The following study is devoted to normative and practical aspects of the presidential succession in post-Soviet republics: Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Kazakhstan in the period of 2006–2022. In these Central Asian countries personalized, superpresidential models of government have emerged, what makes the transfer of the presidential power critically important for the further regime existence. As the following paper shows, in all mentioned states such procedure is regulated by the constitutions, but in some cases the transfer of power was not in line with the legal provisions. The paper concludes that the Central Asian republics have established some model of presidential succession what confirms, that these nations are consolidated, “militant autocracies” that guarantee themselves continuity and resistance.