Custody X Change can help you create a perfect
custody agreement in Texas.
How to Create Your Child Custody Agreement in Texas (TX)
Creating your child custody agreement is the most important thing you'll do in your custody situation. The custody agreement contains the information about how parents will divide parental responsibility, share time with the children, and continue to care and provide for the children. The custody agreement turns into the custody order, making it a legal document that the parents must follow. Therefore, it is crucial that parents take the time and effort to make the best custody agreement possible.
The first step in making your child custody agreement is to understand the definitions of physical custody and legal custody.
- Physical custody means the time the child is with the parent and in the parent's care.
- Physical custody can be given to one parent--a sole physical custody agreement--with visitation to the other parent, or parents may have a joint physical custody agreement where they both spend significant time caring for the children (although, in a joint custody agreement, the time doesn't have to be exactly equal).
- Legal custody refers to the rights and responsibilities the parents have over making decisions for the child. This includes decisions about education, medical and dental care, religion, child care, driving privileges, extra-curricular activities, etc.
- A mother or father may have sole legal custody over the children, or they may share joint legal custody. Parents can have joint legal custody without sharing joint physical custody.
Basically, your custody agreement contains information about how you and the other parent will share and divide legal and physical custody and a plan for how you will make those arrangements work.
- For physical custody, the parents should include a complete custody and visitation schedule, a holiday schedule, and include any days or events where the custody situation changes.
- For legal custody, the agreement should contain the process for how decisions will be made and how the decision making responsibility will be shared.
- Parents can also include more provisions in their agreement that provide rules that help the parents work out custody issues. For example, many agreements have provisions that outline how transportation for visits will be handled.
- Anything else that will help the custody arrangements go more smoothly and help the parents cooperate should also be put in the agreement.
When Making a Texas Custody Agreement
- Along with detailed information about physical and legal custody, a Texas custody agreement must have a provision that specifies how the parents will make future modifications to the agreement.
- Parents are encouraged to work out an agreement and submit it to the court together.
- If the mother and the father are not able to agree, the court will determine what the final custody agreement will be.
- This is usually done after both parents present a proposed custody agreement to the judge and explain why that agreement is the best one for the child.
- The judge can then accept either of the presented agreements, combine elements of both, or make an entire new one.
- Parents have the option of trying custody mediation before attending court.
Custody X Change is child custody software that lets parents create custody agreements that have all of the information about physical and legal custody. The program helps you make an agreement that the court will accept and make into a custody order. With the software you can:
- Make a complete custody and visitation schedule with a repeating cycle of custody, a holiday schedule, vacation time, and special events.
- Include information about how legal custody will be divided and shared between the parents.
- View the exact timeshare percentage that each parent has with the children so you can create the best schedule for your situation.
- Add important provisions and stipulations to help the custody arrangements work better.
- Print professional reports that contain your agreement, including a written and calendar form of the custody schedule, a list of the included provisions, and a detailed timeshare percentage document.
- Track what is going on with your custody situation by marking the actual time that each parent has the children, keeping a visitation journal, and printing a report that shows the difference between actual and scheduled time with the children.
- Export all of the reports to Word, PDF, and Excel.
- Sync your custody and visitation schedule to your Blackberry, iPhone, Palm/PDA, Outlook, Google Calendar, Yahoo Calendar, Windows Live, etc.
Texas Parents Use Custody X Change To
- Make a custody agreement that meets the needs of your child with detailed information about physical and legal custody.
- Add a provision about how future changes will be made to the agreement as well as other provisions to add clarity to the agreement.
- Work together with the other parent to make a joint or shared agreement that everyone likes and supports.
- Prepare example custody agreements to show in mediation, to the other parent, or to your attorney.
- Represent yourself in court and use the documents from the program to explain the benefits of your agreement.
- Save money in legal fees by doing your own work on the agreement.
- Have greater satisfaction in your agreement because you personalized to your child and to your situation.
- Look at many options for your custody and visitation schedule and use the timeshare percentage to compare schedules.
- Track the actual visitation time for each parent so you know if the schedule is being followed.
- Keep a custody journal where you write about visitation and other custody matters.
- Modify the agreement to continually meet the needs of your child.
- Print copies of the calendar and sync the calendar to your phone or device so you always have the updated schedule.
- Feel confident and secure about your custody arrangements.
You can get a free thirty day trial of Custody X Change by entering your name and email at the top of the page. Join the others in Texas who have found the easy way to make the best child custody agreement.
The top twenty cities in Texas (by population, US Census Bureau, 2008) are: Houston, San Antonio, Dallas, Austin, Fort Worth, El Paso, Arlington, Corpus Christi, Plano, Laredo, Lubbock, Garland, Irving, Amarillo, Brownsville, Grand Prairie, Pasadena, Mesquite, McAllen, Carrolltown.
Additional state custody agreement articles you might want to consider:
Related article (not state-specific): Custody Agreement.
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