When you marry someone who already has children and become their step parent, this can often mean you take on many of the same day-to-day duties and responsibilities as the parent you married. Many step parents treat these children as if they were their own. However, it is important to remember than even though this may happen; they do not have the same rights as the child’s biological parents when they get divorced.
What is a step parent?
A step parent is someone who married or entered into a civil partnership with the biological parent of a child. If you only live with the biological parent without legalising your relationship, you will have different rights.
A step parent can be any gender, but they will not acquire any legal rights to be involved in an important decision over a child’s life, such as their education or medical treatment, despite finding themselves acting as parent or sharing parenting duties with the biological parent.
Do step parents have parental responsibility?
Parental responsibility is a term covering the rights and responsibilities of a parent. Fundamentally, it requires a parent to provide a home for the child and to protect and maintain them. It also covers things such as discipline and looking after their property, as well as schooling and consenting to medical treatment. Anyone with parental responsibility is responsible for naming the child and agreeing to any subsequent change of name.
Step parents do not automatically acquire parental responsibility, even if they are married to, or in a civil partnership with, the child’s biological parent. However, there are some ways that step parents can obtain parental responsibility should they wish to.
One way is to apply to the court for a Child Arrangements Order setting out where and who the child will live with. If the step parent is named on the order, either on their own or with another person, they will automatically be conferred with parental responsibility. However, these orders are not very common.
It is also possible to acquire parental responsibility by adopting the child and taking on the same rights as a biological parent. The court can also make a parental responsibility order as a result of an application by the step parent. The final way a step parent can obtain parental responsibility is by entering a parental responsibility agreement, although this must be signed by all parties who already have it.
It is important to note that step parents cannot acquire parental responsibility once they are divorced, or their civil partnership is dissolved from the biological parent.
Parental responsibility orders or agreements come to an end when the child reaches the age of 18, if the child is adopted, or by further order of the court.
What are the legal rights and limitations of step parents?
If a step parent is granted parental responsibility, it can allow them to have a say in all aspects of the child’s upbringing. This can mean that they are able to consent to medical treatment and to be informed about the child from the school or GP. Having parental responsibility can be extremely important as it can allow a step parent to make emergency decisions, such as agreeing to urgent medical care, or if consent needs to be given about certain aspects of their education. It will also allow the step parent to be consulted by other people in relation to a change in the child’s surname, their religion, and where they live. In addition, the step parent will be included as a party to any legal or formal processes or court proceedings that may involve the child.
In some circumstances, a step parent may have financial obligations towards a child that continue after they are divorced from the child’s biological parent. The court is also likely to factor in the needs of step children when deciding on a financial settlement upon divorce.
What changes for a step parent after divorce?
When a step parent divorces the child’s biological parent, they do not have an automatic right to see the child because there is no presumption of continued involvement when it comes to step parents. The exception to this rule is if they have officially adopted the child.
Even if the step parent has acquired parental responsibility for the child during the marriage, they still have no automatic right to have contact with the child, although it may have a positive impact on court proceedings if they decide to make an application to see the child.
Does a step parent have to pay child maintenance if they divorce the child’s biological parent?
The Child Maintenance Service (CMS) cannot require a step parent to pay maintenance for a step child. However, if the child was raised as if they were part of a new family comprising the step parent, the biological parent, and any children of the two parties, the court could decide that the step parent should contribute financially. Here, the step parent could be ordered to make monthly maintenance payments, provide the step child and biological parent with a place to live and/or cover specific living costs.
What options are available to a step parent for maintaining contact after divorce?
Before any court proceedings are issued, the step parent and biological parent will be required to attend mediation. This is aimed towards resolving the dispute through constructive discussion with the help of an independent mediator. If this is unsuccessful, and an agreement cannot be reached, the step parent can make an application to court.
The court will look at whether making an order is suitable in the case, but in most cases of this nature, it will make a Child Arrangements order which sets out where the child lives and with whom they spend their time. The judge will take several factors into account when a step parent applies for such an order, and will consider the welfare checklist and all the relevant circumstances of the case before making a decision.
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