
Montana Child Custody Laws (2026): Parenting Plans, Best Interests, and Your Rights
Montana resolves custody through a parenting plan under MCA 40-4-212. Learn the 13 best-interests factors, relocation notice rules, and how to modify a plan.
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Montana resolves custody through a parenting plan under MCA 40-4-212. Learn the 13 best-interests factors, relocation notice rules, and how to modify a plan.

Missouri presumes equal parenting time since 2023 (SB 35). Learn how courts apply the 8 best-interests factors, relocation rules, and modification standards.

Mississippi Chancery Courts apply the 12 Albright factors to decide custody. Learn about joint custody rules, Miss. Code §93-5-24, relocation, and modification standards.

Minnesota decides custody using 12 statutory best-interests factors under Minn. Stat. §518.17. Learn about joint legal custody presumption, parenting time, relocation rules, and modification.

Michigan uses 12 best-interests factors under MCL 722.23 to decide custody. Learn about joint custody, the established custodial environment doctrine, and relocation rules.

Massachusetts child custody law uses the best-interests standard under G.L. c. 208, §31. Learn types of custody, the MCCJA (not UCCJEA), relocation rules, and how to modify a custody order.

Maryland custody law now has 16 codified best-interests factors (HB 1191, eff. Oct. 1, 2025). No joint-custody presumption. Learn legal vs physical custody, relocation, and modification rules.

Maine decides child custody as 'parental rights and responsibilities' using 19 best-interests factors. No 50/50 presumption. Learn the law, types, modification, and relocation rules.

Louisiana presumes joint custody under Civil Code Art. 132. Learn how courts designate the domiciliary parent, apply 13 best-interests factors, and handle relocation.

Kentucky presumes joint custody and equally shared parenting time since 2018 (HB 528). Learn how courts apply KRS 403.270, the DV exception, and modification rules.

Kansas uses an 18-factor best-interests test for child custody. Joint legal custody is the statutory first choice but not a presumption; no 50/50 time rule exists.

Iowa decides custody by the best interests of the child, using 'physical care.' Joint physical care is rebuttably presumed when joint legal is awarded and requested.