- →Halala is often weaponised against vulnerable women.
- →There is a crucial difference between a genuine part of the deen, where, after a final irrevocable divorce, a woman would first be genuinely married to another man (a real, sincere marriage), and only if that marriage naturally ends could remarriage to her first husband become possible, and the condemned scam of a pre-arranged, intention-of-divorce halala.
- →The arranged version is condemned in the strongest terms, with narrations cursing those involved, and overwhelmingly exploits women.
- →Pressure toward it is a red flag; the actual ruling for any divorce situation must come from a trustworthy scholar.
"Halala" is a word that gets weaponised against vulnerable women, usually divorced women who are desperate to return to a former husband and are told they must do something deeply wrong to make it possible. Because this topic is so often used to exploit people, it deserves a clear, honest, protective explanation. I'm not issuing any ruling here; I'm drawing the crucial line between a genuine part of the deen and a condemned scam, and pointing you to a scholar for your situation.
The background: why the question even arises
In Islam, after a final, irrevocable divorce (the point reached after the third divorce), a couple cannot simply remarry each other immediately. The established understanding is that the woman would first have to be genuinely married to another man in the normal way, and only if that second marriage naturally ends, through his death or a genuine divorce, could she then, in principle, remarry her first husband. This is part of the deen, and its wisdom includes making divorce a weighty, not casually reversible, matter.
Crucially, that intervening marriage is meant to be a real, sincere marriage entered for its own sake, not a staged transaction.
The scam: pre-arranged "halala"
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Here's where the abuse comes in. A "halala marriage" in the corrupt sense is a pre-arranged setup: a man is found to marry the woman temporarily, with the secret intention that he'll divorce her quickly so she can return to her first husband. Sometimes money changes hands. Sometimes she's pressured or exploited, including sexually, under religious cover.
This arranged, intention-of-divorce version is condemned in the strongest terms. There are well-known narrations in which the Prophet cursed those involved in this kind of arrangement. Far from being a pious solution, scholars treat the deliberately staged halala as a serious sin and a corruption of the very marriage it pretends to be. It is, bluntly, a scam dressed in religious language, and it overwhelmingly harms women.
What this means for you, practically
- If anyone tells you that you must do a quick, arranged marriage-and-divorce to fix a situation, be extremely wary. That arranged version is exactly what's condemned, not a requirement of the deen.
- Don't let religious vocabulary disarm your alarm. Pressure, secrecy, money, and a planned quick divorce are signs of exploitation, not piety.
- Get your actual situation to a trustworthy scholar. Questions about divorce, whether a divorce was final, what your real options are, are genuine fiqh matters that depend on exact details (how many divorces, in what manner, and so on) and differ by school. Do not let a self-interested party be your source of rulings; go to a qualified, trustworthy scholar.
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A protective bottom line
There's a world of difference between the deen's actual provision, a genuine, sincere later marriage that happens to end, after which remarriage to a first husband may become possible, and the condemned scam of a pre-arranged, intention-of-divorce "halala" used to exploit vulnerable women. The first is part of the religion; the second is cursed in the texts. If you're being pushed toward the second, that pressure is the red flag, not the answer. Rebuild your life on something real, and take your specific case to a scholar you can trust, not to anyone who benefits from your compliance.
Frequently asked questions
What is halala in Islam? After a final, irrevocable divorce, the established understanding is that a woman cannot immediately remarry her former husband; she would first have to be genuinely married to another man, and only if that marriage naturally ends could remarriage to the first become possible. That intervening marriage must be a real, sincere marriage, not a staged one. For your specific situation, consult a trustworthy scholar.
Is arranged halala allowed in Islam? No. A pre-arranged "halala", where a man marries a woman temporarily with the secret intention of divorcing her quickly so she can return to her first husband, is condemned in the strongest terms, with well-known narrations in which the Prophet cursed those involved. Scholars treat it as a serious sin and a corruption of marriage, and it overwhelmingly exploits women.
Someone is pressuring me into a halala arrangement, what should I do? Be very wary, the arranged, intention-of-divorce version is exactly what the deen condemns, not what it requires. Treat pressure, secrecy, money, and a planned quick divorce as signs of exploitation. Take your actual situation to a qualified, trustworthy scholar rather than to anyone who benefits from your compliance.
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From the Seerah
Ali och Fatimah — Profetens ﷺ egen dotter
När Ali ibn Abi Talib (radiyallahu anhu) ville fria till Fatimah (radiyallahu anha), var hans mahr två rustningar. Profeten ﷺ frågade honom om hans ekonomi, hans planer och hans deen. Han testade Ali — inte för att försvåra, utan för att säkerställa att hans dotter skulle få en god make.
an-Nasa'i, Sunan al-Kubra
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Common questions
After a final, irrevocable divorce, the established understanding is that a woman cannot immediately remarry her former husband; she would first have to be genuinely married to another man, and only if that marriage naturally ends could remarriage to the first become possible. That intervening marriage must be a real, sincere marriage, not a staged one. For your specific situation, consult a trustworthy scholar.
No. A pre-arranged halala, where a man marries a woman temporarily with the secret intention of divorcing her quickly so she can return to her first husband, is condemned in the strongest terms, with well-known narrations in which the Prophet cursed those involved. Scholars treat it as a serious sin and a corruption of marriage, and it overwhelmingly exploits women.
Be very wary, the arranged, intention-of-divorce version is exactly what the deen condemns, not what it requires. Treat pressure, secrecy, money, and a planned quick divorce as signs of exploitation. Take your actual situation to a qualified, trustworthy scholar rather than to anyone who benefits from your compliance.
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