The Malaysian Bar takes serious note of the latest marriage, divorce and reconciliation statistics released by the Department of Statistics Malaysia. While marriages recorded only a slight increase of 0.9 per cent in 2024, divorces rose by 4.1 per cent, and reconciliation cases continued to decline.1 These patterns point to pressures within Malaysian families, which require thoughtful attention and sustained policy intervention.
A rising divorce rate signals more than marital breakdown: it affects the children caught in the crossfire of domestic upheavals, schooling outcomes, mental health of the people concerned, community stability, and the overall social fabric. When the family structure disintegrates, the long-term cost is borne by society; and most often, it is the children who bear the deepest hurt, facing disruptions in routine and emotional insecurity, and living through fractured parental relationships. The justice system is also affected, as the courts are also required to manage heavier demands at a time when judicial resources are already stretched.
The legal profession does not view the growth of family disputes as increased commercial opportunity. Rather, the Malaysian Bar reiterates that lawyers carry a duty to help minimise conflict, uphold fairness and guide clients towards outcomes that protect children and preserve dignity. Our responsibility is to play a constructive role in restoring balance in the family unit and supporting families during difficult transitions.
The time has come to strengthen the structures that support marriage, guide couples during breakdowns and protect children from the fallout of conflict. Institutional reforms are needed, and in the light of the troubling statistics, the Malaysian Bar proposes the following:
(1) Make mediation a mandatory first pathway: Family mediation should be the default process before litigation begins, except where safety or abuse issues are present. Early resolution reduces emotional and financial strain and promotes more stable arrangements for children.
(2) Introduce a collaborative family practice framework: Malaysia should adopt a structured, non-adversarial model similar to practices in other Commonwealth jurisdictions, such as Australia, Canada, Hong Kong and the United Kingdom, where parties commit to resolving matters without court battles. This reduces hostility, promotes transparency and improves long-term family outcomes.
(3) Establish family support units within the courts: Family courts should be equipped with counsellors, psychologists, social workers and mediators who can assist parties before and during proceedings. Early intervention can stabilise relationships, assist in reconciliation where possible, and support co-parenting where separation is inevitable.
(4) Strengthen pre-marriage and marriage support modules: Pre-marriage programmes should include modern-day essentials such as:
- conflict resolution;
- emotional resilience;
- financial planning;
- communication skills; and
- managing expectations.
These modules should be standardised across civil and religious institutions.
(5) Centre court processes on the welfare of children: Improved child-focused measures are needed, including having:
- standardised parenting plans;
- compulsory co-parenting education;
- frameworks to address parental alienation;
- guidelines for access arrangements; and
- specialised training for lawyers managing child-related disputes.
(6) Expand legal aid coverage for family matters: Access to justice must not depend on income level. Expanded legal aid for family cases (in particular for alternative dispute resolution options) will support fair outcomes, reduce delays and ease courtroom burdens
(7) Advocate broader socioeconomic support: Family cohesion is closely linked to cost-of-living pressures, childcare accessibility, mental health services and work-life balance. The Bar supports policies that strengthen the everyday realities of family life, not only its legal framework.
The Malaysian Bar encourages lawyers to adopt a constructive and therapeutic approach when assisting families in crisis. Lawyers should strive to minimise hostility, guide clients realistically and prioritise the long-term welfare of their children. Conflict-driven solutions may deliver short-term advantage, but they damage families and erode confidence in the profession.
Our responsibility is clear — we must help families navigate hardship with fairness, perceptiveness and respect for the consequences that follow them long after a case file is closed.
The latest statistics highlight the need for a more resilient and supportive family justice ecosystem. The Malaysian Bar remains committed to working with the Judiciary, Government, religious authorities and civil society to strengthen the institutional frameworks that protect families. Reforms that prioritise stability, fairness and the well-being of children are essential if Malaysia is to develop a more cohesive society.
The Malaysian Bar will continue to advocate improvements that place the family at the centre of policy development and uphold the principles of justice and responsibility within the family law system.
Mohamad Ezri b Abdul Wahab
President
Malaysian Bar
26 December 2025
1 Marriages, Divorces and Rujuk Statistics, Malaysia, 2025, Department of Statistics Malaysia.

