Practical guidance on creating arrangements that put your children first.
A parenting plan is a written agreement between separating parents setting out how they will share the care of their children. It is not a legal document and does not need to be filed with a court, but a well-thought-through parenting plan can prevent misunderstandings, reduce conflict and provide stability for your children at a time when everything else feels uncertain.
The best parenting plans are child-centred, realistic and flexible. Here's how to create one that actually works.
Before thinking about what works for you, think about what works for your children. Their ages, school arrangements, friendships, activities and emotional needs should shape the plan. What works for a toddler will look very different from what works for a teenager.
Try to separate your feelings about your ex-partner from your children's need for a relationship with both parents. Children generally benefit from having both parents actively involved in their lives, even when that is hard for the adults involved.
A good parenting plan should cover:
Frame everything in terms of the children's time rather than parental rights. "The children will spend time with Mum on..." is more constructive than "Mum will have the children every other weekend." The difference is subtle but it shifts the focus to where it belongs, on the children.
Vague arrangements cause arguments. "Alternate weekends" sounds simple until you disagree about when a weekend starts. Be specific: "The children will be collected from school on Friday afternoon and returned by 6pm on Sunday evening."
Think through the scenarios that are most likely to cause problems, such as bank holidays, school inset days, illness, last-minute changes, and agree in advance how you will handle them.
Life changes. Children grow. New relationships, job changes and house moves all affect arrangements. Build a review process into your plan, perhaps annually, or when children reach certain ages or milestones.
A plan that is too rigid will either break or breed resentment. Leave room for common sense and goodwill.
Agreeing a parenting plan requires both parents to communicate constructively, which can be genuinely difficult when a relationship has broken down. Some suggestions:
Not necessarily. Many parents make and keep arrangements without any court involvement. However, if you cannot agree or if arrangements break down repeatedly, you may need to apply to the court for a Child Arrangements Order. A parenting plan, even an informal one, demonstrates to the court that you have attempted to resolve matters constructively.
Practical help with parenting plans, communication frameworks and arrangements that genuinely work for your children.
Book a Free Call