Missouri courts make custody decisions based entirely on the best interests of the child. That means every factor — from each parent's relationship with the children to work schedules to living arrangements — is examined. Thompson & Walker builds custody cases that put your children first and your parental rights front and center.
Legal Custody: Decision-making authority over the child's education, healthcare, and religious upbringing. Missouri courts strongly prefer joint legal custody, allowing both parents to share major decisions.
Physical Custody: Where the child primarily lives. Courts can award joint physical custody (shared time) or sole physical custody to one parent with visitation to the other.
Missouri courts apply a multi-factor best interests test under RSMo § 452.375, including: each parent's wishes; the child's adjustment to home, school, and community; the mental and physical health of all parties; the willingness of each parent to support the child's relationship with the other; and the child's own preferences (given weight based on age and maturity).
Missouri requires a detailed parenting plan in every custody case. Thompson & Walker drafts comprehensive parenting plans that cover holiday schedules, school-year routines, decision-making protocols, and dispute resolution procedures — minimizing future conflict.
Once a custody order is entered, modifying it requires showing a "substantial change in circumstances" under RSMo § 452.410. Relocation of a parent, remarriage, changes in the child's needs, or a parent's inability to provide a stable environment may qualify. We handle modifications efficiently and strategically.
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