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Divorce and Custody Research

Financial outcomes by state

How much is alimony in your state?
A typical U.S. divorce could end with an alimony payment ranging from $0 to $1,381 a month depending on the state. In two-thirds of states, there's not a reliable way to predict alimony at all. See also: Appendix

Map: How much is child support in your state?
The size of your child support payment depends heavily on where you live, according to research from Custody X Change. A typical parent's payment can vary by over $700 a month from state to state. See also: Appendix

Custody schedules

Map: How much custody time does Dad get in your state?
Custody X Change conducted a first-of-its-kind study and found that parenting time varies dramatically as you cross state lines. Nationwide, a father is likely to receive about 35% of child custody time. See also: Appendix

Hennepin County's top custody schedules determined for first time
Court records reveal the most popular custody schedules in Hennepin County, Minnesota. They may also shine light on schedule trends in other regions, where records are often harder to access.

Other research

1 in 4 states don't require judge to consider child's custody preference
Only one U.S. state lets a child choose who takes custody of them. More than a quarter of states don't even require a judge to consider a child's preference.

Make peace with your ex: Kids do best after divorce if parents get along
Parents who get along well after their divorce are 53% likelier to say their kids adjusted well than parents who get along badly. Could this encourage co-parents to act civilly for the sake of the kids?

Statistics: Hire a divorce attorney for the best custody outcome
When both parents have attorneys, they're more likely to share joint custody and settle out of court. Other surprising divorce and custody stats.


Legal professionals: Speak with us
We interview legal professionals so we can provide practical information to help parents ensure the best possible future for their children.

Explore examples of common schedules

Explore common schedules

Most popular articles

Examples:

Schedules

Long distance schedules

Third party schedules

Holidays

Summer break

Parenting provisions

Scheduling:

How to make a schedule

Factors to consider

Parenting plans:

Making a parenting plan

Changing your plan

Interstate, long distance

Temporary plans

Guides by location:

Parenting plans

Scheduling guidelines

Child support calculators

Age guidelines:

Birth to 18 months

18 months to 3 years

3 to 5 years

5 to 13 years

13 to 18 years

Terminology:

Joint physical custody

Sole physical custody

Joint legal custody

Sole legal custody

Product features:

Software overview

Printable calendars

Parenting plan templates

Journal what happens

Expense sharing

Parenting time tracking

Calculate time & overnights

Ways to use:

Succeed by negotiating

Prepare for mediation

Get ready for court

Join the 60,000+ other parents who have used our co-parenting tools

Organize your evidence

Track your expenses, journal what happens, and record actual time. Print organized, professional documents.

Co-parent civilly

Our parent-to-parent messaging system, which detects hostile language, lets you collaborate without the drama.

Get an accurate child support order

Child support is based on parenting time or overnights in most jurisdictions. Calculate time instead of estimating.

Succeed by negotiating

Explore options together with visual calendars and detailed parenting plans. Present alternatives and reach agreement.

Never forget an exchange or activity

Get push notifications and email reminders, sync with other calendar apps and share with the other parent.

Save up to $50,000 by avoiding court

Write your parenting agreement without lawyers. Our templates walk you through each step.

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