Updated: 2026-06-04
Quick answer: Bring multiple copies of your parenting plan and every exhibit — the standard is the original plus three copies — along with your custody journal, communication records, your child’s school and medical records, and proof of income. Arrive early, dress as you would for a job interview, and bring a pen, a notepad, and your attorney’s and witnesses’ contact information. Organized, labeled documents matter more than volume.
Note: This article is general information, not legal advice. Court rules and procedures vary by state and county. For your specific case, consult a family-law attorney or your local court’s self-help center.
A custody hearing is won or lost in the preparation, not the performance. The parent who walks in with labeled folders and a calm plan reads very differently to a judge than the one shuffling loose papers. This checklist covers exactly what to bring, what to wear, and what to leave at home.
Table of Contents
- What should you bring to a custody hearing?
- Documents and evidence checklist
- What should you wear to a custody hearing?
- How do you prepare for a custody hearing beyond documents?
- What should you not bring or do at a custody hearing?
- What happens at a custody hearing?
- Frequently Asked Questions
What should you bring to a custody hearing?
Everything you bring falls into three buckets: documents, evidence, and yourself, prepared. The documents prove the facts. The evidence backs your claims. Being prepared is how you present both without losing your composure.
Start with the rule that governs all of it: the original plus three copies of every document — one for the judge, one for the other parent, one for the court file, and your own. Loose, single-copy paperwork slows the hearing and looks unprepared.
Label and order everything before you arrive. A judge has limited time and patience for a parent who can’t find the exhibit they just referenced. Tabs, a simple index, and a logical order do quiet work in your favor.
Documents and evidence checklist
Here is the full checklist, grouped by category. Not every item applies to every case — bring what’s relevant to the issues your hearing will decide.
| Category | What to bring |
|---|---|
| Court papers | Your petition or response, the current custody order, any motions, your proposed parenting plan |
| Your records | Custody journal, calendar of parenting time, log of missed or denied exchanges |
| Communication | Printed texts, emails, and app messages relevant to the issues — organized, dated, in context |
| Child’s records | School reports, attendance, report cards, medical and therapy records, immunizations |
| Financial | Proof of income, pay stubs or tax returns, a budget, and any child-related expenses |
| Evidence exhibits | Photos, written witness statements, and any documents that support specific claims |
| Practical | Pen, notepad, your attorney’s number, witness contact info, photo ID, and any required fees |
Two of these deserve extra care. Your communication records should follow the rules for admissible text messages — complete threads, not screenshots cropped to flatter you. And your overall package should match our broader custody evidence checklist, which covers how judges weigh what you bring.

What should you wear to a custody hearing?
Dress as you would for a serious job interview. Clean, conservative, and comfortable. You want the judge focused on your parenting, not your clothes.
A few specifics that consistently help:
- Solid, muted colors over loud patterns or logos
- Covered tattoos and minimal jewelry, simply to keep attention on what you say
- Neat grooming — it signals you take the proceeding seriously
- Comfortable shoes, because you may wait and stand more than you expect
Skip anything that reads as casual or attention-seeking: ripped jeans, slogans, heavy cologne, sunglasses on your head. None of this decides custody, but courtrooms run on first impressions, and you only get one.
How do you prepare for a custody hearing beyond documents?
The paperwork is half the job. The other half is knowing your case and keeping your composure under questions designed to rattle you.
Know your own plan cold. Be ready to say, in plain language, what schedule you’re asking for and why it serves your child. Judges decide custody on the best interests of the child, so frame every point around the child’s needs, not your grievances with the other parent.
Rehearse the hard questions. Expect to be asked about your work hours, your living situation, and any weak spot in your history. Practicing calm, honest answers beats getting surprised on the stand. If a custody evaluation or hearing involves your child’s preferences or a guardian’s report, know what those say before you walk in. And manage your nerves — the emotional weight of these hearings is real, and the American Psychological Association’s guidance on coping with divorce is a reasonable place to start. A family-law attorney can run a mock cross-examination if your case is contested.

What should you not bring or do at a custody hearing?
What you leave out matters as much as what you pack. A few things work against you:
- Don’t bring your child unless the court specifically ordered it. A courthouse is no place for them, and judges rarely want them there.
- Don’t bring new partners or a crowd. Supportive witnesses with a purpose are fine; an audience is a distraction.
- Don’t bring your phone out. Silence it, and keep it away during the hearing.
- Don’t bring disorganized piles of paper or evidence you haven’t reviewed.
- Don’t interrupt, roll your eyes, or argue with the other parent. Judges watch behavior closely, and a parent who can’t stay calm raises exactly the concern a custody case is meant to resolve.
The pattern is simple: anything that signals drama, disrespect, or disorganization undercuts you. Anything that signals a stable, child-focused, prepared parent helps.
What happens at a custody hearing?
A custody hearing is more structured and shorter than most parents expect. The judge typically reviews the filings, hears from each parent, and may ask direct questions. Each side can present evidence and, in contested cases, witnesses.
The judge weighs it all against the child’s best interests, then either rules or sets next steps — sometimes a follow-up hearing, an evaluation, or mediation to resolve open issues. Many hearings end without a final decision the same day; that’s normal, not a bad sign.
Bring your patience along with your folders. You may wait, the schedule may slip, and the hearing itself may feel quick. The preparation you did beforehand is what carries the day. For the full path from filing to final order, see our complete guide to filing for custody.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I bring to my custody hearing?
Bring the original plus three copies of your parenting plan and every exhibit, your custody journal and communication records, your child’s school and medical records, proof of income, photo ID, and a pen and notepad. Label and order everything so you can find any document the moment it comes up.
What do judges look for in a custody hearing?
Judges focus on the child’s best interests — stability, safety, each parent’s involvement, and which parent better supports the child’s relationship with the other. They also watch how you behave. Calm, organized, child-focused parents make a stronger impression than parents who attack the other side.
How should I dress for a custody hearing?
Dress as you would for a serious job interview: clean, conservative, muted colors, neat grooming, minimal jewelry. Avoid casual or attention-seeking clothing. The aim is to keep the judge’s focus on your parenting, not your appearance.
What should you not say in a custody hearing?
Avoid badmouthing the other parent, exaggerating, or guessing at answers you don’t know. Don’t make absolute claims you can’t back up, and never lie. Stick to facts, keep answers about the child, and say “I don’t know” when that’s the truth.
Can I bring my child to a custody hearing?
Usually no, unless the court specifically requests it. Courthouses are stressful, and most judges prefer children stay out of the proceedings. Arrange childcare in advance so you can focus on the hearing.
Note: This article is general information, not legal advice. Laws vary by state and country, and situations vary widely. For decisions about your specific case, consult a family-law attorney or your local court’s self-help center.