How to File for Child Custody
Understanding the different types of custody is essential to protecting your parental rights and your children’s well being. This guide explains each type of custody, how they work, and which might be best for your situation.
What Filing For Custoy?
Understanding the Filing
Filing for custody means submitting legal documents (a petition or complaint) to family court to formally request a custody order. It’s the official start of your custody case.
Simple Definition:
Filing = Starting a legal case asking the court to decide custody. You submit paperwork to court, pay fees, serve other parent, and the legal process begins.
What Filing Does
FILING INITIATES:
LEGAL CASE:
✓ Creates court case with case number
✓ Puts case on court's calendar
✓ Starts clock on deadlines
✓ Official legal proceedings begin
✓ Public record created
JURISDICTIONAL AUTHORITY:
✓ Court gains authority over case
✓ Can issue orders
✓ Can enforce compliance
✓ Legal process in motion
NOTICE TO OTHER PARENT:
✓ Other parent must be served
✓ Gets notice of your request
✓ Opportunity to respond
✓ Constitutional due process
TRIGGERS DEADLINES:
✓ Other parent's response deadline
✓ Court hearing schedules
✓ Discovery deadlines
✓ Trial setting
✓ All subsequent proceedings
NO GOING BACK:
Once filed, case exists
Can't simply "unfile"
Must be dismissed or resolved
Legal process in motion
Filing vs. Other Actions
FILING IS DIFFERENT FROM:
TEMPORARY ORDERS:
- Filing = starting case
- Temporary orders = early hearing within case
- Must file case first, then request temporary orders
MODIFICATION:
- Filing = starting NEW case OR modifying existing
- Modification = changing existing custody order
- Different process if order already exists
ENFORCEMENT:
- Filing = starting case
- Enforcement = making other parent follow order
- Contempt motions enforce existing orders
EMERGENCY ORDERS:
- Emergency filing = expedited filing with emergency motion
- Still a filing, just faster
- Special circumstances required
MEDIATION:
- Filing = court action
- Mediation = out-of-court negotiation
- Can mediate before filing (better) or after
CLARIFICATION:
Filing is the first formal step
Starts the legal machinery
Everything else happens after
When To File
Timing Your Filing
Right Time to File
FILE WHEN:
1. INFORMAL AGREEMENT IMPOSSIBLE:
✓ Tried to negotiate, failed
✓ Other parent unreasonable
✓ Can't reach agreement
✓ Need court intervention
2. SAFETY CONCERNS:
✓ Child in danger
✓ Abuse or neglect
✓ Substance abuse issues
✓ Need protective orders
✓ Emergency situation
3. OTHER PARENT DISAPPEARED:
✓ Abandoned children
✓ Can't locate
✓ No contact
✓ Need formal custody
4. RELATIONSHIP ENDED:
✓ Separation or divorce
✓ Never married, breaking up
✓ Need legal custody arrangement
✓ Moving forward separately
5. OTHER PARENT FILED:
✓ Already being sued
✓ Must respond
✓ Defensive position
6. RELOCATION:
✓ Need to move
✓ Other parent won't agree
✓ Court permission required
7. READY TO PROCEED:
✓ Evidence gathered
✓ Attorney hired (or ready to go pro se)
✓ Financially prepared
✓ Emotionally ready
✓ Clear goals
Wrong Time to File
DON'T FILE WHEN:
✗ EMOTIONAL REACTION:
"He made me mad, I'll show him!"
File strategically, not emotionally
✗ REVENGE OR PUNISHMENT:
Using custody as weapon
Courts see through this
Hurts your case
✗ NOT PREPARED:
No evidence gathered
No attorney consulted
Not ready for process
Will hurt your case
✗ MINOR DISAGREEMENT:
Can be resolved without court
Not worth litigation costs
Disproportionate response
✗ CAN STILL NEGOTIATE:
Other parent willing to talk
Mediation possible
Agreement within reach
Try that first
✗ NO GENUINE DISPUTE:
Already have working arrangement
Both happy with status quo
No need for court intervention
✗ WRONG JURISDICTION:
Child doesn't live in this state
Can't file here
Case will be dismissed
✗ FINANCIAL HARDSHIP:
Can't afford process
No plan to pay attorney/costs
Better to wait and prepare
Strategic Timing Considerations
TIMING MATTERS:
WHO FILES FIRST:
Advantages of filing first:
✓ Choose jurisdiction (if options exist)
✓ Frame the narrative
✓ Establish status quo faster
✓ Get temporary orders first
✓ Psychological advantage
But: Other parent can respond
Both get full opportunity
Filing first not determinative
TIMING WITHIN YEAR:
Consider:
- School year (don't disrupt mid-year if possible)
- Holidays (avoid if you can)
- Child's activities/events
- Work schedules
- Tax implications
- Strategic advantages
PREPARATION TIME:
Better to wait 2-3 months and prepare well
Than rush and file poorly documented case
First 2-3 months after separation:
- Gather evidence
- Establish caregiving pattern
- Document everything
- Then file when ready
FILE TOO EARLY:
- No evidence yet
- No pattern established
- Weak case
FILE TOO LATE:
- Other parent established status quo
- Uphill battle
- Disadvantaged
SWEET SPOT:
2-4 months after separation
- Evidence gathered
- Pattern establishing
- Ready to present case
- Not so late other parent entrenched
Where To File (JURISDICTION)
Filing in the Correct Court
This is CRITICAL – file in wrong place = case dismissed
Jurisdiction Rules (UCCJEA)
UCCJEA = Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction
and Enforcement Act
GOVERNS: Which state has authority to decide custody
ALL STATES FOLLOW UCCJEA:
(Except Massachusetts - similar law)
Prevents parent from "forum shopping"
Prevents multiple states issuing conflicting orders
Protects children from jurisdictional disputes
HOME STATE RULE:
Child's "HOME STATE" has jurisdiction
HOME STATE = State where child lived
6 consecutive months immediately before filing
EXAMPLES:
Scenario 1:
Child born and lived in California entire life
Parents separate, child still in California
File in: CALIFORNIA (home state)
Scenario 2:
Child lived in Texas 2 years
Mom moved with child to Florida 2 months ago
Dad files for custody
File in: TEXAS (home state - child's state last 6 months)
Scenario 3:
Child lived in New York 1 year
Both parents moved to Georgia 4 months ago with child
File in: NEW YORK (still home state - only been in GA 4 months)
Must wait until 6 months in Georgia to change jurisdiction
Scenario 4:
Child born 4 months ago, only lived in Ohio
File in: OHIO (child's home state even though <6 months)
For children under 6 months, wherever they lived
since birth is home state
Exceptions to Home State
FILE IN DIFFERENT STATE IF:
1. NO HOME STATE:
Child hasn't lived anywhere 6 months
File where child currently located
And has significant connections
2. HOME STATE DECLINES:
Home state court says "we decline jurisdiction"
Example: All parties moved away
More convenient forum elsewhere
Home state court defers
3. EMERGENCY:
Child in immediate danger
File for emergency protection
In state where child currently located
Emergency jurisdiction only
Home state decides permanent custody later
4. SUBSTANTIAL CONNECTIONS:
No home state AND
Child has significant connections to this state
Significant evidence in this state
Rare situation
ALMOST ALWAYS:
Home state has jurisdiction
This is where you must file
Exceptions uncommon
Don't assume exception applies
Exclusive Continuing Jurisdiction
IMPORTANT RULE:
Once state issues custody order,
that state keeps jurisdiction
EVEN IF:
- Everyone moves away
- Child lives elsewhere now
- Been years since left
UNTIL:
- Everyone moves away AND
- No one has significant connections anymore AND
- Substantial evidence no longer available in state
THEN:
New state can take jurisdiction
PRACTICAL:
If custody order exists in California
Everyone moved to Texas
Want to modify custody
Where file modification?
CALIFORNIA (usually)
- Unless California declines
- Or no connections left
CHECK WITH ATTORNEY:
Jurisdiction complex
Don't file in wrong state
Case dismissed and start over
Which County/Court
WITHIN CORRECT STATE:
FILE IN COUNTY WHERE:
- Child currently resides, OR
- Either parent resides
Example:
California has jurisdiction (home state)
Child lives in Los Angeles County with Mom
Dad lives in San Diego County
Can file in:
- Los Angeles County (child's residence), OR
- San Diego County (Dad's residence)
Strategically:
Often better to file where child lives
Local resources
School testimony
More convenient
FAMILY COURT:
Most states: Family Court or Family Division
May be called:
- Family Court
- Superior Court, Family Division
- Circuit Court, Family Division
- Domestic Relations Court
- Varies by state
CHECK:
County's court website
Which courthouse
Which division/department
Clerk can direct you
Types Of Custody
Different Filing Scenarios
1. Divorce with Children
FILING FOR CUSTODY WITHIN DIVORCE:
PETITION INCLUDES:
- Divorce petition
- Child custody requests
- Parenting plan
- Child support
- Property division
- Spousal support (if applicable)
- All divorce issues
PROCESS:
File divorce petition
Custody part of divorce case
Resolved together
One case, multiple issues
TIMELINE:
6-24 months typical
Custody and divorce together
WHO CAN FILE:
Married parents filing for divorce
Custody automatically addressed in divorce
FORMS NEEDED:
- Divorce petition
- Custody/parenting plan
- Financial declarations
- Child support worksheet
- Other divorce forms
2. Custody-Only (Unmarried Parents)
NEVER MARRIED:
SEPARATE CUSTODY CASE:
Not divorce (weren't married)
Standalone custody case
Only addresses:
- Child custody
- Parenting time
- Child support
- Paternity (if needed)
PATERNITY FIRST:
If father's paternity not established:
- Must establish first
- DNA test if disputed
- Voluntary acknowledgment
- Court order
- Then custody case proceeds
PROCESS:
File petition for custody
Called:
- Petition for Custody
- Petition to Establish Parenting Plan
- Varies by state
SIMPLER:
No property division
No spousal support
Only child issues
COMMON:
Many custody cases
Never-married parents
Relationship ended
Need formal arrangement
3. Custody Modification
CHANGING EXISTING ORDER:
WHEN:
Already have custody order
Want to change it
Circumstances changed
Current arrangement not working
FILE:
Motion to Modify Custody
Or: Petition to Modify Parenting Plan
REQUIRES:
- Material change in circumstances
- Since original order
- Change in child's best interests
- Waiting period may apply (1-2 years)
EXAMPLES:
- Parent relocating
- Child's needs changed
- Parent's circumstances changed
- Other parent not following order
- Child struggling with current arrangement
HIGHER BURDEN:
Must prove change warranted
Can't just disagree with original order
Significant change required
PROCESS:
Similar to original filing
But must prove change
Original order presumed correct
4. Emergency/Ex Parte
EMERGENCY CUSTODY FILING:
WHEN:
Child in immediate danger
Can't wait for regular process
True emergency
FILE:
Emergency motion for custody
Ex parte application
Same-day review requested
REQUIREMENTS:
- Immediate serious danger
- Documented evidence
- Can't wait even days
- Police reports, medical records, etc.
PROCESS:
File emergency motion
Judge reviews immediately
Emergency order issued (if warranted)
Hearing within 7-14 days
MUST HAVE:
True emergency
Not just custody dispute
Actual danger
EXAMPLES:
- Active abuse
- Kidnapping risk
- Severe neglect
- Child abandoned
- Parent overdosed with child present
5. Establishment (No Prior Orders)
FIRST TIME CUSTODY ORDER:
SITUATIONS:
- Parents separating, no prior orders
- Informal arrangement breaking down
- Need formal court order
- Never had custody determination
FILE:
Petition to Establish Custody
Or: Petition for Parenting Plan
Initial custody determination
FRESH SLATE:
No prior orders to consider
Court determines based on:
- Best interests of child
- Evidence presented
- Current circumstances
- No presumptions
MOST COMMON:
First-time custody cases
Clean slate determination
Required Documents
What You Must File
Forms vary by state, but basic documents similar everywhere.
Core Documents
ESSENTIAL FILING PACKAGE:
1. PETITION/COMPLAINT FOR CUSTODY
Main document starting case
Title varies:
- Petition for Custody
- Complaint for Custody
- Petition to Establish Parenting Plan
- Petition for Child Custody and Support
Contains:
â–¡ Caption (court, parties, case info)
â–¡ Parties' information
- Your name, address, DOB
- Other parent's name, address, DOB
- Each child's name, DOB, address
â–¡ Jurisdictional allegations
- Why this court has jurisdiction
- Child's residential history (6 months)
- UCCJEA information
â–¡ Current custody situation
- Where child currently lives
- Current arrangement (if any)
- How it's been working
â–¡ Your relationship with child
- Your caregiving history
- Involvement level
- Bond with child
â–¡ Other parent's situation
- Their caregiving
- Fitness issues (if any)
- Relevant facts
â–¡ What you're requesting
- Legal custody (joint/sole)
- Physical custody (joint/sole/primary)
- Specific schedule desired
- Decision-making authority
- Other relief
â–¡ Factual basis
- Why your request is best for child
- Supporting facts
- Child's best interests
â–¡ Child support request
- Amount requested
- Basis for calculation
â–¡ Verification
- Sworn under oath
- Penalty of perjury
- Your signature
Length: 5-15 pages typical
Must be typed (usually)
Specific format required
2. SUMMONS
Official notice to other parent
Court-issued document
Served with petition
Notifies of lawsuit and deadline to respond
States:
- Court information
- Case information
- Warning that lawsuit filed
- Deadline to respond (20-30 days)
- Consequences of not responding
- Attorney information (if applicable)
3. PROPOSED PARENTING PLAN
Detailed custody schedule you're requesting
Includes:
â–¡ Custody designation (legal/physical)
â–¡ Regular weekly schedule
- Specific days with each parent
- Exact times
- Exchanges (when, where, how)
â–¡ Weekend schedule
â–¡ Weeknight time
â–¡ Holiday schedule
- Which holidays
- How divided (alternate/split)
- Specific dates and times
â–¡ Summer schedule
- Vacation weeks
- Camps/activities
- Extended time
- Notice requirements
â–¡ School breaks
- Spring break
- Winter break
- Other breaks
â–¡ Decision-making
- Education decisions
- Medical decisions
- Religious upbringing
- Activities
- Who decides what
â–¡ Transportation
- Who transports
- Meeting locations
- Costs
â–¡ Communication
- Between parents
- With children during other's time
- Methods and boundaries
â–¡ Right of first refusal
- If need childcare
- Notice requirements
â–¡ Relocation
- Notice requirements
- Restrictions
â–¡ Dispute resolution
- Mediation
- Other methods
â–¡ Other provisions
- Technology use
- Social media
- Medical marijuana (some states)
- Specific concerns
Length: 5-25 pages
Very detailed
Specific to your family
4. CHILD SUPPORT WORKSHEETS
State-specific calculation form
Information needed:
â–¡ Your gross income (monthly)
â–¡ Other parent's gross income
â–¡ Number of children
â–¡ Overnight percentages
â–¡ Health insurance costs
â–¡ Childcare costs
â–¡ Other children support obligations
â–¡ Extraordinary expenses
Calculates:
- Support amount
- Who pays whom
- How much per month
Attach:
- Recent pay stubs
- Tax returns
- Income verification
5. FINANCIAL DECLARATION/AFFIDAVIT
Sworn statement of income and expenses
Lists:
â–¡ Income (all sources)
- Employment
- Self-employment
- Investments
- Benefits
- Other
â–¡ Monthly expenses
- Housing
- Utilities
- Food
- Transportation
- Insurance
- Child expenses
- Debt payments
- Other
â–¡ Assets
- Bank accounts
- Investments
- Property
- Vehicles
- Other
â–¡ Debts
- Mortgages
- Loans
- Credit cards
- Other
Attach documentation:
- Pay stubs (2-3 months)
- Tax returns (2 years)
- Bank statements
- Other income proof
6. CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION FORM
Private information not in public record
Contains:
â–¡ Social security numbers
â–¡ Driver's license numbers
â–¡ Children's dates of birth
â–¡ Addresses
â–¡ Other sensitive info
Filed separately
Not public record
For court use only
7. CIVIL CASE COVER SHEET
Administrative form
Identifies:
â–¡ Type of case
â–¡ Parties
â–¡ Nature of action
â–¡ Relief sought
â–¡ Attorney information
8. UCCJEA AFFIDAVIT
Jurisdiction declaration
States:
â–¡ Where child lived last 5 years
â–¡ Addresses and dates
â–¡ Who child lived with
â–¡ Any prior custody cases
â–¡ Any protective orders
â–¡ Other states' involvement
Establishes jurisdiction
Required in all states
Critical for proper filing
Additional Documents
MAY ALSO NEED:
STATE-SPECIFIC FORMS:
â–¡ Parenting plan (detailed version)
â–¡ Child support addendum
â–¡ Financial affidavit
â–¡ Local court forms
â–¡ Domestic violence screening
â–¡ Mediation information sheet
â–¡ Other jurisdiction-specific
SUPPORTING DOCUMENTS:
â–¡ Birth certificates (children)
â–¡ Marriage certificate (if applicable)
â–¡ Separation agreement (if exists)
â–¡ Prior custody orders (if any)
â–¡ Protective orders (if any)
â–¡ Police reports (if relevant)
â–¡ Medical records (if relevant)
â–¡ School records (if relevant)
IF EMERGENCY:
â–¡ Emergency motion
â–¡ Evidence of emergency
â–¡ Affidavit of urgency
â–¡ Police reports
â–¡ Medical records
â–¡ Photos
â–¡ Other emergency proof
CHECK YOUR COURT:
Every court has specific requirements
County website lists forms
Clerk can provide list
Attorney knows what's needed
COMPLETE PACKAGES:
Many courts offer form packets
All forms together
Instructions included
Self-help centers assist
Format Requirements
TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS:
PAPER:
- 8.5 x 11 inch
- White
- One-sided (usually)
- Good quality
FORMATTING:
- Typed (not handwritten)
- 12-point font
- Times New Roman or similar
- Double-spaced (may vary)
- 1-inch margins
- Page numbers
- Line numbers (some courts)
CAPTION:
Every page must have:
- Court name
- County
- Case title (once case number assigned)
- Document title
- Page number
SIGNATURES:
- Blue ink (preferred)
- Original signature required
- Notarization (some documents)
- Under penalty of perjury
COPIES:
- Original for court
- Copy for other parent
- Copy for yourself
- Extra copies (2-3)
ORGANIZATION:
- Documents in order
- Pages numbered
- Stapled (not paper clipped)
- No missing pages
PROFESSIONAL:
- Clean, neat
- No coffee stains
- Legible
- Organized
- Complete
Step By Step Filing Process
How to Actually File
Phase 1: Preparation (1-4 weeks before)
BEFORE GOING TO COURTHOUSE:
STEP 1: GATHER INFORMATION
Collect:
â–¡ Your information (name, address, DOB, SSN)
â–¡ Other parent's information (same)
â–¡ Children's information (all children)
â–¡ Current custody arrangement details
â–¡ Income information (yours and estimate other's)
â–¡ Child expenses
â–¡ Your work schedule
â–¡ Other parent's work schedule (if known)
â–¡ School information
â–¡ Medical information
â–¡ Addresses for last 5 years (child)
â–¡ Any prior court cases
â–¡ Any protective orders
STEP 2: COMPLETE FORMS
â–¡ Download forms from court website
OR get forms from courthouse
OR attorney provides forms
â–¡ Read instructions carefully
â–¡ Complete all forms
- Every question
- Every section
- Sign where required
â–¡ Type (don't handwrite unless form says okay)
â–¡ Proofread multiple times
â–¡ Check for errors
â–¡ Verify all information accurate
â–¡ Make sure consistent across forms
Common mistakes:
✗ Wrong court name
✗ Wrong county
✗ Missing information
✗ Inconsistent dates
✗ Math errors (support calculation)
✗ Not signed
✗ Wrong forms
STEP 3: MAKE COPIES
â–¡ Original + 3 copies of everything
- Original: For court
- Copy 1: For other parent (service)
- Copy 2: For yourself
- Copy 3: Extra (just in case)
â–¡ Organize in same order
â–¡ Paper clip sets separately
(Don't staple until directed)
â–¡ Put in folder or envelope
STEP 4: PREPARE FILING FEE
â–¡ Check filing fee amount
- Court website lists fees
- Call clerk to confirm
- Usually $200-$400
â–¡ Payment method
- Cash (some courts)
- Check or money order (most common)
- Credit/debit card (some courts)
- Exact amount helpful
â–¡ If can't afford:
- Fee waiver forms available
- Income-based
- Complete fee waiver request
- File with petition
- Clerk reviews and approves/denies
STEP 5: PLAN SERVICE
â–¡ Decide service method:
- Sheriff
- Private process server
- Certified mail (if allowed)
â–¡ Get service provider contact info
â–¡ Have money ready for service
- Sheriff: $50-$100
- Process server: $50-$150
â–¡ Have other parent's address
- Current address
- Where they can be found
- Work address (backup)
STEP 6: KNOW WHERE TO GO
â–¡ Identify courthouse
- County family court
- Correct location
- Correct building
â–¡ Family law clerk's office
- Hours of operation
- Location within courthouse
â–¡ Parking
- Where to park
- Costs
- Time limits
â–¡ Security
- Court has security screening
- Like airport security
- Don't bring prohibited items
Phase 2: Filing at Courthouse (Day of filing)
AT THE COURTHOUSE:
ARRIVE:
â–¡ Morning is best (less crowded)
â–¡ Allow extra time
â–¡ Don't rush
SECURITY:
â–¡ Go through security screening
â–¡ Metal detector
â–¡ Bag search
â–¡ Like airport
â–¡ Can't bring weapons, drugs, etc.
FIND CLERK'S OFFICE:
â–¡ Family law clerk
â–¡ Follow signs
â–¡ Ask security if need help
â–¡ May be called:
- Family Court Clerk
- Clerk of Court - Family Division
- Domestic Relations Clerk
AT CLERK'S WINDOW:
SAY:
"I need to file a petition for child custody"
OR
"I need to file for custody of my child"
CLERK WILL:
â–¡ Take your documents
â–¡ Review for completeness
- Make sure everything there
- Signed properly
- Filled out correctly
â–¡ May point out errors/omissions
- Fix if minor
- Come back if major
â–¡ Assign case number
â–¡ Stamp all documents
- Filed date
- Case number
- Court stamp
â–¡ Tell you filing fee
â–¡ Take payment
â–¡ Give you receipt
â–¡ Return copies (stamped)
â–¡ Provide information:
- Case number
- What happens next
- Service requirements
- Possible hearing dates
GET FROM CLERK:
â–¡ Filed-stamped copies (all pages)
â–¡ Receipt for fees paid
â–¡ Case number
â–¡ Any instructions
â–¡ Forms for service
â–¡ Information sheets
TIME: 15-45 minutes at window
(Depends on how busy)
CONGRATULATIONS:
You've filed!
Case officially started
Case number assigned
On court's calendar
What Clerk Reviews
CLERK CHECKS:
✓ Right court? (Jurisdiction)
✓ All required forms included?
✓ Every form filled out completely?
✓ Signed where required?
✓ Copies provided?
✓ Filing fee paid (or waiver filed)?
✓ Proper format?
CLERK DOES NOT:
✗ Give legal advice
✗ Tell you what to write
✗ Say if you'll win
✗ Recommend attorney
✗ Help you fill out forms
✗ Guarantee outcome
CLERK CAN:
✓ Tell you what forms needed
✓ Explain filing process
✓ Accept or reject filings
✓ Provide forms
✓ Explain next steps
IF PROBLEMS:
- Missing forms: Get them, complete, return
- Errors: Correct and return
- Can't accept: Explains why
- Can usually fix same day
SELF-HELP CENTER:
Many courts have
- Free assistance with forms
- Review before filing
- Workshops
- Notary services
- Computer access
- Form help (not legal advice)
Use if available!
Phase 3: Arrange Service (Immediately after filing)
SERVICE = Getting documents to other parent
CRITICAL: Must be done properly
IMMEDIATELY AFTER FILING:
OPTION 1: SHERIFF SERVICE
â–¡ Take papers to sheriff's office
- Civil division
- Same county or where other parent lives
â–¡ Complete service request form
â–¡ Provide:
- Copies of all filed documents
- Other parent's address
- Physical description (helpful)
- Where/when to find them
- Your contact information
â–¡ Pay fee ($50-$100)
â–¡ Sheriff will serve
- Goes to address
- Delivers in person
- May take several attempts
- 1-2 weeks typical
OPTION 2: PRIVATE PROCESS SERVER
â–¡ Hire private process server
- Find online
- Yellow pages
- Attorney referral
â–¡ Costs: $50-$150
â–¡ Usually faster than sheriff
â–¡ More persistent
â–¡ Professional
â–¡ Provide:
- Documents to serve
- Other parent's info
- Best times to find them
â–¡ Server delivers in person
â–¡ Usually within days
OPTION 3: CERTIFIED MAIL (If Allowed)
â–¡ Some states allow
â–¡ Mail copies via certified mail
- Return receipt requested
- Restricted delivery
â–¡ Must sign for it
â–¡ Proof of service = signed receipt
â–¡ Cheap ($10-$20)
â–¡ But: They might not sign
Not personal service
Less reliable
CANNOT:
✗ Serve yourself
✗ Have friend/family serve
✗ Mail regular mail
✗ Just hand to them informally
MUST BE:
✓ Someone over 18
✓ Not a party to case (not you)
✓ Proper legal service
✓ Proof of service obtained
WHAT GETS SERVED:
â–¡ Complete filed petition (stamped copy)
â–¡ Summons
â–¡ All attachments/exhibits
â–¡ Blank response forms (helpful)
â–¡ Notice of hearing (if scheduled)
TIME LIMIT:
Must serve within:
- 60-120 days of filing (varies by state)
- Or case may be dismissed
- Check your state's deadline
Phase 4: Proof of Service (After other parent served)
AFTER OTHER PARENT SERVED:
OBTAIN PROOF:
Server provides:
- Affidavit of service
- Declaration of service
- Proof of service form
States:
- Who served
- When (date and time)
- Where (address)
- How (personal delivery, etc.)
- Description of person served
- Server's signature (under oath)
IF SHERIFF:
They file proof automatically (usually)
IF PRIVATE SERVER:
They give you affidavit
You must file it
FILE PROOF WITH COURT:
â–¡ Take proof of service to clerk
â–¡ File with court
â–¡ Original + copy
â–¡ Keep copy for records
CRITICAL:
Must file proof
Or other parent can claim "never served"
Proof triggers their deadline to respond
Required for case to proceed
DEADLINE STARTS:
From date of service
Other parent has 20-30 days to respond
(Varies by state)
IF CAN'T SERVE:
- Other parent avoiding service
- Can't locate
- Wrong address
Options:
â–¡ Service by publication
- Court permission required
- Publish in newspaper
- Last resort
â–¡ Service at work
â–¡ Service through family
â–¡ Hire investigator to locate
ATTORNEY HELPFUL:
Service problems common
Attorney knows procedures
Can ensure proper service
Filing Fees
Costs to File
Typical Filing Fees
COURT FILING FEES:
INITIAL PETITION:
$200-$400 typical
Varies by:
- State
- County
- Type of case
- Local court rules
Examples:
- California: $435-$450
- Texas: $250-$300
- Florida: $400-$409
- New York: $210-$335
- Small counties: Sometimes less
- Large counties: Sometimes more
INCLUDES:
- Filing fee
- Processing
- Case management
- Administrative costs
DOES NOT INCLUDE:
- Attorney fees
- Service costs
- Copying
- Other expenses
Additional Costs
OTHER FILING-RELATED FEES:
SERVICE OF PROCESS:
- Sheriff: $50-$100
- Process server: $50-$150
- Certified mail: $10-$20
COPIES:
- Court certified copies: $0.50-$2.00 per page
- Self-made copies: Minimal
NOTARY:
- If documents need notarization: $5-$15 per signature
- Banks often free for customers
EXPEDITED SERVICE:
- If available: Extra $50-$200
- Rush processing
- Same-day filing
OTHER:
- Parking: $5-$20
- Gas/transportation
- Time off work
TOTAL INITIAL:
$250-$600 typical
Just to file and serve
More expenses come later
Fee Waivers
CAN'T AFFORD FILING FEE?
FEE WAIVER AVAILABLE:
WHO QUALIFIES:
Income-based eligibility
Generally:
- Below 125% of federal poverty line
- Receiving public benefits (SNAP, SSI, TANF)
- Demonstrate financial hardship
PROCESS:
â–¡ Complete fee waiver form
- "Application for Waiver of Court Fees"
- "In Forma Pauperis" (IFP) application
- Different names, same thing
â–¡ Provide income information
- Pay stubs
- Tax returns
- Benefit letters
- Bank statements
â–¡ List expenses
â–¡ Explain financial hardship
â–¡ Sign under oath
â–¡ File with petition
COURT REVIEWS:
- Clerk or judge decides
- Usually granted if qualify
- Sometimes hearing required
- Decision quick (same day to week)
IF GRANTED:
- Don't pay filing fee
- May cover other costs too
- Service fees sometimes waived
- Valid for duration of case
IF DENIED:
- Must pay filing fee
- Can ask for payment plan
- Can appeal denial
- Must pay to proceed
NO SHAME:
Many people qualify
Common to request
Designed to ensure access to courts
Don't let cost prevent filing if need custody
APPLY:
Better to try than not file
Courts want to help
Access to justice important
Service Of Process
Getting Papers to Other Parent
Service is CRITICAL – improper service can derail entire case
Why Service Required
CONSTITUTIONAL REQUIREMENT:
DUE PROCESS:
Other parent has right to:
- Notice of lawsuit
- Opportunity to respond
- Defend themselves
- Present their case
CANNOT:
- Secretly get custody order
- Proceed without notice
- Ambush other parent
- Deny them opportunity
SERVICE PROVIDES:
- Official notice
- Triggers deadlines
- Starts legal clock
- Jurisdiction over person
WITHOUT PROPER SERVICE:
- Court lacks jurisdiction
- Can't issue orders
- Case dismissed
- Start over
MUST BE DONE RIGHT:
Technical requirements
Strict rules
Follow exactly
Service Requirements
RULES FOR VALID SERVICE:
WHO CAN SERVE:
✓ Anyone over 18
✓ Not a party to case (not you)
✓ Sheriff
✓ Private process server
✓ Anyone not involved in case
CANNOT SERVE:
✗ You (the filing parent)
✗ Your minor children
✗ Party to the case
HOW TO SERVE:
Personal Service (Best):
- Hand documents directly to other parent
- In person
- At any location
- Don't need permission to serve
Substitute Service (If personal not possible):
- Leave with person at their home
(over 18, lives there)
- Follow up with mail
- Some states allow
Certified Mail (Some states):
- Mail via certified mail
- Return receipt requested
- Must be signed for
- Proof = return receipt
Service by Publication (Last resort):
- If can't locate other parent
- Court permission required
- Publish notice in newspaper
- Specific requirements
- Usually 4 weeks
- Expensive ($200-$500)
WHAT TO SERVE:
â–¡ Complete filed petition
â–¡ Summons
â–¡ All exhibits/attachments
â–¡ Blank response forms (helpful)
â–¡ Any hearing notices
TIME LIMITS:
Must serve within:
- 60-120 days of filing (state-specific)
- Before case dismissed
- Earlier better
WHERE TO SERVE:
- Other parent's home
- Other parent's work
- Anywhere they can be found
- Multiple attempts okay
Service Methods Compared
SHERIFF SERVICE:
Pros:
✓ Official
✓ Credible
✓ Experienced
✓ Court trusts
✓ File proof automatically
Cons:
✗ Slower (1-2 weeks)
✗ Limited attempts
✗ Busy, lower priority
✗ Standard hours only
Cost: $50-$100
Best if: Other parent cooperative
PRIVATE PROCESS SERVER:
Pros:
✓ Fast (days)
✓ Persistent
✓ Flexible hours
✓ Multiple attempts
✓ Experienced
✓ Professional
Cons:
✗ More expensive
✗ Must find server
✗ You file proof
Cost: $50-$150
Best if: Need it done quickly or other parent avoiding
CERTIFIED MAIL:
Pros:
✓ Cheapest ($10-$20)
✓ Easy
✓ Proof of delivery
Cons:
✗ They might not accept
✗ Can refuse delivery
✗ Not personal service
✗ May not be valid (state-dependent)
Cost: $10-$20
Best if: Other parent cooperative and state allows
SERVICE BY PUBLICATION:
Pros:
✓ Can serve even if can't locate
✓ Last resort option
Cons:
✗ Expensive ($200-$500)
✗ Time-consuming (4+ weeks)
✗ Court permission required
✗ Must prove couldn't locate
Cost: $200-$500+
Best if: Can't locate other parent at all
Proof of Service
AFTER SERVICE COMPLETED:
AFFIDAVIT/DECLARATION OF SERVICE:
Must state:
â–¡ Who served documents
â–¡ Date and time of service
â–¡ Location of service
â–¡ How served (personal delivery, etc.)
â–¡ Description of person served
â–¡ List of documents served
â–¡ Server's signature (under oath)
â–¡ Notarization (sometimes required)
FILE WITH COURT:
Must file proof
Within days of service
Court needs proof
Other parent's deadline starts
KEEP COPY:
For your records
Proof you complied
May need later
IF PROBLEMS:
Other parent claims not served
Proof of service is evidence
Court trusts server's affidavit
Important to have
Service Problems
COMMON ISSUES:
PROBLEM: Can't locate other parent
Solutions:
â–¡ Hire investigator
â–¡ Check social media
â–¡ Contact family/friends
â–¡ Last known address
â–¡ DMV records
â–¡ Employer
â–¡ Service by publication (last resort)
PROBLEM: Other parent avoiding service
Solutions:
â–¡ Multiple attempts different times
â–¡ Serve at work
â–¡ Serve early morning/late evening
â–¡ Private server (more persistent)
â–¡ Substitute service (if allowed)
â–¡ Service by publication if truly evading
PROBLEM: Wrong address
Solutions:
â–¡ Update address
â–¡ Try to locate
â–¡ Contact family
â–¡ Social media
â–¡ Public records
PROBLEM: Service refused
Solutions:
â–¡ Don't need them to accept willingly
â–¡ Can leave documents nearby
â–¡ Verbal notice enough
â–¡ Service valid even if they reject
PROBLEM: Out of state
Solutions:
â–¡ Serve where they are
â–¡ Hire server in that state
â–¡ Certified mail (if allowed)
â–¡ Follow that state's service rules
ATTORNEY HELPFUL:
Service problems common
Attorney knows procedures
Can ensure proper service
Don't let service issues derail case
After Filing
What Happens Next
Immediate Next Steps
RIGHT AFTER FILING:
DAY 1 (Filing Day):
â–¡ File documents with court
â–¡ Get case number
â–¡ Receive stamped copies
â–¡ Arrange service immediately
DAYS 2-7:
â–¡ Other parent served
- Sheriff serves, OR
- Process server serves
â–¡ You wait for service to complete
DAYS 7-10:
â–¡ Proof of service filed
â–¡ Other parent's deadline starts
(20-30 days to respond)
YOUR TASKS:
â–¡ Keep copies of everything organized
â–¡ Note important dates
- Service date
- Response deadline
- Any hearing dates
â–¡ Start gathering more evidence
â–¡ Prepare for temporary orders hearing
â–¡ Continue documenting
â–¡ No contact with other parent about case
(unless through attorney)
Other Parent’s Response
AFTER BEING SERVED:
OTHER PARENT HAS OPTIONS:
1. FILE RESPONSE (Most common)
- Answer to your petition
- Admits or denies allegations
- May file counter-petition
- States their position
- What they want
Deadline: 20-30 days from service
(Varies by state)
2. FILE COUNTER-PETITION
- Their own custody request
- May ask for different arrangement
- State their reasons
- Present their case
3. DEFAULT (Don't respond)
- Miss deadline
- Don't file anything
- Rare in custody cases
4. FILE MOTION TO DISMISS
- Challenge jurisdiction
- Challenge service
- Legal defenses
- Uncommon
TYPICAL RESPONSE:
Most parents respond
File answer + counter-petition
State their position
Ask for custody/time
Litigation proceeds
If They Don’t Respond (Default)
DEFAULT = No response filed within deadline
RARE IN CUSTODY CASES:
Usually both parents want involvement
But sometimes happens:
- Can't locate parent
- Parent doesn't care
- Parent agrees informally
PROCEDURE:
1. WAIT FOR DEADLINE TO PASS
- Don't file default immediately
- Wait until deadline fully expired
- Check court rules for exact timing
2. FILE DEFAULT MOTION
- Request for default judgment
- Affidavit of default
- Proof of service
- Proposed order
3. HEARING MAY BE REQUIRED
- Even if default
- Judge wants to hear evidence
- Especially in custody cases
- Child's best interests paramount
4. DEFAULT JUDGMENT
- Court may grant your requests
- But: Not automatic in custody
- Judge still evaluates
- Child's interests primary
CUSTODY DIFFERENT:
Property cases: Default = you win automatically
Custody cases: Default ≠automatic win
Child's interests must be shown
Proof still required
Judge still decides
DON'T ASSUME:
Default doesn't mean automatic victory
Present your case properly
Show child's best interests
Prepare thoroughly
Court Scheduling
AFTER RESPONSE FILED:
COURT WILL SCHEDULE:
1. TEMPORARY ORDERS HEARING
(If you filed motion for temporary orders)
- 4-8 weeks from filing
- Both sides present evidence
- Judge issues temporary custody
- Stays in effect until final judgment
2. CASE MANAGEMENT CONFERENCE
- Initial meeting with judge
- Discuss case timeline
- Set deadlines
- Discovery schedule
- Trial date (maybe)
3. MEDIATION
- Required in many states
- Attempt settlement
- Before trial
- May be multiple sessions
4. TRIAL DATE
- Final hearing
- 6-18+ months out
- Often delayed
- Depends on court backlog
NOTIFICATIONS:
Court sends notices:
- By mail
- To both parties
- Of all hearing dates
- Deadlines
- Requirements
STAY INFORMED:
- Check court website
- Review notices carefully
- Calendar everything
- Don't miss dates
- Respond to court communications
What to Do While Case Pending
DURING LITIGATION:
DOCUMENT EVERYTHING:
â–¡ Your caregiving
â–¡ Time with children
â–¡ Activities
â–¡ School involvement
â–¡ Medical care
â–¡ All interactions with other parent
â–¡ Communications
â–¡ Photos with children
COMPLY WITH ANY ORDERS:
â–¡ Temporary orders (if issued)
â–¡ Court orders
â–¡ Deadlines
â–¡ Requirements
â–¡ Exactly as written
BE THE BEST PARENT:
â–¡ Consistent caregiving
â–¡ Meet child's needs
â–¡ School involvement
â–¡ Medical appointments
â–¡ Activities/sports
â–¡ Quality time
â–¡ Document it all
AVOID:
✗ Badmouthing other parent
✗ Violating any orders
✗ Social media posts about case
✗ Introducing new partners too soon
✗ Major life changes (if possible)
✗ Alienating behaviors
✗ Anything that looks bad
PREPARE:
â–¡ Gather evidence
â–¡ Organize documents
â–¡ Identify witnesses
â–¡ Work with attorney
â–¡ Financial preparation
â–¡ Attend all hearings
â–¡ Be professional always
BUILD YOUR CASE:
Every day counts
Your actions during case matter
Judge evaluates current parenting
Show you're best parent
Document everything
Common Filing Mistakes
What Not to Do
Top Filing Errors
BIGGEST MISTAKES:
1. WRONG JURISDICTION
✗ Filing in wrong state
✗ Not child's home state
✗ Case dismissed
✗ Start over
Fix: File where child lived last 6 months
2. INCOMPLETE FORMS
✗ Missing information
✗ Blank sections
✗ Unsigned
✗ Clerk rejects
Fix: Complete every section carefully
3. IMPROPER SERVICE
✗ Serving yourself
✗ Handing to them informally
✗ No proof of service
✗ Case can't proceed
Fix: Use proper service method
4. NOT FILING PROOF OF SERVICE
✗ Served but didn't file proof
✗ Other parent claims not served
✗ Delays case
Fix: File proof immediately after service
5. INCONSISTENT INFORMATION
✗ Different dates on different forms
✗ Conflicting statements
✗ Math errors
✗ Loses credibility
Fix: Review all forms together, proofread
6. EMOTIONAL LANGUAGE
✗ Calling other parent names
✗ "He's terrible, evil, monster"
✗ Unprofessional
✗ Hurts credibility
Fix: Stick to facts, professional tone
7. IRRELEVANT INFORMATION
✗ Marriage problems
✗ Why relationship ended
✗ Complaints about ex
✗ Not about children
Fix: Focus only on child custody issues
8. TOO MUCH INFORMATION
✗ 50-page petition
✗ Every detail of relationship
✗ Judge won't read it all
Fix: Be concise, relevant facts only
9. NO EVIDENCE ATTACHED
✗ Making claims without proof
✗ "I believe" "I think"
✗ Unsubstantiated
Fix: Attach supporting evidence
10. UNREASONABLE REQUESTS
✗ Demanding no visitation for other parent
✗ Sole custody with no good reason
✗ Unrealistic schedule
✗ Judge sees as vindictive
Fix: Be reasonable, child-focused
11. MISSING DEADLINES
✗ Not serving within time limit
✗ Not responding to court orders
✗ Case dismissed
Fix: Calendar everything, meet deadlines
12. WRONG FORMS
✗ Using another state's forms
✗ Using old outdated forms
✗ Wrong type of petition
Fix: Get current forms from your court
13. NOT ENOUGH COPIES
✗ Only bringing original
✗ Clerk needs multiple copies
✗ Have to come back
Fix: Original + 3 copies
14. NOT PAYING FEE
✗ Assuming can pay later
✗ No fee waiver filed
✗ Clerk can't file
Fix: Bring payment or file fee waiver
15. FILING TOO EARLY
✗ No evidence gathered
✗ Not prepared
✗ Weak case
Fix: Prepare thoroughly first
How to Avoid Mistakes
PREVENTION:
â–¡ CONSULT ATTORNEY
- Before filing
- Review documents
- Ensure proper procedure
- Worth consultation fee
â–¡ USE COURT'S FORMS
- From your court's website
- Current versions
- Fill out completely
- Follow instructions
â–¡ SELF-HELP CENTER
- Many courts have
- Free form review
- Answer questions
- Check before filing
â–¡ READ INSTRUCTIONS
- Carefully
- Multiple times
- Every form
- Follow exactly
â–¡ PROOFREAD EVERYTHING
- Multiple times
- Check consistency
- Verify information
- No errors
â–¡ ORGANIZE DOCUMENTS
- Logical order
- Complete set
- Neat and professional
- Copies ready
â–¡ CALENDAR DEADLINES
- Service deadline
- Response deadline
- Hearing dates
- Don't miss any
â–¡ ASK QUESTIONS
- Clerk (procedural)
- Attorney (legal)
- Self-help center (forms)
- Don't guess
BETTER TO:
- Take extra time preparing
- File correctly once
- Than rush and file incorrectly
- Have to start over
PRO SE VS. ATTORNEY
Representing Yourself or Hiring Help
Pro Se (Self-Representation)
PRO SE = Representing yourself
ALLOWED:
- Constitutional right
- Can represent self
- Many people do
- Courts provide forms
- Self-help available
ADVANTAGES:
✓ Save attorney fees
✓ Maintain control
✓ Learn the system
✓ Direct communication with court
DISADVANTAGES:
✗ Complex procedures
✗ Strict deadlines
✗ Technical requirements
✗ Don't know the law
✗ Other parent may have attorney
✗ Significant disadvantage
✗ Easy to make mistakes
✗ May lose case due to procedure
✗ High stakes (your children)
WHEN MIGHT WORK:
- Uncontested case
- Both agree on custody
- Just need court order
- Simple situation
- Limited assets
- Low conflict
WHEN DOESN'T WORK:
- Contested custody
- Other parent has attorney
- Complex issues
- Abuse allegations
- High conflict
- Significant assets
- Legal complexities
REALITY:
- Judges can't help you
- Must follow same rules as attorneys
- No special treatment
- Held to same standards
- Other parent's attorney will exploit mistakes
- Very difficult in contested custody
RESOURCES IF PRO SE:
- Court self-help center
- Legal aid (if qualify)
- Form instructions
- Court clerks (procedural only)
- Online resources
- Law library
Hiring an Attorney
ATTORNEY REPRESENTATION:
WHY HIRE:
✓ Complex procedures
✓ Knows the law
✓ Knows local rules
✓ Knows judges
✓ Experienced in custody
✓ Strategic guidance
✓ Evidence presentation
✓ Negotiation skills
✓ Trial experience
✓ Protects your rights
✓ Levels playing field
✓ Better outcomes typically
COSTS:
Initial consultation: $0-$500 (often free)
Retainer: $2,500-$7,500
Hourly rate: $200-$500/hour
Total case: $5,000-$50,000+
(Depends on complexity)
WORTH IT IF:
- Contested case
- Other parent has attorney
- Complex issues
- You can afford it
- High stakes
- Want best chance
HOW TO FIND:
â–¡ State bar referral service
â–¡ Online lawyer directories
â–¡ Friends/family referrals
â–¡ Consultations (multiple)
â–¡ Check reviews
â–¡ Verify license
â–¡ Custody experience essential
WHAT TO LOOK FOR:
✓ Family law specialist
✓ Custody experience
✓ Licensed in your state
✓ Practices in your county
✓ Good communicator
✓ Responsive
✓ Reasonable fees
✓ Personality fit
INITIAL CONSULTATION:
- Usually free
- Meet attorney
- Discuss case
- Get advice
- Understand costs
- Assess fit
- No obligation
RETAINER:
- Upfront payment
- Held in trust account
- Billed against hourly
- Refunded if not used
- May need to replenish
BILLING:
- Hourly typically
- Track time
- Bills monthly
- Phone calls, emails, court time
- All time billed
- Review bills carefully
PAYMENT PLANS:
- Many attorneys offer
- Monthly payments
- Work with budget
- Ask about options
Limited Scope Representation
"UNBUNDLED SERVICES"
WHAT IT IS:
Attorney helps with parts of case
You handle other parts
Reduces costs
Hybrid approach
EXAMPLES:
â–¡ Attorney reviews documents you prepare
â–¡ Attorney gives advice, you file
â–¡ Attorney handles court appearances only
â–¡ Attorney negotiates, you do paperwork
â–¡ Attorney for trial only
â–¡ Consultation services only
ADVANTAGES:
✓ Professional help on key parts
✓ Lower cost than full representation
✓ You maintain control
✓ Guidance when need it
DISADVANTAGES:
✗ Still responsible for parts you handle
✗ Attorney not fully familiar with case
✗ Coordination challenges
✗ May not be available in your area
WHEN WORKS:
- Straightforward case
- You're capable
- Tight budget
- Need specific help only
- Can handle most yourself
ASK ATTORNEYS:
Do they offer limited scope?
What can they help with?
How does it work?
What does it cost?
GOOD OPTION:
If can't afford full representation
But need some professional help
Better than nothing
Decision Framework
SHOULD YOU HIRE ATTORNEY?
HIRE IF:
✓ Case contested
✓ Other parent has attorney
✓ Complex issues
✓ Abuse/neglect allegations
✓ You can afford it
✓ High conflict
✓ Unsure of procedure
✓ Want best outcome
✓ Significant assets
✓ Child with special needs
✓ Relocation involved
MAYBE OKAY WITHOUT IF:
✓ Both agree (uncontested)
✓ Simple situation
✓ Low conflict
✓ Limited budget
✓ Just formalizing agreement
✓ Other parent also pro se
✓ You're organized and capable
✓ Good at research
DEFINITELY NEED IF:
✓ Other parent has attorney
✓ Serious abuse allegations
✓ Complex legal issues
✓ High conflict
✓ Significant assets/support
✓ Business ownership
✓ Interstate issues
HONEST ASSESSMENT:
- What can you afford?
- How complex is case?
- How contested?
- Your capabilities?
- Stakes for children?
RECOMMENDATION:
At minimum: Consultation
- Learn your rights
- Understand process
- Get strategic advice
- Even if don't hire
- Worth consultation fee
IDEAL:
Full representation if can afford
Your relationship with children
Worth the investment
Attorney significantly improves outcomes
State Specific Requirements
Your State’s Rules
General Variations
ALL STATES:
- Use "best interests" standard
- Follow UCCJEA for jurisdiction
- Require proper service
- Issue custody orders
BUT DIFFER ON:
- Specific forms required
- Filing procedures
- Fee amounts
- Service methods allowed
- Deadlines
- Local rules
- Terminology
- Court structure
CRITICAL:
Follow YOUR state's requirements
Forms from other states don't work
Procedures vary
Local rules matter
County-specific practices
Major State Differences
EXAMPLES:
FORMS:
- California: Judicial Council forms
- Texas: State-approved forms
- Florida: Supreme Court forms
- New York: Unified Court System forms
- Each state different
FEES:
- California: $435-$450
- Texas: $250-$300
- Florida: $400+
- Varies significantly
SERVICE:
- Some states: Certified mail allowed
- Some states: Personal service only
- Rules differ
TERMINOLOGY:
- Some: "Custody"
- Some: "Parenting time"
- Some: "Residential responsibility"
- Different words, similar concepts
MEDIATION:
- California: Required
- Florida: Required
- Texas: Not always required
- Varies by state
WAITING PERIODS:
- California: 6 month minimum for divorce
- Nevada: Faster
- Affects timeline
CHECK YOUR STATE:
Can't assume
Must follow your jurisdiction
State website has information
Local rules critical
