How do I enforce a custody order in Connecticut?
Feeling frustrated, worried, or angry when a co-parent doesn't follow your custody order is completely understandable. You went through the difficult ...
Quick answer: What to know first
Feeling frustrated, worried, or angry when a coparent doesn't follow your custody order is completely understandable. You rely on the parenting plan for stability, and violations disrupt your routine and your child's sense of security. Connecticut courts take those problems seriously and give you formal tools to respond.
- Understanding Custody Orders and Violations
- Connecticut Law: The Power to Enforce Your Order
- Step-by-Step: How to Enforce a Custody Order in Connecticut
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In this guide
- Understanding Custody Orders and Violations
- Connecticut Law: The Power to Enforce Your Order
- Step-by-Step: How to Enforce a Custody Order in Connecticut

Feeling frustrated, worried, or angry when a co-parent doesn't follow your custody order is completely understandable. You rely on the parenting plan for stability, and violations disrupt your routine and your child's sense of security. Connecticut courts take those problems seriously and give you formal tools to respond.
The primary tool you'll use to enforce a custody order in Connecticut is a Motion for Contempt. This is a formal request asking the court to step in, find that the other parent has willfully violated the order, and issue new orders to compel their compliance. It sends a strong message that the parenting plan is not just a suggestion; it's a legally binding mandate that must be followed.
This guide will walk you through the entire process, from understanding the legal foundation to the practical steps you can take to protect your rights and your child's well-being.
Understanding Custody Orders and Violations
A custody order, often called a parenting plan in Connecticut, is the legally binding document signed by a judge that outlines the rights and responsibilities of each parent. It covers two main areas:
- Legal Custody: Who makes the major decisions for your child regarding health, education, and religious upbringing. This is often joint.
- Physical Custody: Where the child lives and the specific schedule of parenting time (visitation) each parent has.
A violation occurs anytime one parent fails to follow the specific terms of this order. Common violations include:
- Refusing to drop off the child at the scheduled time.
- Consistently being late for exchanges.
- Taking the child on vacation without permission or proper notice.
- Making major decisions without consulting the other parent (if joint legal custody is ordered).
- Denying phone calls or other communication between the child and the other parent.
- Relocating with the child without court permission.

Connecticut Law: The Power to Enforce Your Order
When you need to enforce a custody order in Connecticut, you aren't just asking the court for a favor—you're invoking specific laws and rules designed to uphold the court's authority. The legal framework gives judges the power to hold non-compliant parents accountable.
That matters because enforcement is about more than punishing a missed exchange. The court wants to restore a workable schedule and protect the child's stability going forward. Linda Douglas, Chief Legal Officer at Untangle, recommends framing an enforcement request around the specific parts of the order that were broken and the concrete effect those violations had on the child, not just around general frustration with the co-parent.
The Motion for Contempt
The cornerstone of enforcement is the Motion for Contempt. The rules for filing this motion are laid out in the Connecticut Practice Book. Specifically, Practice Book § 25-27 requires that your motion must clearly state:
- The date and exact language of the court order that was violated.
- The specific actions (or inactions) of the other parent that you believe constitute a violation.
- The relief you are asking the court to grant.
This isn't just a general complaint; it's a precise legal document that puts the other parent on notice of exactly what they are accused of doing wrong.
The Court's Authority to Act
Once you file the motion, the court has broad power to act. According to Connecticut General Statutes (C.G.S.) § 46b-87, if a person is found in contempt of a court order, the court can take several actions. Most importantly for enforcement, the statute allows the court to award "a reasonable attorney's fee" to the person who had to file the motion. This means if you win, the non-compliant parent may be ordered to pay for your legal costs.
The court's ultimate goal in any custody matter is to act in the best interests of the child, a standard reinforced throughout Connecticut's family laws, including C.G.S. § 46b-56. Therefore, any enforcement action will be viewed through the lens of what is best for your child's stability and well-being.
Step-by-Step: How to Enforce a Custody Order in Connecticut
Navigating the court system can feel intimidating, but the process for enforcing a parenting plan follows a logical path. Here are the steps you'll typically take.
Approaching the process methodically can improve both your evidence and your credibility. Judges tend to respond best when the moving parent can show a clean timeline, copies of the order, written communications, and a narrow request for relief tied to what actually happened. That structure also makes it easier to tell the difference between an enforcement problem and a modification problem.
Step 1: Try to Resolve the Issue Amicably (If Possible and Safe)
Before heading to court, consider reaching out to your co-parent in writing (email or text is best for documentation). Calmly and clearly point out the specific part of the custody order that was violated and ask them to comply in the future.
- Example: "Hi [Co-parent's Name], just a reminder that our parenting plan states that vacation requests need to be made 30 days in advance. I didn't receive notice for your upcoming trip. Please make sure to follow that procedure next time."
This step is not always possible, especially if there is a history of conflict or domestic violence. Your safety and your child's safety always come first. However, if the relationship allows for it, showing a judge you tried to resolve it yourself first can be beneficial. Keep copies of all communication.
Step 2: Gather Your Evidence
To succeed on a Motion for Contempt, you must prove that the other parent's violation was a willful violation—meaning they knew what the order said and chose not to follow it. It can't be an honest mistake or a misunderstanding.
Collect documentation that proves the violation, such as:
- Text messages and emails showing their refusal to follow the schedule.
- A calendar or journal where you've logged every late or missed exchange.
- Voicemails.
- Photos or social media posts (e.g., showing them on an unapproved vacation).
- Names of any witnesses who saw the violation occur.
The more organized and specific your evidence is, the stronger your case will be.
Step 3: File a Motion for Contempt
If informal attempts fail, it's time to file a Motion for Contempt (Form JD-FM-15) with the Superior Court that issued your original custody order. As required by Practice Book § 25-27, your motion must be specific. You can't just say, "They're not following the order." You must list each violation with dates and details.
You will also state what you want the court to do. This can include:
- Finding the other parent in contempt.
- Ordering them to pay your attorney's fees and costs (C.G.S. § 46b-87).
- Ordering "make-up" parenting time for any time you lost.
- Clarifying the language in the original order to prevent future confusion.
- Ordering the other parent to attend a parenting class or co-parenting counseling.
Step 4: Serve the Other Parent
After filing the motion, you must legally notify the other parent. This is called "service of process." You cannot simply mail it or hand it to them yourself. You must have a state marshal deliver a copy of the motion and the court hearing notice to the other parent. This ensures they are officially aware of the hearing and have an opportunity to respond, and it prevents them from claiming later that they never received proper notice.
Step 5: The Court Hearing
At the hearing, both you and the other parent will have a chance to present your cases to a judge. You will present your evidence and explain how the other parent willfully violated the order. The other parent will have a chance to defend their actions.
The judge will listen to both sides and may ask questions. The key is to remain calm, stick to the facts, and focus on the violations of the order, not on general complaints about your co-parent.
Step 6: The Court's Decision
After hearing the evidence, the judge will make a decision. If the judge finds the other parent in contempt, they can issue orders to force compliance. Possible outcomes include:
- A Finding of Contempt: A formal declaration that the parent violated the order.
- An Order to Comply: A direct command from the judge to follow the parenting plan.
- Make-Up Parenting Time: Granting you extra time to compensate for what was missed.
- Attorney's Fees: Ordering the non-compliant parent to pay your legal costs.
- Modification of the Order: If the judge believes the current order is unclear or no longer working, they may modify it to be more specific.
- Fines or Sanctions: In more serious cases, the court can impose fines.
- Jail Time: This is extremely rare and reserved for severe, repeated, and flagrant violations of court orders. It is a last resort.
Important Considerations When Enforcing a Custody Order
Enforcement cases often move faster and more cleanly when the requested remedy matches the actual problem. A single missed visit may call for make-up time, while repeated disobedience may justify contempt findings, attorney's fees, or a more specific order. The court is usually looking for a response that restores compliance without escalating conflict more than necessary for the child's protection. Tailored requests tend to be more persuasive to family judges and family relations staff reviewing the dispute.
What If It's an Emergency?
If you believe your child is in "an immediate and present risk of physical danger or psychological harm," you can seek an Emergency Ex Parte Order of Custody. According to C.G.S. § 46b-56f, this allows you to go to court without the other parent present to get a temporary order for the child's protection. The court will then schedule a full hearing within 14 days. This is a serious step reserved for true emergencies.
Can I Withhold Child Support or Parenting Time?
Absolutely not. It is crucial to understand that child support and parenting time are separate issues in the eyes of the law. If your co-parent is violating the custody order, you cannot retaliate by withholding their parenting time. Likewise, if they are not paying child support, you cannot deny them their scheduled time with the child. Taking matters into your own hands will put you in violation of the court order and severely damage your credibility with the judge.
Mediation as an Alternative
For some disputes, particularly those involving visitation, mediation can be a useful tool. C.G.S. § 46b-59a allows the court system to establish mediation programs to help resolve these issues without a formal contempt hearing. Mediation is a confidential process where a neutral third party helps you and your co-parent reach an agreement. It can be faster, cheaper, and less adversarial than going to court, especially when the schedule is workable but communication has broken down.
Frequently Asked Questions About Enforcing Custody Orders in CT
These questions tend to focus on whether a court problem really calls for contempt, emergency relief, or a future modification. The answer usually turns on how specific the existing order is and whether the other parent had the ability to comply with it. A clean record of dates, communications, and missed parenting time will usually matter more than broad claims that the other parent has become difficult. Courts respond best to specifics and a narrow timeline.
1. What's the difference between a Motion for Contempt and a Motion for Modification?
A Motion for Contempt asks the court to enforce the existing order. A Motion for Modification asks the court to change the order because there has been a "substantial change in circumstances." If the problem is that the other parent simply is not following the current rules, contempt is usually the right path. If the schedule itself no longer fits the child's needs or daily reality, modification is usually the better request. Sometimes parents need both in sequence.
2. How much does it cost to enforce a custody order in Connecticut?
Costs can vary. There is a court filing fee for the motion, and the largest expense is often attorney's fees if you hire counsel to prepare the motion and appear at the hearing. However, C.G.S. § 46b-87 allows the court to order the non-compliant parent to pay reasonable legal fees when contempt is proven, which can reduce or offset what you had to spend to get the order enforced. That fee-shifting power can matter a lot.
3. Can my co-parent be arrested for violating the custody order?
It is highly unlikely in an ordinary parenting-time dispute. Custody orders are civil matters, so arrest is not the standard remedy when one parent misses exchanges or ignores the schedule. If the conduct also violates a criminal law, such as abduction or a protective order, separate criminal consequences can follow. In civil contempt, jail is a last-resort coercive remedy, not the first or usual response to a routine violation. Most cases never get close to that point.
4. What if my child refuses to go for their scheduled parenting time?
This is a difficult situation, but the standing court order still controls. You are generally required to make the child available and encourage compliance while also taking any credible safety concern seriously. If the child is refusing because of fear, threats, or emotional harm, you should contact counsel or DCF promptly. If the refusal is more about preference or maturity, it may signal that the parenting plan needs to be reviewed through a modification request.
5. What if the other parent takes our child out of Connecticut without permission?
The automatic orders in a divorce case (Practice Book § 25-5) prohibit either parent from permanently removing a child from the state without written agreement or a court order. If your final order has similar restrictions and they are violated, this is a serious matter. You should move quickly to file a Motion for Contempt and, when the circumstances justify it, seek emergency relief aimed at returning the child and freezing further unilateral travel. Delay can make recovery harder.
6. How long does it take to get a court date for a contempt motion?
The timeline depends on the court's schedule, the type of violation, and whether emergency relief is requested. After you file the motion and complete service, the court will assign a hearing date, which may be a few weeks away or several months out in a busy judicial district. Serious safety issues can move faster, but standard contempt matters still depend heavily on docket availability and proper notice. Good service avoids extra delay and rescheduling problems.
Getting Help from a Connecticut Family Lawyer
While you can file a Motion for Contempt on your own, enforcing a custody order involves navigating specific legal rules and presenting a persuasive case to a judge. An experienced Connecticut family law attorney can be an invaluable asset.
An attorney can help you:
- Evaluate the strength of your case.
- Gather and organize the necessary evidence.
- Draft a precise and effective Motion for Contempt that meets all legal requirements.
- Ensure the other parent is properly served.
- Represent you in court and advocate effectively on your behalf.
- Advise you on the best strategy to achieve your goals and protect your child.
Conclusion: Protecting Your Family's Stability
When you have to enforce a custody order in Connecticut, remember that the law is on your side. The courts provide clear procedures to hold non-compliant parents accountable and restore stability for your child. By understanding the process, documenting everything, and acting decisively, you can take meaningful steps to ensure your parenting plan is respected. You don't have to tolerate constant disruptions and broken promises. You have the right to seek enforcement and the peace of mind that comes with a predictable, stable routine for your child.
Author
Linda Douglas, Esq.
Chief Legal Officer, Untangle
Linda Douglas is a Divorce and Family Attorney with 38 years of experience handling nearly 2,000 cases in Connecticut and New Hampshire. She is licensed to practice law in Connecticut and New Hampshire.
Legal citations
- Practice Book § 25-27
- Practice Book § 25-5
- C.G.S. § 46b-56 (Orders re Custody and Support of Children)
- C.G.S. § 46b-56f (Emergency Ex Parte Order of Custody)
- C.G.S. § 46b-59a
- C.G.S. § 46b-87 (Contempt of Orders)
Get Help
Get help with your divorce
Get guided answers, organize your paperwork, and move through Connecticut divorce with a clearer plan.
