Official breakdown of the Standard Possession Order (SPO), the default custody schedule Texas courts use when parents live within 50 miles of each other. Covers weekend, holiday, and extended summer schedules. The SPO gives the noncustodial parent the 1st, 3rd, and 5th weekends, Thursday evenings, alternating holidays, and 30 days in summer. Call the OAG at 1-800-252-8014 or visit the site to understand your rights under the default order.
Custody and visitation cases are handled at the state and county level, typically through each state's family court or unified family division. Every state follows some version of the 'best interest of the child' standard, but the specifics — how judges weigh parental fitness, how parenting time is structured, how modifications are granted — vary widely. Most states have free self-help centers inside their main courthouses where fathers can get forms, file paperwork, and receive guidance without hiring an attorney. National organizations like the ABA, Cordell & Cordell, and various fathers' rights groups supplement local resources. This directory combines official state court self-help portals, county-level family law facilitators, private family law firms that represent fathers, and fatherhood advocacy organizations — all verified and up to date.
Custody & Visitation in Texas
Texas district courts hear family matters across its 254 counties, with many urban counties operating dedicated family courts. The Texas Attorney General's Child Support Division runs enforcement statewide. Houston, San Antonio, Dallas, Austin, and Fort Worth are the largest metros. Texas Legal Services Center, Lone Star Legal Aid, Legal Aid of NorthWest Texas, and Texas RioGrande Legal Aid cover the state.
More Custody & Visitation in Texas
TexasLawHelp.org — Family Law & Custody — Official free legal information website for Texans, operated by Texas Legal Services Center. Covers SAPCR (Suit Affecting Parent-Child Relat
Texas Access & Visitation Hotline — Free hotline funded by the Texas OAG and operated by the Texas Legal Services Center. Parenting time specialists provide legal information o
Texas State Law Library — Family Law Self-Help — Public law library operated by the Texas Supreme Court. Provides in-person legal research help, family law forms, SAPCR guides, and curated
Travis County (Austin) Self-Help Center — Walk-in self-help center inside the Travis County courthouse assisting self-represented parents with SAPCR filings, custody petitions, and f
No. Every state has self-represented (pro se) filing options, and most county courthouses have a Family Law Facilitator or Self-Help Center that provides forms and guidance at no cost. A lawyer is strongly recommended if the case is contested, involves abuse allegations, or requires relocation or interstate issues.
How is 'best interest of the child' actually decided?
Judges weigh factors including each parent's ability to provide stability, the child's relationship with each parent, any history of violence or substance abuse, the child's preference (usually after a certain age), work schedules, and each parent's willingness to support the other's relationship with the child. Specific factors are listed in each state's custody statute.
Can I get 50/50 custody as a father?
Yes. Most states now have a presumption of — or strong preference for — joint legal and joint physical custody when both parents are fit and engaged. Fathers who show consistent involvement, stable housing, and willingness to coordinate with the mother have strong odds of receiving substantial parenting time, up to 50/50.
What if my ex violates the custody order?
File a Motion for Contempt or a Motion to Enforce with the court. Document every missed exchange, refused visit, or violation with dates, times, messages, and witnesses. Most courts treat repeated violations seriously, with remedies ranging from make-up time to modification of custody to sanctions.