The Problem We Solve
Why a Muslim Marriage Register?
Muslim marriages (Nikah) in South Africa are often performed at Masaajid and recorded informally — in handwritten registers, on paper certificates, or not at all. When records are lost, damaged, or disputed, couples and their families have no way to prove their marriage occurred.
This affects inheritance, child custody, immigration, pension and life insurance claims, and countless other life matters where proof of marriage is legally or personally required.
NikahRegister.co.za provides a secure, permanent digital record that complements the Masjid's own records and gives couples a verifiable, reference-numbered confirmation of their Nikah.
The System
How NikahRegister Works
Mosque Registration
Any registered Masjid in South Africa can join the network by contacting SAMNET. Upon registration, the Imam and mosque administrator receive secure login credentials.
Nikah Registration
After the ceremony, the mosque administrator enters the marriage details online: bride, groom, Wali/Wakeel, witnesses, Imam, Mahr, civil marriage status, and supporting documents.
Imam Sign-Off
The officiating Imam reviews and digitally confirms the record. Once confirmed, the record becomes permanently active and receives a unique reference number.
Reference Number
Each Nikah receives a unique reference number (e.g. NR-2024-KZN-00142) that identifies the province, year, and sequence. This appears on the printed certificate.
Supporting Documents
Up to 3 supporting documents can be attached per Nikah record — scanned Nikah certificate, civil marriage certificate, or witness ID copies — stored securely and accessible only to authorised mosque administrators.
Civil Marriage Tracking
The system records whether the couple also registered their Nikah as a civil marriage with the Department of Home Affairs — helping communities track which marriages have full civil law recognition.
Nikah Verification
Authorised parties can verify any registered Nikah by submitting the reference number. The system confirms the record exists without revealing sensitive private details.
Termination Records
Terminations — Talaq (divorce), death, annulment, or khul' — are recorded against the original Nikah record. Supporting documents such as a divorce decree or death certificate can be attached and are verifiable by authorised parties.
Statistics & Reports
SAMNET (South African Muslim Network) and/or the National Nikah Register NPO (when established) and registered Masaajid have access to statistical reports: registrations by user, age demographics, polygyny statistics, and terminations by reason — for community planning and scholarly research.
Scope
Who Can Register a Nikah?
Any Masjid affiliated with a recognised Ulama body — including UUCSA, MJC, Jamiatul Ulama (KZN or Transvaal), and independent Masaajid — can register with SAMNET (South African Muslim Network) and/or the National Nikah Register NPO (when established) and begin recording Nikahs.
The system supports marriages between South African citizens and foreign nationals. For foreign nationals, passport details are recorded alongside the standard fields.
Polygynous marriages are supported — each additional marriage is linked to the groom's existing record and clearly flagged in the system.
Register Your Masjid ↓What the Register Records
Privacy & Security
How We Protect Your Data
POPIA Compliant
We comply with the Protection of Personal Information Act (POPIA). Your data is collected only for the purpose of recording and verifying the marriage, and is not shared or sold.
Encrypted Storage
Sensitive fields such as Mahr amounts are AES-256 encrypted at rest. All connections are secured via HTTPS.
Access Control
Records are only accessible to the registering mosque, SAMNET (South African Muslim Network) and/or the National Nikah Register NPO (when established) administrators, and designated verifiers. The public cannot browse records.
Full Audit Trail
Every access, change, and export is logged with the user identity, timestamp, and IP address — creating a complete accountability trail.
Data Retention
Marriage records are retained permanently as they form part of the community's historical record. You may contact SAMNET (South African Muslim Network) and/or the National Nikah Register NPO (when established) to request a correction or amendment.
The People & the Purpose
The Story Behind the Register
How a conversation about ageing paper registers at a historic Durban Masjid became a 21st-century national Nikah registry for South Africa — and a model for the world.
Where It Began
The idea was born from a simple but profound request. Mr Y. Randeree, a trustee of a Durban Masjid established in 1920, approached SAMNET with a concern: the mosque's Nikah registers were ageing, accumulating, and at risk of being lost. Could SAMNET store them?
SAMNET recognised that physical document storage was neither their competency nor their role. But the request revealed something far more important — these records, spanning generations, are irreplaceable historical and social documents. The Nikah registers of a century-old Masjid are a community's living memory.
The initial concept was to scan and digitise the old registers. But as the SAMNET team reflected further, a larger truth emerged: the real need was not just to look back, but to look forward. South Africa needed a national register that captures Nikahs as they happen — in real time, from Masaajid across all nine provinces.
Triplicate books were sufficient and fit for purpose at the time — when mobility, travel, legislation, and record-keeping needs were very different. The world has since changed entirely. It is time our solutions caught up.
Why Now?
A Connected, Mobile World
The need for digital access to records — across the country or across the world — is critical in a highly mobile and connected society. A paper register in Durban cannot serve a couple who have moved to Johannesburg or emigrated abroad.
Legal Importance of Verification
Verifying that a Nikah occurred has real legal weight — for inheritance, child custody, immigration applications, pension and life insurance claims, and countless other life matters where proof of marriage is required.
Privacy Laws Have Evolved
Modern data protection frameworks, including South Africa's POPIA, demand that personal and religious records be handled with care, security, and accountability that paper registers cannot provide.
Marriage Law Has Evolved
In many countries — including South Africa — Muslim marriages that were once largely outside civil law frameworks are increasingly part of the legal and judicial system. The Register helps communities track and document civil recognition.
The Value of Data
A national register yields insights that were previously impossible — demographic trends, regional patterns, community health indicators — invaluable for research, planning, and evidence-based community leadership.
Supporting Ulama Bodies
The demands on Ulama bodies for guidance, dispute resolution, and community support are growing. They need more robust, technologically sound systems to serve the Ummah effectively and efficiently.
Why SAMNET?
SAMNET was in a unique position to conceptualise, develop, and roll out this project. As a cross-community network that is genuinely non-partisan and inclusive, SAMNET bridges the full theological and cultural diversity that is the South African Muslim community.
The National Nikah Register is envisaged as a resource for the Ummah — one that transcends organisational, cultural, and theological boundaries. It is designed to be replicable globally, serving Muslim communities wherever they are.
Beyond its immediate practical purpose, the Register serves as a historical and genealogical resource — a living archive that future generations and researchers can draw from for years to come.
This is an idea long overdue. The SAMNET team hopes it becomes a template and inspiration for similar solutions wherever Muslims live, and wherever communities need to be better served.
The Team
Conceptualised and led the development of the National Nikah Register — driving its vision from an initial digitisation concept to a forward-looking national system built for the 21st century.
Provides guidance and oversight, bringing decades of community engagement and activism, ensuring the Register aligns with and serves the needs of the Ummah with integrity and fidelity to Islamic and social principles.
Join the Network
Register Your Masjid
Registration is free for all Masaajid affiliated with a recognised Ulama body. Once registered, your Imam and mosque administrator will receive login credentials within 2–3 business days.