Divorce with Children: What to Know
A practical guide to divorce with children covering custody, child support, parenting plans, minimizing emotional impact, and co-parenting strategies for every age group.
Updated March 15, 2026
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. For advice specific to your situation, consult a licensed attorney in your state.
Read our editorial policy, review process, and source methodology.
Divorce with children involves additional legal steps, higher costs, and longer timelines compared to a childless divorce. Beyond the standard issues of property division and support, you and your spouse must establish a custody arrangement, create a detailed parenting plan, and calculate child support, all of which must be approved by the court before the divorce can be finalized.
The good news is that research consistently shows children can adjust well to divorce when parents minimize conflict, maintain stability, and keep the children’s needs at the center of every decision. The process is more complex, but with the right approach, families emerge with clear structures that serve everyone’s interests.
How Children Change the Divorce Process
When children are involved, the court’s primary concern shifts from the spouses to the children. Every state applies some version of the “best interests of the child” standard, which means judges evaluate custody arrangements based on the children’s well-being rather than parental preference alone.
This introduces several additional requirements. You will need to file a proposed parenting plan that details custody schedules, decision-making authority, holiday arrangements, and communication protocols. Most states also require both parents to complete a parenting education class, typically 4 to 8 hours, before the divorce can be finalized.
Courts may also appoint a guardian ad litem, a custody evaluator, or a mediator to assess the family situation. These additional steps add both time and cost. A divorce with children typically takes 8 to 14 months to finalize, compared to 3 to 6 months for a childless uncontested divorce. Costs also increase, often by $3,000 to $10,000 or more depending on how contested the custody issues become. Use our divorce cost calculator for a more personalized estimate.
Custody Considerations
Understanding how custody works is essential for any parent going through divorce. Our detailed guide to how child custody is determined covers the legal framework, but here are the core concepts.
Legal custody refers to the right to make major decisions about the child’s education, healthcare, religious upbringing, and extracurricular activities. Legal custody can be sole (one parent decides) or joint (both parents share decision-making).
Physical custody determines where the child lives. Physical custody can also be sole or joint. Joint physical custody does not necessarily mean a 50/50 split; it means the child spends significant time with both parents.
Courts evaluate several factors when determining custody, including each parent’s relationship with the child, the child’s adjustment to their home and school, the mental and physical health of all parties, and any history of domestic violence or substance abuse.
Fathers and mothers have equal legal standing in custody proceedings. If you are concerned about your rights as a father, our guide to fathers’ rights in custody addresses common questions and misconceptions.
Child Support
Child support is calculated using state-specific formulas that consider the income of both parents, the custody arrangement, the number of children, healthcare costs, and childcare expenses. The paying parent’s obligation typically continues until the child turns 18, though it may extend to 19 or through college in some states.
You can estimate your potential obligation or entitlement using our child support calculator. For a deeper look at how courts arrive at these figures, see our guide on how child support is calculated.
Key points about child support in a divorce context:
- Child support is separate from property division and spousal support. One does not offset the other.
- Courts can deviate from the guideline amount if the standard calculation would be unjust, such as when a child has special medical needs or when one parent has extraordinary expenses.
- Support orders are enforceable through wage garnishment, tax refund intercepts, and other collection mechanisms.
- Either parent can request a modification of the support order if circumstances change significantly, such as a job loss or a change in custody.
Creating an Effective Parenting Plan
A parenting plan is a detailed written agreement that governs how you and your co-parent will raise your children after the divorce. Courts require one in every divorce involving minor children, and the more thorough your plan, the fewer disputes you will face later.
A strong parenting plan addresses:
Regular schedule. Which parent has the children on which days, including specific pickup and drop-off times and locations. Be precise. “Every other weekend” is less useful than “every other Friday at 5:00 PM through Sunday at 6:00 PM.”
Holiday and vacation schedule. How holidays, school breaks, and summer vacations are divided. Most plans alternate major holidays annually and split summer vacation time.
Decision-making. Who makes decisions about education, medical care, religious instruction, and extracurricular activities. If decision-making is shared, the plan should specify a process for resolving disagreements.
Communication. How parents will communicate about the children, how the children will communicate with the non-custodial parent, and what technology or platforms will be used.
Relocation. What happens if one parent wants to move. Most plans require advance notice (typically 60 to 90 days) and court approval for moves beyond a specified distance.
Dispute resolution. Whether disagreements will be resolved through mediation, a parenting coordinator, or court intervention.
Our dedicated guide to parenting plans provides a more detailed framework and common scheduling templates.
Minimizing the Impact on Children
Decades of research point to consistent findings about what helps children cope with divorce and what makes it harder.
What helps:
- Keeping conflict away from the children. Disagreements should happen out of earshot and never through the children.
- Maintaining routines. Consistent bedtimes, mealtimes, school schedules, and extracurricular activities provide stability during an uncertain time.
- Allowing the child to love both parents without guilt. Children should never feel they must choose sides.
- Being honest in age-appropriate ways without sharing adult details.
- Ensuring both parents stay actively involved in the child’s life.
What harms:
- Using children as messengers between parents.
- Speaking negatively about the other parent in front of the children.
- Interrogating children about the other parent’s home, finances, or relationships.
- Making abrupt changes to living arrangements, schools, or social circles without preparation.
- Involving children in legal or financial discussions.
Age-Appropriate Communication
How you tell your children about the divorce and discuss it over time depends on their developmental stage.
Toddlers and preschoolers (ages 2 to 5) need simple, concrete language. Focus on what will change in their daily life and what will stay the same. Reassure them repeatedly that both parents love them and that the divorce is not their fault. Young children may regress in behavior, which is normal and temporary.
School-age children (ages 6 to 12) can understand more about the situation but may internalize blame. Provide clear explanations without assigning fault. Encourage them to ask questions and express their feelings. Watch for changes in school performance, social behavior, or mood.
Teenagers (ages 13 to 17) will understand the concept of divorce but may react with anger, withdrawal, or acting out. They may try to take sides or assume adult responsibilities. Maintain boundaries, be available for conversation, and avoid leaning on them for emotional support.
Regardless of age, both parents should tell the children together whenever possible. Present a unified message: the decision is final, it is an adult decision, and both parents will continue to be present.
Co-Parenting After Divorce
Successful co-parenting requires treating the other parent as a business partner in the job of raising your children. Personal grievances must stay separate from parenting decisions.
Communicate efficiently. Use a shared calendar app, co-parenting platform, or email for scheduling and logistics. Keep messages focused on the children.
Be flexible when it matters. Rigid adherence to the schedule can create unnecessary tension. Occasional swaps and accommodations build goodwill and model cooperation for the children.
Present a consistent front. Align on major rules and expectations across both households, including bedtimes, screen time limits, and academic expectations. Some variation is inevitable, but significant inconsistencies confuse children and create opportunities for manipulation.
Support the other parent’s relationship. Encourage your children to enjoy their time with the other parent. Celebrate milestones together when possible, such as attending school events or sports games.
Know when to seek help. If communication breaks down repeatedly, a family therapist or parenting coordinator can help. Many courts can appoint a parenting coordinator as part of the custody order.
What to Do Next
Navigating a divorce with children requires careful planning and a commitment to putting your children’s needs first.
- Learn the types of child custody available in your state so you can approach custody discussions informed.
- Begin drafting a parenting plan that covers daily schedules, holidays, decision-making, and communication.
- Estimate child support using our child support calculator and review how the calculation process works.
- Gather the documents and records you will need by working through our divorce checklist.
- Schedule a free consultation with a family law professional who can help you develop a custody strategy that serves your children’s best interests.
Your children’s well-being during and after divorce depends more on how you handle the process than on the process itself. Preparation and cooperation are the best tools you have.
Frequently Asked Questions
How does divorce with children differ from divorce without children?
Divorce with children requires a court-approved parenting plan, child support calculations, and often a parenting education class. Courts scrutinize these arrangements closely under the “best interests of the child” standard. The process typically takes 8 to 14 months compared to 3 to 6 months for a childless uncontested divorce, and costs increase by $3,000 to $10,000 or more depending on how contested custody becomes.
What is the single most important factor in how children adjust to divorce?
Research consistently shows that the level of conflict between parents is the most significant factor. Children who experience low-conflict divorce generally show no long-term differences in well-being compared to children from intact families. Keeping disagreements away from children, maintaining routines, and allowing children to love both parents without guilt are the most protective behaviors.
Should both parents tell the children about the divorce together?
Whenever possible, yes. Presenting a unified message helps children feel secure and reduces the chance that one parent’s narrative dominates. The core message should be: the decision is final, it is an adult decision, both parents love the children, and both parents will continue to be present in their lives.
What is a parenting coordinator, and when would one be appointed?
A parenting coordinator is a mental health professional or attorney appointed by the court to help high-conflict parents implement their parenting plan without returning to court for every disagreement. They make binding decisions on day-to-day disputes about scheduling, activities, and communication. Courts typically appoint them when parents have demonstrated an inability to resolve routine co-parenting issues on their own.
How This Guide Was Researched
This guide was created by reviewing publicly available legal information from official state statutes, judiciary websites, court resources, and family law publications. The goal is to explain family law topics in plain English so readers can better understand the process before speaking with an attorney.
Sources and Legal References
This guide is based on publicly available legal information and official sources, including:
- Child Custody – Legal Information Institute
- Best Interests of the Child – Legal Information Institute
- Parenting Plan – Legal Information Institute
- ABA Child Custody Resources
- Child Welfare Information Gateway – Children and Divorce
For more about how we research our guides, see our editorial policy and sources methodology.
Related Guides
Learn more about related family law topics:
- Child custody laws explained
- 50/50 custody
- Complete guide to divorce
- How to file for divorce
- Community property vs. equitable distribution
- Divorce checklist
- Contested vs. uncontested divorce
Last updated: March 2026. This guide summarizes general legal information based on publicly available sources and is provided for educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice. For advice specific to your situation, consult a licensed attorney in your state.
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