Child Custody by State — 50-State Comparison Guide (2026)

Child custody by state varies significantly across the United States. While every state uses the “best interest of the child” standard, the specific factors courts weigh, whether there is a presumption favoring joint custody, and whether mediation is required all differ from state to state. Some states set specific ages at which a child’s custody preference carries weight, while others leave it to judicial discretion. This 50-state comparison guide shows the key custody features in every state.

Click any state name below to read its detailed child custody guide with best interest factors, parenting plans, and modification rules.

Quick Facts — U.S. Child Custody by State (2026)

  • All 50 states use the “best interest of the child” standard for custody decisions
  • 11 states have a legal presumption favoring joint custody (AK, AZ, FL, IA, KY, LA, MN, NV, NM, TX, WI)
  • 25+ states require or strongly encourage mediation before contested custody hearings
  • States that set specific preference ages typically use 12 or 14 as the threshold
  • Most states require a parenting plan to be filed with any custody arrangement
  • Domestic violence creates a presumption against custody in the majority of states

All 50 States — Child Custody Comparison

The table below shows each state’s joint custody presumption status, the age at which a child’s preference is considered, whether mediation is required, and notable features. Click any state name to read the full guide.

State Joint Presumption Child Preference Age Mediation Required Notable
Alabama No 14 No Child preference at 14
Alaska Yes Discretion Yes Joint custody presumption, mediation required
Arizona Yes Discretion No Maximizing parenting time standard
Arkansas No Discretion No Court discretion on preference
California No 14 Yes Frequent and continuing contact standard
Colorado No Discretion Yes Best interests primary, mediation encouraged
Connecticut No Discretion No Active parenting time considered
Delaware No Discretion Yes Mediation required before trial
Florida Yes Discretion No Equal time-sharing presumption
Georgia No 14 No Child elects custodian at 14
Hawaii No Discretion No Frequent and continuing contact
Idaho No Discretion No Joint custody if in best interest
Illinois No Discretion Yes Parenting plan required, mediation
Indiana No 14 No Child preference at 14
Iowa Yes Discretion No Liberal visitation standard
Kansas No Discretion Yes Parenting plan encouraged
Kentucky Yes Discretion Yes Equal time presumption, mediation
Louisiana Yes Discretion Yes Joint custody presumption
Maine No Discretion Yes Mediation before contested hearing
Maryland No Discretion Yes Mediation available in most counties
Massachusetts No Discretion No Shared custody considered
Michigan No Discretion No 12 best interest factors
Minnesota Yes Discretion Yes Joint custody presumption, mediation
Mississippi No 12 No Albright factors, age 12 preference
Missouri No Discretion No 8 statutory factors
Montana No Discretion No Best interest analysis
Nebraska No Discretion Yes Parenting plan mediation
Nevada Yes Discretion No Joint custody presumption
New Hampshire No Discretion Yes Parenting plan mediation
New Jersey No Discretion Yes Mediation available
New Mexico Yes 14 Yes Joint custody presumption, mediation
New York No Discretion No Best interests standard
North Carolina No Discretion Yes Custody mediation required
North Dakota No Discretion No Best interest factors
Ohio No Discretion No Shared parenting option
Oklahoma No 12 No Child preference at 12
Oregon No Discretion Yes Mediation required
Pennsylvania No Discretion No 16 best interest factors
Rhode Island No Discretion No Best interests standard
South Carolina No Discretion Yes Mediation encouraged
South Dakota No Discretion No Best interests analysis
Tennessee No 12 Yes Parenting plan required
Texas Yes 12 No Joint managing conservatorship presumption
Utah No 14 Yes Mandatory mediation
Vermont No Discretion No Best interest factors
Virginia No Discretion Yes Mediation in many circuits
Washington No Discretion No Parenting plan required
West Virginia No Discretion No Best interests standard
Wisconsin Yes Discretion Yes Maximize parenting time
Wyoming No Discretion Yes Mediation encouraged

Understanding How Child Custody Differs by State

The biggest difference between states is whether there is a presumption favoring joint custody. In states like Florida, Kentucky, and Minnesota, courts start from the assumption that joint custody and equal parenting time is in the child’s best interest. The burden falls on the parent opposing joint custody to prove otherwise. In the majority of states, there is no presumption either way, and courts decide based on the totality of the evidence.

States also vary significantly in how they handle a child’s custody preference. States like Georgia and Indiana give significant weight to a child’s choice at age 14 — in Georgia, a child aged 14 can effectively elect which parent to live with unless the court finds that parent unfit. Other states leave the child’s preference entirely to judicial discretion, with courts considering the child’s age, maturity, and reasoning.

The Mediation Requirement

Over half of states require or strongly encourage mediation before a contested custody case proceeds to trial. Mediation is typically confidential and led by a trained family mediator. The goal is to help parents reach a parenting agreement without adversarial litigation, which research shows produces better long-term outcomes for children.

In states that mandate mediation, the requirement is usually waived when there are allegations of domestic violence. Some states offer court-connected mediation programs at reduced or no cost, while others require parents to hire a private mediator.

Find Your State Custody Guide

Ready to understand your state’s custody rules? Click any state name in the table above, or browse by topic using the links below.

Official Sources

  • Cornell LII: law.cornell.edu — Child custody legal information
  • NCSL: ncsl.org — State custody law comparisons
  • UCCJEA: uniformlaws.org — Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act

State data compiled from official state statutes, court self-help resources, and family law authorities. Custody laws are subject to legislative changes and judicial interpretation. Click any state name above for your complete state guide. Last reviewed April 2026.

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