Child Custody & Parenting Arrangements in Ontario

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When parents separate in Ontario, determining how decisions will be made for children and how time will be shared between households is among the most important — and most emotionally challenging — issues families face. The outcome of these arrangements directly affects your children’s stability, their relationships with both parents, and the foundation of their lives going forward.    

At Soica & Associates, our family lawyers take a child-focused, strategic approach: helping parents understand the updated legal framework, develop practical parenting plans, and — when necessary — advocate effectively in court for arrangements that genuinely serve the best interests of their children.

Since the 2021 amendments to Canada’s Divorce Act, Ontario courts no longer use the terms ‘custody’ and ‘access.’ These have been replaced by two distinct legal concepts:

  • Decision-making responsibility refers to the authority to make significant decisions about a child’s life — including decisions about education, healthcare, religious upbringing, and extracurricular activities. It can be allocated to one parent alone (sole decision-making responsibility) or shared between both (joint decision-making responsibility).
  • Parenting time refers to the time the child spends in the care of each parent. A parenting schedule sets out where the child lives and when — including daily arrangements, holidays, school breaks, and special occasions.

Decision-making responsibility and parenting time are separate issues that do not have to mirror each other. The right arrangement depends entirely on what serves the best interests of the specific child.

Child spending time with both parents after divorce

Child Custody Laws in Ontario: The Best Interests Standard

The overriding principle governing all parenting decisions under the Divorce Act is the best interests of the child. When assessing best interests, courts are required to consider a broad set of factors, including:

  • The nature and strength of the child’s relationships with each parent, siblings, and other significant people in their life
  • Each parent’s willingness to support the child’s relationship with the other parent — courts take a negative view of parents who attempt to undermine the other parent’s relationship with the child
  • The child’s own views and preferences, given weight appropriate to their age and maturity
  • The child’s cultural, linguistic, religious, and spiritual upbringing and heritage
  • Each parent’s ability to care for and meet the child’s physical, emotional, psychological, and developmental needs
  • Any family violence or history of abuse, its nature and severity, and its impact on the child and the affected parent
  • The stability and continuity of the child’s existing care arrangements and the potential disruption of a change

Courts do not automatically favour mothers over fathers. The analysis is entirely child-centred and fact-specific. Our lawyers help you present the strongest possible picture of your parenting role and your child’s needs.

What Is a Parenting Plan and Do You Need One?

A parenting plan is a written document that sets out the arrangements for how parents will share time with their children and make decisions on their behalf. From our experience, some parents may choose to divert from the Parenting Plan on mutual consent but it is important to have one, particularly in cases where conflict arises.

A well-crafted parenting plan addresses:

  • Day-to-day schedule — where the child lives on each day of the week, including school nights, weekends, and regular weekday arrangements
  • Holiday and vacation schedule — how statutory holidays, school breaks, birthdays, summer vacations, and special events are divided year to year
  • Decision-making protocols — how major decisions will be made, what constitutes a ‘major decision,’ and what happens if parents disagree
  • Communication arrangements — how and when each parent may communicate with the child when they are in the other parent’s care
  • Travel and relocation provisions — protocols for travel outside Ontario and notice requirements for proposed relocations
  • Dispute resolution mechanism — how disagreements about the plan will be handled in the future, typically starting with direct communication, then mediation

A detailed, practical parenting plan dramatically reduces the risk of future conflict and provides children with the stability and predictability they need. Our lawyers draft comprehensive parenting plans or review and improve existing proposals.

Can I Move With My Child After Separation in Ontario?

Relocation is one of the most significant and contested issues in Ontario parenting law. Under the Divorce Act, a parent who intends to relocate with a child must give the other parent at least 60 days’ written notice before the planned move. The non-relocating parent can object, and the court will then decide whether the relocation is permitted.

When assessing a relocation request, courts apply the best interests of the child standard. Where parenting time is substantially equal, the relocating parent must establish that the relocation is in the child’s best interests. Where one parent has the majority of parenting time, the objecting parent must establish that the relocation is not in the child’s best interests. Relocation decisions are among the most consequential in Ontario family law — seek legal advice immediately if a move is being considered.

How to Change a Custody Order in Ontario

An existing parenting order or agreement can be varied if there has been a material change in circumstances since the original order was made. A material change is one that, had it been known at the time, would likely have produced a different order.

Common bases for a variation application include: a significant change in a child’s needs, preferences, or circumstances; a change in a parent’s work schedule, living arrangements, or health; the relocation of a parent; concerns about the child’s safety or wellbeing in the current arrangement; or a breakdown in the co-parenting relationship. When a material change is established, the court reassesses the arrangement based on the current best interests of the child.

Family adjusting to new parenting schedule

When Parents Cannot Agree: Your Options

  • Mediation. A neutral mediator facilitates structured discussions to help parents reach a parenting agreement. Mediation is confidential, less adversarial than court, and significantly faster and less expensive. We strongly encourage this path where it is safe and appropriate.
  • Collaborative family law. Both parents and their trained collaborative lawyers work together in structured meetings to develop a parenting arrangement without going to court. A family professional assists both parents, instead of the lawyers taking an adversarial approach.
  • Section 30 assessment. In contested parenting cases, a court may order a formal assessment of the child and family by a mental health professional, who provides a report with recommendations.
  • Court proceedings. Where out-of-court options have been exhausted or are inappropriate, a court will make binding decisions about parenting arrangements. In urgent situations — including safety concerns — emergency orders can be obtained on very short notice.

Child Support: Connected but Separate

Child support is a separate legal issue from parenting arrangements — but the two are closely connected. In Ontario, child support is determined by the Child Support Guidelines and is primarily based on the payor parent’s income and the number of children. Parenting time arrangements directly affect the support calculation in cases where each parent has the child for at least 40% of the time. See our Child Support practice area for detailed information.

Costs and Timelines

Agreed parenting plan (negotiated): Often completed in 4–12 weeks as part of the overall separation process.

Mediated parenting arrangement: Typically 2–6 months.

Contested parenting proceedings: Case conference within 3–5 months; motions and trial may take 1–3+ years.

Variation application: Typically 6–18 months if contested.

→ For most families, a negotiated or mediated parenting plan produces a better outcome for children than a court-imposed order.

Meet Our Lawyers

Experienced family law and divorce lawyers with a reputation for being ethical, practical, and a focus on what is best for the client.

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Roxana Soica

Roxana Soica

Founder | Family Law Lawyer

Known for clear legal strategy, calm advocacy, and consistent client communication.
Roxanna Cian

Roxanna Cian

Family Law Lawyer

Known for her genuine empathy and excellent preparation.
Michelle Atalla

Michelle Atalla

Family Law Lawyer

Known for her professionalism and creative approaches to each case.
Hiba Lakhani

Hiba Lakhani

Family Law Lawyer

Known for her strong work ethic, and genuine commitment to achieving the best possible outcomes for families.
Arvind Kaushik

Arvind Kaushik

Family Law Lawyer

Known for his focus, preparation and strategic thinking.
Beatriz Rodriguez

Beatriz Rodriguez

Legal Assistant

Known for her dedication to her work, including excellent communication with clients.
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What Clients Often Ask

What are child custody laws in Ontario?

Ontario no longer uses the term ‘custody’ — since 2021, the Divorce Act and Children’s Law Reform Act uses decision-making responsibility (major life decisions for the child) and parenting time (the schedule of when each parent cares for the child). The governing principle is the best interests of the child, assessed against a comprehensive set of statutory factors. Provincial matters involving unmarried parents are governed by Ontario’s Children’s Law Reform Act, which applies the same best interests framework as the Divorce Act.

How is the Ontario child support calculator used?

The amount of parenting time each parent has will impact the rights and obligations with regard to child support. The Child Support Guidelines provide the basis for calculating child support in Ontario. The basic monthly amount is determined by the payor parent’s gross annual income and the number of children, using tables set out in the Guidelines. Our lawyers use the Guidelines tables along with any applicable adjustments — for shared parenting time (40%+ each), split parenting arrangements, or special and extraordinary expenses — to determine the appropriate child support amount.

What is parenting time vs decision-making responsibility in Ontario?

Parenting time is the schedule of when a child is physically in each parent’s care. Decision-making responsibility is the authority to make major life decisions for the child — education, healthcare, religion, and extracurriculars. They are separate issues: a parent can have significant parenting time but limited decision-making authority, or vice versa. Sole decision-making responsibility means one parent decides alone; joint means both parents must consult and agree on major decisions.

Can I move with my child after separation in Ontario?

A change of residence usually does not need court approval. However, a move that hinders existing parenting arrangements is different and is called relocation. Under the Divorce Act, a parent planning to relocate with a child must give the other parent at least 60 days’ written notice. The other parent can object, and a court will decide based on the child’s best interests. The burden of proof depends on the existing parenting arrangement. Early legal advice is critical — the process is time-sensitive and the consequences of acting without proper notice can be severe.

How do I change a custody order in Ontario?

A variation application is required. You must demonstrate a material change in circumstances since the original order was made — not merely dissatisfaction with the existing arrangement. Once a material change is established, the court assesses the current best interests of the child. Our lawyers can advise on whether your circumstances meet the threshold and prepare the application if they do.

Do courts favour mothers over fathers in Ontario?

No. Ontario courts do not apply any presumption favouring either parent. The analysis is entirely based on the best interests of the specific child, including each parent’s ability to meet the child’s needs, the nature of existing relationships, and all other relevant factors. Gender is not a relevant consideration.

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