Relocation Lawyer In Costa Mesa & Orange County, CA
Here’s How It Works
- Call this number 24/7: (949) 629-4111 (Tap To Call On Mobile)
- One of our relocation attorneys will take your call and invite you into a one-on-one, secure video chat for your free consultation. (You also have the option of just speaking via telephone if you wish.)
- Our relocation lawyer will answer your questions and carefully assess and evaluate the details of your case.
- Our attorney will then determine the best fit for you and your case with one of our professionally vetted, specialized family law attorneys nearest you. They will then will work with you to get your case started.
- This is a free consultation. There’s no charge and no obligation.
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We’re a mobile society. Everything from job offers or school to new relationships can have us packing up and starting over. Yet in a divorce, moving with children is not always a foregone conclusion. In fact, each state handles the relocation of children differently.
In California, if you’re the primary custodian, it’s presumed your relocation will be allowed.
But before you get too excited, recognize there are actually eleven different criteria the court considers in whether to allow your relocation:
- The relative strength, nature, quality, the extent of involvement, and stability of the child’s relationship with each parent, siblings, and other significant persons in the child’s life;
- Prior agreements of the parties;
- Whether disrupting the contact between the child and the person with whom the child resides a majority of the time would be more detrimental to the child than disrupting contact between the child and the person objecting to the relocation;
- Whether either parent or a person entitled to residential time with the child is subject to limitations under current family law;
- The reasons each person has for seeking or opposing the relocation and the good faith of each of the parties in requesting or opposing the relocation;
- The age, developmental stage, and needs of the child, and the likely impact the relocation or its prevention will have on the child’s physical, educational, and emotional development, taking into consideration any special needs of the child;
- The quality of life, resources, and opportunities available to the child and to the relocating party in the current and proposed geographic locations;
- The availability of alternative arrangements to foster and continue the child’s relationship with and access to the other parent;
- The alternatives to relocation and whether it is feasible and desirable for the other party to relocate also;
- The financial impact and logistics of the relocation or its prevention; and
- For a temporary order, the amount of time before a final decision can be made at trial.
Whether your wish is to relocate or prevent your children from relocating, an experienced attorney is a must. We understand in either case, helping the children stay connected with both parents is important.