Shared parenting has become the cultural and increasingly legal default in divorce. Many states now presume 50/50 custody absent specific evidence against it, and the framing in popular advice has shifted from “best interests of the child” to something closer to “equal time as a parental right.” For the majority of separating couples, this framework is probably an improvement over the old maternal-preference default. But the research is consistent and largely uncomfortable: in high-conflict cases โ perhaps 15% to 20% of divorces โ equal-time arrangements correlate with worse child outcomes than primary-residence arrangements.
This is hard to talk about because the topic intersects with gender politics and parental rights. The research doesn’t care about either, and neither should children’s welfare. If any of this echoes a current situation, professional family therapists and child psychologists are worth consulting.
What the research consistently finds
Studies from researchers including Jennifer McIntosh in Australia, Joan Kelly and Robert Emery in the U.S., and longitudinal Scandinavian work have repeatedly identified the same pattern. In low- and moderate-conflict separations, shared parenting is associated with outcomes comparable to or better than primary-residence arrangements. In high-conflict separations โ defined by ongoing hostility, litigation, denigration of the other parent, or domestic violence history โ equal-time schedules correlate with elevated anxiety, sleep problems, attachment disruption, and behavioral issues, particularly in younger children. The mechanism isn’t mysterious: kids in those situations are repeatedly exposed to transitions between hostile environments, exchanges that function as opportunities for conflict, and parents who use them as conduits for messages.
Why courts get it wrong anyway
Family courts are under enormous pressure to apply uniform rules. A presumption of 50/50 is administratively cleaner than a case-by-case best-interests analysis, and it satisfies political constituencies on multiple sides. Judges, often without specialized training in child development, default to the presumption unless one party can prove “unfit parenting” โ a high bar that doesn’t capture chronic low-grade conflict or psychological mistreatment. Custody evaluators, when used, are inconsistent in quality and can be gamed. And the parents in the highest-conflict cases are often the most adversarial litigants, which means the cases that most need nuanced treatment get the most rigid one. The presumption that more equal time is automatically better for kids is not supported by the data when conflict is the variable being held constant.
What better looks like
Some jurisdictions have moved toward conflict-graduated parenting plans: equal time for cooperative parents, primary residence with structured visitation for high-conflict cases, and a middle path with reduced exchanges for those in between. Parallel parenting models โ where parents have minimal direct contact and exchanges happen at neutral locations or through schools โ show better outcomes than forced co-parenting in hostile cases. None of this requires demonizing fathers or mothers; it requires acknowledging that the relationship between the parents, not the parenting time itself, is the strongest predictor of child outcomes.
Bottom line
50/50 is a reasonable default for most families and a poor default for the highest-conflict ones. Pretending otherwise to satisfy a political slogan does measurable harm to a real subset of children. The honest position is that the right schedule depends on the parents โ and the worse the parents get along, the more the kids need protection from the schedule itself.
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