Practice AreasÂ
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Children & Parenting
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Child Custody & Allocation
Child Custody & Allocation of Parental Responsibility
As an Illinois parental responsibility attorney, I help clients navigate the two-part framework Illinois adopted in 2016 — when 'child custody' was replaced with allocation of parental responsibility and parenting time.
The terminology changed. The stakes didn't.
In 2016, Illinois eliminated the term "child custody" from its statutes and replaced it with two separate concepts: allocation of parental responsibility and parenting time. The change wasn't just semantic — it reflects a more nuanced approach to how courts think about children's relationships with both parents.
Parenting time governs the physical schedule. Allocation of parental responsibility governs who makes major decisions about the child's life. These are allocated independently. A parent can have equal parenting time but sole decision-making authority. A parent can have limited parenting time but share equally in major decisions. The arrangements don't have to mirror each other — and understanding that flexibility is often the key to a negotiated resolution that actually works for a family.
When parents can't agree, a court decides both — based on the best interest of the child, evaluated through the specific statutory factors in 750 ILCS 5/602.5 and 602.7. How well each parent's position is documented and presented shapes the outcome significantly.
Before 2016, Illinois courts awarded "legal custody" (decision-making) and "physical custody" (residence). The new framework under the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act treats these as fully separate allocations with their own standards. If your prior order uses the old "custody" terminology, it remains enforceable — but modifications are now evaluated under the new framework, which is why understanding both matters.
Sole allocation vs. joint allocation — what each actually means.
The allocation of parental responsibility — who makes major decisions about the child's education, healthcare, religion, and activities — can be structured in two fundamentally different ways. Which arrangement the court orders depends on the specific facts of the family dynamic and the ability of the parents to communicate and cooperate.
One parent holds decision-making authority
Under sole allocation, one parent has the exclusive legal right to make major decisions about the child's life without needing the other parent's agreement. The other parent retains the right to be informed — and to make day-to-day decisions during their parenting time — but does not have veto power over major decisions.
When courts order sole allocation:Â Sole allocation is most commonly ordered when the parents have a significant history of inability to communicate or cooperate on child-related decisions, when one parent has a pattern of making unilateral decisions that exclude the other, or when the nature of the conflict between the parents is such that requiring joint decision-making would harm the child through the parents' inability to agree.
One parent makes education, healthcare, religion, and activity decisions
Other parent must be informed of major decisions but does not approve them
Both parents retain access to school and medical records
Does not determine parenting time — schedules are set separately
Both parents share decision-making authority
Under joint allocation, both parents must agree on major decisions about the child's education, healthcare, religion, and extracurricular activities. Neither parent can unilaterally make a major decision — and when they disagree, the dispute may require mediation or court intervention to resolve.
When courts order joint allocation: Joint allocation works best — and is most commonly ordered — when both parents have demonstrated the ability to communicate civilly about their child's needs, when neither parent has a history of excluding the other from major decisions, and when the geographic and practical circumstances allow for meaningful co-parenting.
Both parents must agree on education, healthcare, religion, and activities
Disagreements on major decisions may require mediation or court resolution
Each parent retains full decision-making during their own parenting time
Does not require equal parenting time — allocation and schedule are separate
How Illinois judges decide
allocation disputes.
Under 750 ILCS 5/602.5, courts evaluate specific factors when determining the allocation of parental responsibility. These are assessed separately from the parenting time factors — though there is significant overlap in the underlying evidence courts consider for both.
Factors about the child's needs
The child's adjustment to home, school, and community — and the degree to which each proposed arrangement would disrupt that stability.
The child's needs — including any special educational, medical, or developmental considerations that bear on which parent is better positioned to manage those decisions.
The child's wishes, given appropriate weight based on age and maturity. Not determinative, but increasingly influential as children grow older.
Any prior agreement between the parents about decision-making — and the history of how that agreement was actually followed in practice.
Factors about the parents
The ability of each parent to cooperate effectively. Courts are realistic — joint allocation ordered over one parent's strong objection often doesn't work in practice.
The level of conflict between the parents and whether ordering joint allocation would expose the child to ongoing parental disputes over every significant decision.
Each parent's history of involvement in the child's education, healthcare, and activities — who has actually been making decisions and attending to the child's needs.
Any history of domestic violence or abuse — which can significantly limit or eliminate a parent's claim to joint or sole decision-making authority.
How an allocation case moves through Illinois courts.
Whether allocation of parental responsibility is decided as part of a divorce or in a standalone proceeding, the process follows a defined sequence. The timeline and intensity at each stage depend on whether the parents can reach agreement.
Petition and Initial Filing
Allocation of parental responsibility is typically addressed as part of a dissolution of marriage proceeding or in a separate petition. Each parent submits a proposed parenting plan within 120 days of service — which includes their proposed allocation of decision-making authority across the four major categories.
Mediation
Most Illinois courts require mediation before scheduling a contested hearing on parenting matters. A neutral mediator helps both parents work through the allocation of responsibilities. Agreements reached in mediation can significantly reduce cost and conflict — and many allocation disputes resolve here.
Guardian ad Litem / 604.10 Evaluator (if ordered)
In contested cases the court may appoint a Guardian ad Litem to investigate and make recommendations, or a 604.10(b) mental health professional to evaluate the family. Their findings carry significant weight. How we position your case before and during an evaluation matters as much as the hearing itself.
Evidentiary Hearing
If mediation and negotiation don't resolve the dispute, the matter proceeds to a contested hearing. Both parties present evidence — including testimony, documentary evidence, and expert witnesses — on the best-interest factors. We build every allocation case as if it will be tried.
Allocation Judgment and Parenting Plan
The court enters a written allocation judgment and approved parenting plan. This document governs the decision-making arrangement until a court modifies it. The specificity and clarity of this document directly affects how well it functions — and how enforceable it is when disputes arise later.
What clients ask about allocation in Illinois.
These are the questions prospective clients most often raise before their first consultation. We've answered them honestly — because informed clients make better decisions, and that's better for everyone.
Does joint allocation mean equal parenting time?
What happens when joint decision-makers can't agree on a major decision?
Can one parent change schools or doctors without the other's consent under joint allocation?
Can the allocation of parental responsibility be modified after the initial order?
What if my parenting order still uses the old "custody" language?
Is it possible to split allocation — giving one parent control over some decisions and the other control over others?
"The allocation of parental responsibility determines who shapes your child's education, healthcare, and upbringing. It deserves the same preparation as any other major legal matter."
Child Custody Attorney Serving Chicagoland
O'Brien Family Law handles allocation of parental responsibility matters — initial allocations, modifications, and enforcement — throughout Cook, DuPage, Kane, Kendall, Lake, and Will County. We appear regularly in the circuit courts of each county and understand how local judges evaluate these cases.
Whether your matter is in Wheaton, Aurora, Joliet, Waukegan, or Yorkville, we're positioned to represent you from the first consultation through the final order.
The first step is just a conversation.
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