Islamic Estate Planning
Most Muslim families in Ontario don't have a will. We're changing that.
BAQI helps you create a Sharia-compliant estate plan that works under Ontario law — backed by your local masjid, not a generic template.
100% refundable. $25 applies as credit toward your will.
The Problem
What happens when you don't plan
Back home, families fight over property for generations. In Ontario, dying without a will can mean $50,000+ in legal fees — and the same family disputes, just in a courtroom your children don't understand.
Ontario's intestacy rules don't follow Islamic inheritance. Without a will, the province decides who gets what. Your wishes — and your faith — don't factor in.
The conversation never starts. In our communities, talking about death feels disrespectful. So families stay unprotected, and the people who suffer most are the ones left behind.
What You Get
Join the founding waitlist
Priority access
Be the first to use BAQI when it launches. Founding members get in before anyone else.
Free starter guide
Our Islamic Estate Planning Starter Guide for Ontario families. Coming soon to your inbox.
Locked-in price
Your founding rate of $79 is locked in for life.
$25 credit
Your deposit applies as credit toward your will. Nothing wasted.
Coming Soon
How BAQI works
Tell us about your family
Answer simple questions about your family, assets, and wishes.
BAQI generates your will
A Sharia-compliant estate plan aligned with Ontario law, ready for review.
Review and sign
Go over it with your imam or a lawyer, then make it official.
Community
Built with your masjid, not around it
BAQI partners with local masjids so your family gets support from people you already trust. Estate planning is personal — your community should be part of it.
Common Questions
Frequently asked questions
Your family deserves a plan
Take the first step toward protecting your family's future — the Islamic way.
100% refundable. $25 applies as credit toward your will.
BAQI is a document automation and education platform. It is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. No solicitor-client relationship is created. Ontario courts may adjust distributions under the SLRA (Part V).