Who Owns the Embryos After Divorce?
Malaysia’s First Frozen Embryo Case Delivers a Landmark Judgment!
In 2025, the Malaysian Family High Court, in the case of RAH v RAL, addressed the legal status and control of frozen embryos following a divorce for the first time. The decision is regarded as a landmark development in Malaysian family law.
📌 Background of the Case
• The couple married in 2009 and underwent In Vitro Fertilisation (IVF) treatment in 2014 due to fertility difficulties.
• The embryos were created using the husband’s sperm and eggs donated by the wife’s sister, resulting in three embryos that were cryopreserved.
• Following the parties’ divorce in 2017, one of the embryos was used, and a daughter was born in 2022.
• The dispute concerned the remaining two frozen embryos.
📌 Parties’ Positions
• The wife sought control of the embryos in order to have the possibility of future childbearing.
• The husband opposed the application and did not wish to become a father again.
📌 Key Findings of the Court
• The embryos were lawfully created through a recognised IVF procedure.
• The embryos ❌ were not considered “persons” because they had not acquired legal personality.
• The embryos ❌ were also not regarded as ordinary property capable of being divided or sold.
➡️ Instead, they were recognised as occupying a unique legal status somewhere between a person and property.
📌 How the Court Approached the Issue
• The Court focused on the concept of control, rather than custody or ownership.
• The Court balanced two competing rights:
• The right to procreate
• The right not to be compelled into parenthood
📌 Decision of the Court
• Control of the embryos was granted to the wife.
• However, the order was subject to several conditions:
• The husband would not be responsible for any expenses relating to the embryos or any future child.
• The wife would not be entitled to claim maintenance from the husband if a child were subsequently born.
• All relevant medical regulations and institutional requirements must be complied with.
📌 Significance of the Decision
• It is the first reported Malaysian case dealing with frozen embryos after divorce.
• It establishes the principle that the law should not compel a person to become a parent against his or her will.
• It demonstrates the Court’s attempt to balance advances in reproductive technology, ethical considerations, and human interests.
📌 Future Legal Issues Raised by the Case
• Donation of embryos and their use in scientific research
• Posthumous use of embryos after the death of one party
• Surrogacy arrangements and legal parentage issues
• Cross-border surrogacy and conflicts of law
📌 Conclusion
Under Malaysian law, frozen embryos are:
👉 Neither “persons” nor “property”
👉 Not assets that can simply be divided upon divorce
👉 Subject to judicial determination regarding who should exercise control over them, based on principles of fairness and justice
⚖️ As assisted reproductive technology becomes increasingly common, the development of a clearer and more comprehensive legal framework is becoming an urgent necessity.







