HF4660

Parenting time determinations provisions modified.
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)

Related bill: SF4833

AI Generated Summary

Purpose

  • This bill changes how Minnesota courts decide parenting time in divorce or legal separation cases. It aims to maximize the time a child spends with each parent while keeping the child’s safety and well-being at the center.

Key Provisions

  • Presumption and best interests

    • In dissolution or legal separation cases, during the child’s minority, the court must grant parenting time upon request to protect each parent–child relationship and maximize the child’s time with both parents.
    • This creates a rebuttable presumption that it is in the best interests of the child to maximize time with each parent.
    • The court may reserve a future decision on establishing or expanding parenting time; if so, the “best interests” standard can apply to later motions.
  • Safety and restrictions

    • If parenting time with a parent is likely to endanger the child’s physical, mental, or emotional health or safety, the court must restrict or deny parenting time as appropriate.
    • The court must consider the child’s age and the child’s relationship with the parent before the proceedings began.
  • Support and enforcement

    • A parent’s inability to pay child support is not enough to deny parenting time.
    • The court may order a law enforcement officer or other designated person to accompany a party to enforce or comply with parenting time.
  • Scheduling and forms

    • When possible, parenting time orders must include a specific schedule for regular parenting time, including holidays, vacations, and school breaks (unless time is restricted, denied, or reserved).
    • The court administrator must provide a form for pro se (self-represented) motions about parenting time disputes. The form cannot request a change of custody and must include basic instructions and a section about the parenting time expeditor process.
  • Time targets and calculation

    • There is a presumption that a child should receive a substantial amount of parenting time with each parent, aiming toward 50 percent when feasible.
    • If it isn’t practicable to award 50 percent to each parent, the court should maximize time for each parent as close as possible to 50 percent.
    • Time can be calculated by counting overnights or by another method if there are significant periods when the child is in a parent’s custody but not overnight.
  • Findings and compliance

    • The court must include findings about each parent’s ability to comply with the parenting time schedule.
    • If the court deviates from the 50 percent presumption, it must provide written findings supported by clear and convincing evidence for the deviation.
  • Grounds for deviation from the presumption

    • Mental illness diagnosed by a licensed physician or psychologist that endangers the child’s safety.
    • A parent refusing or failing to complete a court-ordered substance use disorder assessment or chemical dependency recommendations.
    • A parent’s inability to care for the child at least 50 percent of the time because of scheduling conflicts (work, school, childcare, medical appointments, etc.) that make 50 percent impractical.
    • Other factors such as long travel distances, the child’s medical or educational needs, or concerns about the child’s safety.
  • Considerations when deviating

    • The court must consider that reducing a parent’s time can hurt the parent’s ability to parent, which might negatively affect the child.
  • Relationship building and gradual increase

    • If a child has not had a relationship with a parent due to the other parent’s absence for a year or more, or if the child is a very young child (1 year old or younger), the court may order a gradual increase in parenting time (for up to one year, then switch to a schedule based on the 50/50 presumption).
  • Age, gender, and relationship status

    • The court may not limit parenting time based solely on the child’s age.
    • The court may not consider a parent’s gender, marital status, or relationship status when making parenting time decisions.
  • Exceptions to the 50/50 norm

    • It is not considered a deviation if a parent receives up to 53 percent of parenting time and the other parent receives at least 47 percent.
    • A deviation may still occur if there has been domestic abuse, or a domestic violence-related offense between the parents or between a parent and child.
  • Other factors in awarding time

    • The court will evaluate whether one parent has interfered with the child’s relationship with the other parent without justification, whether false allegations of domestic abuse have been made, and whether a parent has chronically denied or minimized the other parent’s parenting time to gain an advantage.

Significant Changes to Existing Law

  • Introduces a strong presumption to maximize parenting time with each parent, subject to safety and other restrictions.
  • Requires more explicit schedules and formal findings about each parent’s ability to comply.
  • Expands grounds for deviating from 50/50 time to include mental health, substance use treatment, scheduling infeasibility, distance, and child-specific needs, with a requirement for written factual findings.
  • Explicitly prohibits gender, marital status, or relationship status from affecting parenting time decisions.
  • Creates procedural tools for self-represented parties and emphasizes early, explicit consideration of the parenting time plan (including holidays and school breaks).
  • Adds protections for safety-related concerns, while clarifying that inability to pay support should not automatically restrict parenting time.

Practical Implications

  • Courts may push toward more equal time with each parent, provided safety and practicality considerations are met.
  • Families may need to provide more scheduling information and follow more detailed parenting time plans.
  • There could be more emphasis on addressing parental cooperation and accountability, including addressing false allegations and interference with time.

Notable Concepts and Phrases from the Text

  • parenting time, best interests, rebuttable presumption
  • maximize time with each parent, 50 percent presumption
  • schedule, holidays, vacations, school breaks
  • pro se motion, court administrator form, parenting time expeditor process (518.1751)
  • safety: physical, mental, emotional health; restrict or deny
  • overnights, time calculation methods, significant time periods, separate days
  • compliance findings, clear and convincing evidence
  • deviation grounds: mental illness, substance use disorder assessment, schedule modification infeasibility
  • distance, special needs, safety concerns, inability to modify schedule
  • gradual increase, one year limit
  • age, gender, marital status, relationship status not a factor
  • exceptions to 50/50: domestic abuse, domestic violence-related offense
  • unwarranted interference, false allegations of domestic abuse, chronic denial/minimizing of parenting time

Relevant Terms - parenting time - best interests - rebuttable presumption - maximize time - 50 percent presumption - overnights - significant time periods - holidays and school breaks - pro se motion - expeditor process - safety (physical/mental/emotional health) - compliance findings - mental illness - substance use disorder assessment - domestic abuse - domestic violence-related offense - unequal time - gradual increase - age considerations - gender neutrality - marital status neutrality - interference with relationship - false allegations - custody (not requested on pro se forms)

Bill text versions

Actions

DateChamberWhereTypeNameCommittee Name
March 25, 2026HouseActionIntroduction and first reading, referred toJudiciary Finance and Civil Law

Citations

 
[
  {
    "analysis": {
      "added": [
        "Introduces a rebuttable presumption that it is in the best interests of the child to maximize each parent's parenting time.",
        "Allows the court to reserve a determination for future establishment or expansion of parenting time."
      ],
      "removed": [],
      "summary": "The bill amends Minnesota Statutes 2024, section 518.175, subdivision 1 to modify the parenting time framework in dissolution or legal separation proceedings, including a rebuttable presumption favoring increased parenting time with each parent and related standards.",
      "modified": [
        "Revises the standard for determining parenting time, including consideration of the age of the child and the existing parent-child relationship.",
        "Sets forth conditions under which parenting time can be restricted or denied (endangerment to health or safety).",
        "Incorporates timing and scheduling considerations, potential weighting of overnights to approximate 50 percent."
      ]
    },
    "citation": "518.175",
    "subdivision": "subd. 1"
  },
  {
    "analysis": {
      "added": [
        "No substantive new changes to the standard itself; reinforces application of the best interests framework in subsequent motions."
      ],
      "removed": [],
      "summary": "The bill references the best interests standard as set forth in 518.175, subdivision 5, paragraph (a), in the context of subsequent motions to establish or expand parenting time.",
      "modified": [
        "Clarifies that the best interests standard applies to subsequent motions for establishing or expanding parenting time."
      ]
    },
    "citation": "518.175",
    "subdivision": "subd. 5, par. (a)"
  },
  {
    "analysis": {
      "added": [
        "Court administrator must provide a pro se motion form for parenting time disputes that references the 518.1751 expeditor process.",
        "Form includes an affidavit, relief description, and a brief description of the 518.1751 expeditor process; prohibitions on requests for custody changes."
      ],
      "removed": [],
      "summary": "The bill references the parenting time expeditor process under Minnesota Statutes 518.1751 in relation to a form and procedure for pro se parenting time disputes.",
      "modified": []
    },
    "citation": "518.1751",
    "subdivision": ""
  },
  {
    "analysis": {
      "added": [],
      "removed": [],
      "summary": "The bill incorporates domestic abuse definitions by referencing 518B.01 when evaluating deviations or restrictions related to parenting time.",
      "modified": [
        "Defines domestic abuse considerations as part of deviations from the parenting time presumption."
      ]
    },
    "citation": "518B.01",
    "subdivision": ""
  },
  {
    "analysis": {
      "added": [],
      "removed": [],
      "summary": "The bill references the definition of domestic violence as defined in Minnesota Statutes 609.02, subdivision 16, in the context of penalties or findings affecting parenting time.",
      "modified": [
        "Uses the definition of domestic violence from 609.02(16) to inform parenting time determinations where applicable."
      ]
    },
    "citation": "609.02",
    "subdivision": "subd. 16"
  }
]

Progress through the legislative process

17%
In Committee
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