Child Custody in Texas: Your Complete Guide to Conservatorship and Possession
Custody is the part of a family law case that matters most to parents, and it is also the part where Texas terminology trips people up. The state does not actually use the word “custody.” It speaks of conservatorship, the bundle of parental rights and duties, and possession and access, the schedule of time with the child. This guide uses the everyday words alongside the legal ones, and it links out to detailed pages on each piece of a Texas custody case, from how courts decide, to support, to enforcement, to moving away.
Three questions, not one: Rights, Time, and Financial Support
A Texas custody case really answers three separate questions. Conservatorship decides who holds which parental rights and duties. Possession and access decides the schedule for sharing parenting time. Child support provides for the financial needs of the children including medical and dental insurance. Keeping them straight is the key to understanding everything else.
The Three Parts of a Custody Case
Every Texas custody determination breaks into three parts. The first is conservatorship: which parent holds which rights and duties, such as making decisions about education, medical care, and where the child primarily lives. The second is possession and access: the calendar that sets when each parent has the child. A parent can share in decision-making yet have less day-to-day time, or the reverse, so it is important not to collapse these two questions into a single idea of “winning custody.” The third part answers the question of how the parents will provide for the children financially, including medical and dental insurance.
Start Here: Conservatorship and the Schedule
These pages cover the framework of who decides and who has the child when:
- Conservatorship explained: joint vs. sole managing conservatorship, rights and duties, and what “joint” really means.
- Possession schedules: the Standard Possession Order, the expanded SPO, 50/50 arrangements, and how distance changes them.
- Best interest of the child: the Holley factors and how courts actually decide.
Support and Money
- Child support guidelines: the percentage guidelines, the net-resources cap, above-guidelines support, and medical and dental support.
Changing and Enforcing Orders
- Modifications: the material-and-substantial-change standard and the rules for changing the primary residence.
- Enforcement: contempt, make-up time, and what to do when the other parent will not comply.
- Geographic restrictions and relocation: the residency-restriction fight and the move-away analysis.
Special Situations
- Custody evaluations and amicus attorneys: when they are appointed, what they do, and how to work with them.
- Paternity: establishing or disproving parentage where it intersects with custody.
- Grandparent and nonparent access: the high bar for standing and access by someone other than a parent.
- Interstate and international custody: which state or country decides, under the UCCJEA and the Hague Convention.
- Authorizing relatives to care for a child: sometimes parents need to authorize a nonparent relative to care for a child.
How Custody Fits With Divorce
When parents divorce, custody is decided as part of the same case. The divorce guide covers the overall process and timeline, and temporary orders often set an interim custody and support arrangement while the case is pending. Custody issues are also frequently resolved in mediation rather than at trial. Custody can also be decided outside of divorce, in a suit affecting the parent-child relationship, when the parents were never married or are already divorced.
A Note on Safety
Where family violence, abuse, or a child’s safety is at issue, it changes the analysis at every stage, from the presumptions that apply, to the possession schedule, to whether visitation must be supervised. Those concerns are addressed within the relevant pages rather than treated as an afterthought, because in Texas the child’s safety is central to the best-interest determination.
Frequently Asked Questions
Child Custody in Texas – Related Posts
Authorization Agreements for Nonparent Relatives in Texas (Chapter 34)
Conservatorship in Texas: Joint and Sole Managing Conservatorship Explained
Child Support Guidelines in Texas: How Support Is Calculated
Best Interest of the Child: The Holley Factors in Texas Custody Cases
Modifying Custody, Possession, and Support Orders in Texas
Geographic Restrictions and Relocation in Texas Custody Cases
Custody Evaluations and Amicus Attorneys in Texas Custody Cases
Enforcement of Custody and Visitation Orders in Texas
Paternity in Texas: Establishing and Disproving Parentage
Grandparent and Nonparent Access and Standing in Texas
Facing a custody dispute in Texas?
Few things matter more than your relationship with your children. Let’s talk about your situation and what a good outcome looks like for your family.
This page provides general information about Texas law and is not legal advice for your specific situation. Reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship.
