buildmyevidence · guide
How to Document Missed Visitation and Custody Violations
The short answer: To document custody issues, log every missed visit, late exchange, and schedule violation with its exact date and time, keep the facts specific and free of emotion, save all co-parenting messages, and keep everything in date order. Family courts decide on facts and patterns, so a clear, dated record of what happened — not how it felt — is your strongest support.
Co-parenting problems are hard to prove one incident at a time. A dated record turns scattered frustrations into a clear pattern. This guide shows you how.
What should I document in a custody situation?
Log the things that show whether the parenting plan is being followed:
- Missed, skipped, or refused visits, with the date and time.
- Late pick-ups and drop-offs.
- Schedule changes made without agreement.
- Co-parenting messages, especially ones that contradict what was agreed.
- Anything affecting the child's wellbeing or safety.
Each entry should be short and factual: what happened, when, and any witnesses.
Why do courts care about facts, not feelings?
Because feelings can't be verified and facts can. "My co-parent is always difficult" is an opinion a court can't act on. "On March 3rd, the 6pm exchange did not happen; I waited until 6:45 and left" is a fact it can. Keeping your record factual and dated makes it credible — and credibility is what gives it weight. Save the emotion for your support network; keep the record clinical.
How do I document a missed visit properly?
Record it the same day: the date, the scheduled time, what actually happened, how long you waited, and any message about it. If you texted or emailed about the missed visit, save that too — it creates a dated, two-sided record. One missed visit is easy to explain away; a documented series of them shows a pattern the court can see.
Should I keep co-parenting messages?
Yes — save them, dated, and unaltered. Messages often contain the clearest evidence: agreements made, agreements broken, tone, and timing. Keep the originals rather than retyped versions, and organize them alongside your timeline so each message connects to the event it relates to.
How do I keep my record credible?
Stay factual, stay dated, and stay consistent. Don't exaggerate, don't editorialize, and don't guess at dates you can't support — mark anything uncertain as approximate. A record that's clearly accurate and even-handed is far more persuasive to a court than one that reads as one-sided. Courts trust the parent whose documentation looks fair.
When should I start documenting?
As early as possible, and keep going even after an agreement is in place — patterns often emerge over months. Starting early means you capture events accurately as they happen. If issues are already underway, begin now and gather any earlier messages that still exist.
Frequently asked questions
How do I document missed visitation?
Log each missed or late visit with the date, time, and what happened, plus any message about it, kept in one place so the pattern is clear.
What counts as a custody violation?
When a parent willfully fails to follow a clear term of the court-ordered parenting plan — missed visits, denied access, unilateral decisions, or schedule breaches.
What should I document for a custody case?
Missed and late visits, co-parent communication, school and medical records, and any safety concerns — factual, dated, without emotional language.
When should I start documenting?
As early as possible, and keep going after an agreement — a record built as events happen is far stronger than one reconstructed later.
General information, not legal advice. Laws vary by location. For your situation, consult a qualified family lawyer.