Custody Evaluations and Amicus Attorneys in Texas Custody Cases
In a contested custody case, parents are not always the only voices the court hears. Texas judges can bring in neutral professionals, a custody evaluator to investigate and recommend, and an amicus attorney or ad litem to look out for the child, to help them make a sound decision. These appointments can be pivotal, because their conclusions often shape the outcome. Understanding who these people are, what they do, and how to work with them is part of being prepared.
The amicus is not your child’s lawyer, and not yours
An amicus attorney serves the court’s need to understand the child’s best interest. They are not your advocate and not the child’s attorney. Knowing whose interest each appointee represents keeps your expectations accurate.
Custody Evaluations
A custody evaluation is an in-depth assessment performed by a qualified mental health professional appointed to investigate the family and recommend an arrangement that serves the child’s best interest. The evaluator typically interviews each parent and the child, observes parent-child interaction, contacts collateral sources such as teachers or doctors, reviews relevant records, and may administer psychological testing. The result is a written report with recommendations on conservatorship and possession. While the judge is not bound by it, a thorough evaluation often influences the outcome heavily, so it deserves to be taken seriously from the first contact.
Amicus Attorney, Attorney Ad Litem, and Guardian Ad Litem
Texas distinguishes three roles that are easy to confuse:
- Amicus attorney: a lawyer appointed to assist the court in determining the child’s best interest. The amicus is not the child’s attorney and does not represent either parent; the amicus serves the court.
- Attorney ad litem: a lawyer appointed to represent the child as a client, advocating for the child’s expressed wishes the way any attorney advocates for a client.
- Guardian ad litem: a person, not necessarily a lawyer, appointed to represent the child’s best interest, which may differ from the child’s stated preference.
Knowing which role has been appointed in your case tells you whose interest that person is advancing and how to engage with them.
When These Appointments Happen
Evaluators and amicus or ad litem attorneys are most often appointed in genuinely contested cases, where the parents sharply disagree, where there are allegations of abuse, neglect, substance abuse, or alienation, or where the stakes and complexity justify an extra set of professional eyes. In routine, low-conflict cases they are usually unnecessary. The appointment itself signals that the court wants independent help understanding what is best for the child.
How to Work With Them
The parents who fare best with evaluators and amicus attorneys share a posture: they are honest, cooperative, organized, and relentlessly focused on the child rather than on attacking the other parent. Provide requested documents promptly. Be candid about your own challenges instead of pretending to be flawless, because credibility matters more than perfection. Show that you understand your child’s specific needs and routines. Professionals in these roles are skilled at telling the difference between a parent centered on the child and a parent centered on the conflict, and that distinction often finds its way into the report and the result. This connects directly to the best-interest factors the court will ultimately weigh.
Who Pays
These appointments cost money, and courts commonly allocate the cost of an evaluation or an appointed amicus or ad litem between the parents in proportions the court sets. That expense is part of why these tools appear in more serious cases rather than every dispute. When they are ordered, though, the investment can be decisive, so it is worth engaging fully rather than treating the process as a formality.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is an evaluator or amicus involved in your case?
How you engage with an evaluator or amicus can shape the outcome of your case. Let’s make sure you are prepared and presenting your strongest, most honest self.
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.
