custody schedules

Free Custody Schedule Generator

Pick your custody arrangement and schedule pattern. Get a printable calendar with overnights, exchange days, and parenting time percentages — in 60 seconds, no signup required.

Custody arrangement

How the Schedule Generator Works

Pick your custody arrangement — 50/50 custody schedule, 60/40 custody schedule, 70/30 custody schedule, or 80/20 custody schedule — then choose a specific rotation pattern within it. The generator builds an 8-week calendar showing which parent has the children each day, marks exchange days, and calculates exact parenting time percentages.

Add parent names so the calendar is clear for both households. Choose any start date. Print it — a lot of parents bring the calendar to mediation or staple it to their parenting plan filing.

No account. No email. No fee.

How to Choose the Right Custody Arrangement

The right arrangement depends on your children's ages, how close both parents live to school, work schedules, and your ability to cooperate on logistics. One parent's longer commute can shift a 50/50 toward a 60/40 without anyone "losing." Here's the honest breakdown of each split:

50/50 custody schedules

Equal time with both parents. Courts in most states presume this is in the child's best interest when both parents are fit and live near the child's school — the American Bar Association's Family Law Section notes that shared custody arrangements have grown significantly over the past two decades. Common patterns: alternating weeks and 3-4-4-3, the 2-2-3 custody schedule, the 2-2-5 custody schedule, and the 2-2-5-5 custody schedule.

The tradeoff between these rotations isn't about parenting time — it's about transition frequency. A 2-2-3 means your child never goes more than three days without seeing either parent, which younger kids often need. Alternating weeks cuts transitions in half, which helps school-age children stay focused during the week.

60/40 custody schedules

One parent has roughly four nights per week; the other has three. It works when one parent has a longer commute or a less flexible work schedule. The child still spends real, meaningful time with both parents — this isn't a "primary vs. visitor" dynamic. Typical patterns are a straight 4-3 weekly split or every-other-weekend plus a midweek overnight with the non-primary parent. See the 60/40 custody schedule page for specific rotation calendars.

70/30 custody schedules

The primary parent has weekdays; the other gets weekends — every weekend or every other. Common when parents live in the same metro area but far enough apart that daily handoffs aren't realistic. Per U.S. Courts, arrangements like this are frequently ordered when school-week stability is the court's priority. Full pattern options on the 70/30 custody schedule page.

80/20 custody schedules

The child lives primarily with one parent and visits the other every other weekend. Standard when a parent has relocated, travels frequently for work, or when the child is under two and still needs one primary base. Many states treat this as the baseline "standard visitation" order. See the 80/20 custody schedule page for what that looks like month to month.

What Courts Consider When Setting a Schedule

Every state applies a "best interests of the child" standard, but the specific factors vary. According to the Justia child custody overview, judges typically weigh:

  1. The child's age and developmental stage
  2. Each parent's ability to provide a stable home
  3. The child's existing routine — school, activities, friendships
  4. Distance between the two households
  5. Each parent's willingness to support the child's relationship with the other parent
  6. The child's own preference, if old enough (typically 12+)

Judges prefer specifics. A parenting plan that says "Monday through Thursday with Parent A, Friday through Sunday with Parent B, exchanges at school drop-off" reads better than "reasonable visitation as agreed." A printed schedule — even a rough one — signals that you've thought through the logistics, not just the percentages.

One parent on r/Custody put it plainly: "We used an online generator to build out a full 8-week calendar before our first mediation session. The mediator said it was the most prepared she'd seen first-time parents come in. We were done in one session."

Tips for Making Any Schedule Work

The calendar is the easy part. These five habits determine whether the schedule actually holds:

  1. Lock in exchange times, not just days."After school on Friday" is unambiguous. "Friday evening" invites conflict. Schools and daycare centers make natural neutral handoff points.
  2. Write a flexibility clause into the plan. A schedule that shatters every time someone gets sick creates more conflict than it prevents. Agree in advance: makeup time within 30 days, same number of nights.
  3. Use a co-parenting app for schedule communication. OurFamilyWizard and TalkingParents log every message and swap request — useful if things become contentious later.
  4. Give kids age-appropriate notice. Toddlers need 30 minutes. A 10-year-old benefits from knowing the plan the night before. Surprises at exchange time create anxiety.
  5. Schedule a review date.What works at age 3 breaks at age 8. Build a 12-month review clause into your parenting plan so you're adjusting by agreement rather than returning to court.

Frequently asked questions

What is the most common custody schedule?+
The most common custody schedule is a 50/50 arrangement, typically using alternating weeks or a 2-2-3 rotation. Courts in most states default to equal parenting time when both parents live near the child's school and can cooperate. However, 'most common' varies by state — some states still lean toward one primary custodial parent with every-other-weekend visitation.
How do I decide between a 2-2-3 and alternating weeks?+
The 2-2-3 rotation means your child never goes more than 2-3 days without seeing either parent, which works well for younger children (under 5) who benefit from frequent contact. Alternating weeks mean fewer transitions — better for school-age children who need stability during the week. The tradeoff is a full 7 days away from one parent.
Can I use this schedule in court?+
This generator creates a visual reference for your proposed parenting plan. Many parents print the calendar and bring it to mediation or attach it to their parenting plan filing. However, the generator does not create a legally binding document — you'll need to formalize the schedule through your court's parenting plan forms or with an attorney.
What does a 60/40 custody schedule look like?+
In a 60/40 schedule, one parent has the child roughly 4 days per week while the other has 3. Common patterns include a straight 4-3 split (e.g., Monday through Thursday with one parent, Friday through Sunday with the other) or every-other-weekend plus a midweek overnight with the non-primary parent.
How are overnights calculated?+
Overnights are counted by where the child sleeps each night. If the child is at Parent A's house Monday night, that counts as one overnight for Parent A. The percentage is calculated over the full repeating cycle — for a 14-day cycle with 7 overnights each, that's 50/50.
What if our schedule doesn't fit any of these patterns?+
These patterns cover the most commonly used custody schedules, but every family is different. If you need a custom arrangement (for example, a 9/5 split or a schedule that changes during school breaks), consult a family law attorney or mediator who can help draft a schedule specific to your situation.
How do holidays and school breaks work?+
This generator builds the baseline week-to-week schedule. Holidays and school breaks are typically handled separately in your parenting plan — most families alternate major holidays yearly and split summer break. The full Custody Schedules app (coming soon) will include holiday rotation planning.
Is this generator free?+
Yes, completely free. No signup, no login, no email required. Generate as many schedules as you want, print them, and use them in mediation or court filings. The generator is supported by our upcoming Custody Schedules app.