Unapologetic Parenting
When Your Child Refuses Visitation — What Texas Law Says and What You Should Do
When a child refuses to go to the other parent’s home, both parents face a situation that is legally complicated, emotionally charged, and full of traps. This guide explains what Texas law requires, what actually causes children to refuse, and what you should and should not do in the moment and after.
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- What Texas Law Says About Child Refusal
- Your Legal Obligation as the Custodial Parent
- Why Children Refuse — The Causes Matter
- What to Do When Your Child Refuses
- What Not to Do
- Older Children and Teenagers — Does Their Preference Matter?
- How to Document Refusal Correctly
- Legal Steps to Address the Situation
What Texas Law Says About Child Refusal
Texas law is clear on this point: a child’s refusal does not relieve the custodial parent of the obligation to comply with the possession order. The court order governs, not the child’s preference — regardless of the child’s age, unless the child is 18 (or legally emancipated).
This creates the core legal problem. If you allow the child to stay home when the court order requires them to go to the other parent, you are in violation of the order — regardless of why the child refused. The other parent can file a motion for enforcement and contempt. Texas courts have held parents in contempt for allowing children to refuse visitation when the parent could have facilitated compliance.
The Difficult Reality
You cannot physically force a teenager into a car to comply with a court order. Courts understand this. But there is a significant legal difference between a parent who genuinely tried to facilitate compliance and documented the refusal, and a parent who passively allowed or subtly enabled it. Your conduct and documentation matter.
Your Legal Obligation as the Custodial Parent
When a child refuses visitation, the custodial parent has several obligations:
- Make a genuine effort to facilitate the exchange — this means actively encouraging the child, not undermining the visit or passively accepting the refusal
- Notify the other parent immediately — document the communication; do not leave the other parent waiting at the exchange location
- Document the refusal specifically — what the child said, what you said, what you did to try to facilitate compliance
- Contact your attorney — to advise on next steps and protect yourself from contempt exposure
- Follow up with the other parent about rescheduling — courts look more favorably on parents who proactively offer make-up time when exchanges fail
Why Children Refuse — The Causes Matter Legally
| Cause of Refusal | What It Usually Means | Legal Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Parental alienation | The custodial parent has (consciously or not) undermined the child’s relationship with the other parent | If the alienating parent is identified, courts can modify custody significantly — including reversing primary conservatorship |
| Genuine fear of harm | The child has experienced or witnessed something genuinely frightening in the other household | Supports CPS report, emergency motion, and modification if documented |
| Normal developmental transition resistance | Young children often resist transitions regardless of how good either home is | Does not justify withholding; the custodial parent must facilitate the transition |
| Adolescent preference | Older children resist transitions as part of normal individuation; often not about either parent specifically | Texas courts give weight to children 12+ but preference alone does not override the order |
| Conflict between the child and the other parent | A relationship difficulty that needs therapeutic intervention | Supports therapy referral; not automatic grounds to withhold possession |
Older Children and Teenagers — Does Their Preference Matter?
Under Tex. Fam. Code §153.009, a child who is 12 years old or older may, on the motion of either party, have the right to express a preference as to the conservator who will have the right to designate their primary residence. The court must consider this preference but is not bound by it.
Critically: a child’s preference affects the primary residence determination in a future proceeding. It does not authorize the custodial parent to unilaterally deviate from the current order based on the child’s stated preference. The current order remains in effect until a court modifies it.
If your teenager is consistently refusing visitation and expressing a preference for your home, the appropriate response is to file for a modification — not to honor the preference by allowing them to stay.
Carl Knickerbocker Law — Round Rock, TX
When your child refuses visitation, every next step matters. Let’s get it right.
Carl Knickerbocker Law handles high-conflict custody cases throughout Round Rock, Georgetown, and Williamson County. Free consultation.
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