Estate & Family Protection · Quick Check

If you passed away suddenly... would your family be protected?

Answer up to 10 focused questions to see how ready you really are — and where your family may face stress, delay or dispute.

See your estate readiness score instantly. Spot hidden risks like guardianship, faraid surprises and frozen accounts. Optional WhatsApp follow-up with our team for personalised guidance.
No IC or documents needed — just honest answers.

Step 1 · Estate & Family Protection Readiness Quiz

For each question, choose the answer that best describes your current situation. There is no “perfect” answer — we just want a realistic snapshot.

1. How important is it to you that your family is not burdened or stressed if something unexpected happens to you?
This sets the tone — we want to understand how seriously you view planning ahead.
2. Which best describes your current family situation?
This helps us understand which laws and risks affect you the most.
3. Do you currently have a valid, updated Will or Wasiat that reflects your present family and assets?
This is usually the foundation of any estate plan.
7. Does someone you trust know where to find your important documents?
For example: Will/Wasiat, land title, sale & purchase agreement, insurance policies, loan agreements.
8. Do you have any simple way for someone you trust to access important digital accounts if needed?
For example: email, online banking, investment apps, e-wallets, business platforms.
9. If you have a business, property with others, or complex family structure (divorce / stepchildren), do you have a clear written plan for what should happen?
If this doesn’t apply to you, you can choose Not applicable.
10. Have you clearly shared your main wishes with your spouse, children or parents?
At least in a basic conversation — it doesn’t have to be a big formal family meeting.
We use your answers to estimate whether your affairs are in order if something unexpected happens. This is an educational tool and not formal legal advice.

Bonus · Simple faraid-style children share tool

This tool shows how children’s shares are usually divided between sons and daughters (2:1 ratio between son and daughter), ignoring other heirs. It is for education only, not a formal fatwa or legal opinion.

Real-life faraid can involve spouse, parents, siblings and other heirs. Use this as a conversation starter — not a final ruling.