Child Adoption and Guardianship in Pakistan

For families wishing to give a child a permanent, loving home, and for those handling the care of a child who is not their biological offspring, the legal framework in Pakistan differs from the formal "adoption" recognised in many Western countries. Pakistani law, reflecting Islamic principles, does not provide for adoption in the sense of fully severing a child's lineage and treating them as a biological child; instead, it provides for guardianship, through which a person assumes legal responsibility for a child's care and upbringing. Global Law Company advises families and individuals across Pakistan, including overseas Pakistanis and foreign nationals, on the guardianship process that serves the function of adoption.
Understanding this distinction is the starting point, because it shapes everything that follows, the process, the rights conferred, the child's status, and what is possible for families who wish to take a child abroad. We guide families through the process with care for the child's welfare and the family's wishes.
Adoption and guardianship in Pakistani law
Pakistani law does not have a formal adoption statute that replicates Western-style adoption; under Islamic law, a child retains their biological lineage and does not become, in law, the biological child of those who raise them. What the law provides instead is guardianship under the Guardians and Wards Act 1890, through which a court appoints a guardian of the person (and, where relevant, the property) of a minor. A guardianship order gives the guardian legal authority and responsibility for the child's care and upbringing, and in practice it serves the function that families seeking to "adopt" are looking for, while preserving the child's lineage and inheritance position as the law requires. We explain these distinctions clearly so families understand what guardianship does and does not confer.
The guardianship process
A person wishing to become the guardian of a child applies to the Guardian Court (the Family Court exercising guardianship jurisdiction) under the Guardians and Wards Act 1890. The court's paramount consideration is the welfare of the minor, and it examines the suitability of the proposed guardian, the circumstances of the child, and the consent of those whose consent is relevant. We prepare and present the application, assemble the evidence of the applicant's suitability and the child's welfare, and guide the family through the court process to the grant of guardianship. Where the child is in the care of a welfare institution or has been surrendered, we advise on the additional steps and consents involved.
Overseas Pakistanis and foreign nationals
Overseas Pakistani families and, in some circumstances, foreign nationals seek to take guardianship of a child in Pakistan and, often, to take the child to live abroad. These cases add a layer of complexity, because the guardianship order must be obtained in Pakistan and then satisfy the immigration and recognition requirements of the destination country, which has its own rules on bringing a child in under a guardianship rather than a full adoption. We advise overseas and foreign families on obtaining guardianship in Pakistan with the destination country's requirements in mind, and we coordinate with the documentation, including court permission to remove the child from the jurisdiction, that international placements require.
Welfare, consents, and safeguards
Because these matters concern vulnerable children, the law and the courts apply safeguards, and getting the consents and welfare considerations right is essential to a sound, unchallengeable guardianship. We advise on the consents required, on the welfare evidence the court will expect, and on the safeguards that protect both the child and the guardians from later challenge. We approach these matters with sensitivity to the child's interests, which are paramount, and to the deep wishes of the families involved, ensuring the process is conducted properly and the resulting arrangement is secure.
How Global Law Company helps
We advise families and individuals, including overseas Pakistanis and foreign nationals, on guardianship of children in Pakistan: explaining the distinction between adoption and guardianship, preparing and presenting the guardianship application, addressing welfare and consent requirements, and handling the additional steps for taking a child abroad. We approach these deeply personal matters with care and discretion, focused on the child's welfare and the family's wishes within what the law allows.
Why choose Global Law Company
Guardianship and "adoption" matters reward advisers who understand both the legal framework and the sensitivity involved, and who can handle the cross-border dimension for families abroad, and clients value that we bring all of this. We explain what is legally possible, conduct the guardianship process correctly, and address the international requirements where a child is to be taken overseas. For families seeking to give a child a home, that careful, knowledgeable guidance is exactly what is needed.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Not in the Western sense of severing lineage. Pakistani law, reflecting Islamic principles, provides for guardianship under the Guardians and Wards Act 1890, which serves the function of adoption while preserving the child's lineage.
A court order under the Guardians and Wards Act 1890 appointing a guardian of a minor's person (and sometimes property), conferring legal authority and responsibility for the child's care.
Yes. We advise overseas Pakistanis and, in some cases, foreign nationals on obtaining guardianship in Pakistan and on the requirements for taking the child to live abroad.
The welfare of the minor is paramount. The court examines the suitability of the proposed guardian, the child's circumstances, and the relevant consents.
Often yes, but it requires court permission to remove the child and compliance with the destination country's immigration and recognition rules. We advise on and handle these steps.