Geographic Restrictions and Relocation in Texas Custody Cases
Few custody disputes are as emotionally and practically charged as a relocation. When one parent wants to move, with the children, far enough that the other parent’s time is threatened, the case collides head-on with the geographic restriction that most custody orders contain. These disputes pit a parent’s freedom to build a life against the child’s interest in keeping both parents close. This page explains how geographic restrictions work and how Texas courts approach a move-away.
Don’t move first and ask later
If your order contains a geographic restriction, relocating the child without agreement or a court order can backfire badly. The move should be authorized first, through agreement or modification, not undone after the fact.
What a Geographic Restriction Does
Most Texas custody orders place a geographic restriction on the parent who holds the exclusive right to designate the child’s primary residence. Rather than letting that parent move the child anywhere, the order confines the primary residence to a defined area, commonly a particular county and the counties adjacent to it, or a named school district or region. The purpose is to keep the child within reasonable reach of both parents so the possession schedule remains practical. Because it directly shapes both parents’ lives, the restriction is one of the most heavily negotiated provisions in any custody order.
When a Parent Wants to Move
A parent who wants to relocate the child beyond the restricted area generally has two legitimate routes: secure the other parent’s agreement to lift or expand the restriction, or ask the court to modify the order. Self-help, simply moving the child in violation of the restriction, is risky and can result in the child being ordered back, a change in the primary designation, or other serious consequences. The disciplined path is to resolve the restriction before the move, not after.
How Courts Weigh a Relocation
Relocation disputes are decided under the best-interest standard, with courts weighing a cluster of considerations:
- The reasons for and against the proposed move.
- Whether the move improves the quality of life for the child and the relocating parent, through employment, family support, or education.
- The effect on the other parent’s relationship and time with the child.
- Whether the move is sought in good faith rather than to interfere with the other parent.
- Whether a revised schedule and travel arrangements can preserve the other parent’s relationship.
No single factor decides the case. The court balances them under the overarching best-interest standard.
Relocation as a Modification
Because a proposed move is often itself a material and substantial change in circumstances, relocation fights typically arrive as modification suits. A relocating parent may seek to lift the geographic restriction; a parent opposing the move, or seeking to become the primary parent if the other leaves, may seek to modify the primary designation or the schedule. The change-in-circumstances framework that governs is set out on the modifications page.
Bridging the Distance
When a move is allowed, the order is usually reworked to preserve the other parent’s relationship as much as possible: longer but less frequent possession periods, most of the summer and school breaks, allocation of travel costs, and generous electronic communication. When parents live far apart, the schedule shifts to the long-distance structure described on the possession schedules page. Thoughtful structuring can soften the impact of distance, even though it cannot eliminate it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Facing a move, or trying to stop one?
Relocation cases move fast and the stakes are high. Whether you want to move or keep your children close, let’s protect your relationship with them.
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.
