Family Court Playbook — Florida Edition · Step 2 of 12

Parent Rights in Florida

Understanding parental responsibility, time-sharing, and how Florida courts make decisions about children

Both parents start with equal rights

Under Florida Statutes § 61.13, Florida law does not presume that either parent is better suited to raise a child based on gender. The court's only standard is the best interest of the child. Both parents begin any proceeding with equal standing.

No gender preference in Florida

Florida courts apply the same best-interest standard regardless of whether the petitioner is the mother or the father. Neither parent has an automatic advantage.

Parental responsibility

Florida uses the term parental responsibility (not “legal custody”) to describe who makes major decisions about the child's life, including:

  • School enrollment and educational decisions
  • Medical and dental care
  • Religious upbringing
  • Extracurricular activities
  • Travel and passport decisions

Florida courts strongly prefer shared parental responsibility — meaning both parents participate in major decisions. Shared parental responsibility is the default unless the court finds it would be detrimental to the child (for example, in cases involving domestic violence or severe conflict). In that case, the court may award sole parental responsibility to one parent.

Shared parental responsibility is the default

Unlike many states, Florida law explicitly directs courts to order shared parental responsibility in most cases. Getting sole parental responsibility requires showing that shared decision-making would harm the child.

Time-sharing

Florida uses the term time-sharing (not “physical custody” or “visitation”) to describe where the child spends time. Common arrangements include:

  • Equal time-sharing (50/50): The child spends equal time with each parent. Florida courts increasingly favor this when both parents are involved and it serves the child's best interest.
  • Majority time-sharing: One parent is the primary residential parent and the child spends more than half the overnights with them. The other parent has a regular time-sharing schedule.
  • Supervised time-sharing: Required in cases involving domestic violence, substance abuse, or safety concerns. A neutral third party supervises all contact.

Overnights affect child support

In Florida, the number of overnights each parent has directly affects the child support calculation under § 61.30. More overnights typically means lower child support obligations for that parent. The time-sharing schedule you negotiate has real financial consequences.

The best-interest standard

Under Florida Statutes § 61.13(3), courts evaluate the best interest of the child using the following factors:

  • The demonstrated capacity of each parent to facilitate and support a close parent-child relationship with the other parent
  • The anticipated division of parental responsibilities after litigation
  • The demonstrated capacity to determine, consider, and act upon the needs of the child
  • The length of time the child has lived in a stable environment
  • The geographic viability of the Parenting Plan
  • The moral fitness of the parents
  • The mental and physical health of the parents
  • The home, school, and community record of the child
  • The preference of the child, if mature enough
  • Evidence of domestic violence, sexual violence, or child abuse
  • Evidence of substance abuse affecting parenting ability
  • Each parent's ability to communicate and cooperate with the other parent

Florida does not use a single dominant factor. The court weighs all relevant factors together. No single factor is automatically dispositive.

The mandatory Parenting Plan

Every case with minor children in Florida requires a Parenting Plan (§ 61.13001). This is a written document that specifies the time-sharing schedule and describes how parents will share responsibility for the child. It must be approved by the court.

If parents agree on a Parenting Plan, they submit it to the court for approval. If they cannot agree, the court will create one at the final hearing. Having a well-documented proposed Parenting Plan is one of the most important things you can prepare.

A child's preference

Florida courts consider a child's preference when the child is mature enough to form an intelligent opinion. There is no specific age threshold in Florida statute (unlike some other states). The weight given to the child's preference depends on the child's age, maturity, and the reasons behind the preference.

Judges may interview children privately in chambers. They may also appoint a Guardian ad Litem to investigate and report to the court on the child's best interest.

Do not coach your children

Florida courts take a dim view of parents who coach children to express a particular preference or who use children as messengers between households. This behavior is a best-interest factor that can weigh against you.

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