Last updated on: August 1, 2025
If you have minor children born of your relationship or marriage but are no longer parenting in the same household, sorting out how to parent your children while living apart may seem daunting. Most of the time, both parents want what is best for their children, but you may not be on the same page about what that looks like.
At Meridian Family Law, we can help you work through custody-related issues and negotiate or litigate a parenting plan that makes sense for your children. You can benefit from our lawyers’ decades of experience with Washington family law. We are highly skilled at understanding issues that affect parents and children, creative problem-solving, working with parenting experts, and utilizing tools like mediation and a Collaborative approach to craft thoughtful, tailored plans that provide support and stability for kids. We are committed to protecting you and your children’s best interests in both the short and long term.
In Washington, the child custody document that is required by the court is referred to as a parenting plan. It addresses parenting time (residential schedule) as well as the care and decision-making related to the children, including:
We know that no two families are the same. Children have unique needs, and some children have special needs. We can help you develop a thorough parenting plan that is custom-tailored to your situation – something you can feel good about, and, in turn, your kids can feel good about.
Custody and parenting issues are a major concern for most divorcing parents – and they can continue to be complex issues until the child is grown. Here are some common questions:
You can request a modification to a parenting plan whenever there has been a significant change in circumstances that makes the current plan no longer suitable.
If both parties agree and the changes are minor, you can submit your agreement to the court for approval. If you and your child’s other parent cannot agree or the changes are major – such as those involving primary custody or anything that would affect one party’s parental rights greatly – the court must evaluate whether the modifications will serve the child’s best interests.
Your parenting plan will contain information about the legal requirements that an intended relocation may trigger. If you want to relocate with your child outside of a prescribed area (usually 60 miles or outside the child’s existing school district) as outlined in the parenting plan, you generally need to seek the court’s consent.
If the court finds the move to be in the child’s best interest, it will modify the parenting plan as needed. It’s wisest to have legal representation during these situations because an attorney can help frame your argument in a way that best reflects the benefits of the move to the child.
That means taking the issue to court and asking a judge to decide. Before it reaches that stage, the court will usually require parents to attempt mediation to see if they can negotiate a resolution. If the dispute does reach the court, the judge will make the decision based on the child’s best interests, considering such factors as the child’s emotional and developmental needs, any history of domestic violence, mental illness or substance abuse by either parent, and the need for stability and continuity in the child’s life.
Learn more about how our attorneys can help you craft the right parenting plan for your children. We are dedicated advocates and thoughtful advisers. Call 206-859-6800 or send us an email to get started.