confirms that the heir has no outstanding tax liabilities connected to the inheritance. The Tapu office will not register a transfer without it. Heirs should also confirm that any municipal property taxes (emlak vergisi) owed by the deceased have been paid or assumed, as some Tapu offices additionally request a municipal clearance.
Armed with the veraset ilamı, tax clearance certificate, identity documents and photographs, heirs apply in person, or through a notarised proxy, to the local Tapu Müdürlüğü where the property is registered. All heirs (or their proxies) must be present simultaneously unless a single heir holds powers of attorney from each co-heir. The Tapu office verifies the documents and, if everything is in order, registers the property in the heirs’ names.
Where the property is to remain in joint ownership, the deed is registered showing each heir’s fractional share. If the heirs have agreed to partition or to transfer the property to one heir (through a family settlement or renunciation), the corresponding agreement or renunciation deed is submitted at this stage.
The Tapu office charges a registration fee (tapu harcı). For inheritance transfers, the standard tapu harcı is calculated as a percentage of the property’s declared or assessed value. Heirs should also budget for a revolving-fund contribution (döner sermaye) payable at the Tapu counter. Once fees are paid, the new title deed is issued, typically on the same day, and the property is formally registered in the heir’s name. This completes the title deed transfer Turkey process.
For a broader overview of claiming an inheritance in Turkey, including bank-account and movable-asset procedures, see our guide on how to claim inheritance in Turkey (2026).
Turkey’s government has invested heavily in digitising land-registry services through the Web Tapu platform, accessible via the national e-Government portal at turkiye.gov.tr. For heirs, the platform offers several useful functions, though it does not yet replace the in-person Tapu office visit entirely for inheritance transfers.
Access to Web Tapu requires a Turkish e-Devlet account, which in turn requires either a Turkish ID number (T.C. kimlik numarası) or a foreign-identification number (yabancı kimlik numarası) issued by Turkish authorities. Foreign heirs who have never resided in or visited Turkey may not hold either number, meaning they must first apply through the nearest Turkish consulate or appoint a Turkish-based representative with an active e-Devlet account. Proxy-holders acting through Web Tapu should hold a notarised power of attorney specifying their authority to transact on the heir’s behalf.
Industry observers expect TKGM to expand fully online inheritance-transfer capabilities in the coming years, but as of mid-2026 the final registration step, where the Tapu officer verifies identities and signs off, remains an in-person requirement.
The Veraset ve İntikal Vergisi (inheritance and transfer tax) is the primary fiscal obligation heirs face, and misunderstanding its rules is the single most common reason property transfers after death in Turkey are delayed. Below are the essential points for 2026.
Every heir who receives any share of a Turkish estate, whether they are a Turkish citizen, a dual national or a foreign resident, must file the inheritance tax declaration. Turkish citizens are taxed on worldwide inherited assets; non-citizens are taxed only on assets located within Turkey. The filing deadlines of four, six or eight months (detailed in Step 3 above) run from the date of death, not from the date the veraset ilamı is issued. Missing these deadlines triggers automatic late-filing penalties plus daily interest.
The taxable base is the fair-market value of the inherited assets minus allowable deductions (debts of the deceased, funeral expenses, certain exempt amounts). The inheritance tax is progressive: lower-value estates attract a lower marginal rate, with rates increasing in bands as the value of the estate rises. Certain exemptions apply, for example, a portion of the inherited estate is exempt from tax altogether, and the exempt threshold is updated annually by the Revenue Administration. Heirs should consult the current year’s tariff published by gib.gov.tr, as the 2026 thresholds may differ from prior years.
During early 2026, Turkish fiscal-policy discussions included a proposal to introduce a flat 1% tax on inheritances and gifts, which would replace or supplement the existing progressive-rate structure. As of mid-2026, this proposal has been the subject of press commentary and parliamentary debate but has not been enacted into law. Heirs should treat the current progressive-rate system as the operative regime unless and until the Official Gazette publishes an enacted statute. Early indications suggest that any such change, if adopted, would likely apply prospectively, but this remains subject to legislative change and should be verified with local counsel before reliance.
Heirs sometimes confuse the Veraset ve İntikal Vergisi (inheritance tax, filed with the tax office) with the tapu harcı (title-deed transfer fee, paid at the Tapu office). These are separate obligations:
| Obligation | Authority | When Paid |
|---|---|---|
| Veraset ve İntikal Vergisi (inheritance tax) | Local tax office (vergi dairesi) / GIB | After filing the declaration and receiving the assessment, before or in parallel with Tapu application |
| Tapu harcı (title-deed registration fee) | Tapu Müdürlüğü (land registry) | At the point of registration, paid at the Tapu counter on the day of transfer |
| Emlak vergisi (annual property tax) | Municipality | Ongoing, any arrears of the deceased must be settled for clearance |
Failing to pay any of these can block the Tapu registration. Heirs who are also looking into residency by property purchase in Turkey should note that the residency application is a separate process from inheritance transfer and carries its own financial thresholds.
One of the most frequent questions heirs ask is how long the entire process takes. The answer depends on whether documents originate in Turkey or abroad, how quickly the court issues the veraset ilamı, and whether the tax office raises any queries. The comparison table below sets out realistic benchmarks.
| Action | Typical Timeframe | Common Cause of Delay |
|---|---|---|
| Court issues Veraset İlamı | 4–12 weeks | Missing original documents, need for all heirs’ IDs, foreign-document recognition proceedings |
| File inheritance tax declaration & receive assessment | 1–4 weeks after filing | Valuation disputes, late filing triggering penalty recalculations |
| Obtain tax clearance / “no debt” certificate | 1–3 weeks after payment | Outstanding municipal property taxes, unresolved bank freezes on estate accounts |
| Tapu registration into heirs’ names | 1–4 weeks after clearance (appointment-dependent) | Incorrect or incomplete documents, absence of one or more heirs, proxy notarisation errors |
Total estimated timeline: For a straightforward domestic case, heirs can expect completion in roughly three to five months. Cross-border cases involving foreign document recognition, translation and apostille commonly stretch to six to nine months or longer.
Indicative costs include court filing fees (modest), sworn-translation fees (per page), notary fees for powers of attorney, the inheritance tax itself (variable, based on estate value), and the tapu harcı registration fee. Heirs should obtain detailed fee estimates from their legal adviser early in the process.
Foreign heirs inheriting Turkish property face additional procedural layers. The recognition of foreign documents is the step that most frequently causes delays, so proactive preparation is critical.
If the deceased was a Turkish citizen (even if resident abroad), applying for the veraset ilamı directly in a Turkish court is usually faster and avoids the tanıma/tenfiz (recognition/enforcement) procedure. If the deceased was a foreign national and a probate decree has already been issued in their home jurisdiction, recognition of that decree through a Turkish court may be the more practical route, particularly when heirs have already completed proceedings abroad and wish to avoid duplicative litigation. Heirs with assets in multiple jurisdictions should consider reading more about how to coordinate wills for assets across multiple countries and the role of handwriting and signature examination on wills when will authenticity is challenged.
Navigating how is a Turkish title inherited requires careful coordination between courts, tax offices, the land registry and, for cross-border cases, consulates and foreign authorities. Missing a deadline or submitting an improperly authenticated document can add months to the process and trigger avoidable financial penalties. Heirs should begin assembling documents immediately after the death, confirm applicable tax-filing deadlines, and engage qualified legal counsel in Turkey to manage the workflow from veraset ilamı through to final Tapu registration.
For assistance finding a qualified practitioner, visit the Global Law Experts lawyer directory and filter by Turkey and inheritance law.
Disclaimer: This article provides general legal information current as of 31 May 2026. It does not constitute legal advice. Turkish inheritance law, tax rates, exemption thresholds and procedural requirements are subject to change. Readers should consult a qualified Turkish lawyer for advice tailored to their specific circumstances.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Büşra NİŞANCI at NISANCI | Attorneys at Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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