Marriage documents
Clarify which marriage-related documents or certificates may be relevant before checking the competent service.
- Marriage contract
- civil status documents
- family book
ⴰⵎⴰⵡⴰⵙ ⴰⵎⵙⵜⴳ ⵉ ⵜⵎⵙⴰⵔⵉⵏ ⵏ ⵜⵡⴰⵛⵓⵍⵜ
L'Cachet helps you ask clearer questions about marriage, divorce, alimony, child custody, and inheritance using the official sources currently available to the assistant.
Independent assistant. Not a court, lawyer, adoul, notary, ministry, or official government service.
This first version keeps the topic practical and source-aware instead of pretending to solve every family dispute.
Clarify which marriage-related documents or certificates may be relevant before checking the competent service.
Understand the broad route for divorce questions and what details can change depending on the case.
Ask careful questions about nafaka and child custody while keeping court discretion and case facts in view.
Frame succession questions without guessing shares before the heirs and legal situation are clear.
01
Say whether your question is about marriage, divorce, custody, nafaka, inheritance, or a document.
02
For inheritance and custody, small facts can change the answer, so the assistant may ask a follow-up.
03
Use the answer to understand what to check, then confirm important steps with the competent authority or a professional.
Marriage documents
What documents are needed to get married in Morocco?
Mutual divorce
How does a mutual divorce work in Morocco?
Alimony
How is alimony handled after divorce in Morocco?
Custody
Who gets custody of children after divorce in Morocco?
Inheritance
How is inheritance divided in Morocco?
After a death
What should I do after a parent dies to start succession steps?
Short answers about what this page can and cannot do.
Not from a generic question. Inheritance depends on the family members, heirs, documents, debts, and legal situation. L'Cachet can help you frame the question and understand available sources, but exact shares need careful verification.
No. L'Cachet is an independent assistant for understanding information. It does not replace a court, lawyer, adoul, notary, or public authority.
Family cases often depend on facts that change the procedure or answer. Asking one focused follow-up is safer than guessing.
The assistant should say that it cannot confirm the point from the official sources available here and recommend manual verification for certainty.
Family matters can be sensitive and fact-dependent. Do not rely on an AI answer alone for divorce, custody, alimony, inheritance, or court decisions.