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Aviso legal: Esto no constituye asesoramiento jurídico. La legislación y la jurisprudencia cambian. Consulte siempre con un abogado cualificado para su situación específica.

UK Law Reference
All Legal Journeys
Family Law
England & Wales
6 stages
6–12 months (often longer if fact-finding required)
Reviewed 2026-05-21

Child Arrangements Order Journey

From separation through MIAM, mediation, C100 application, FHDRA, fact-finding (if needed), final hearing, and order.

Who Uses This Journey

Separated parents (or others with parental responsibility, special guardianship, or sufficient connection) seeking court orders about where a child lives and who they spend time with.

Stage-by-Stage Timeline

1

MIAM (Mediation Information and Assessment Meeting)

Mandatory before applying to court unless an exemption applies (domestic abuse, urgency, etc.). The mediator assesses whether mediation is suitable and signs the C100 confirming attendance.

Fee: Mediator's fee (free if eligible for legal aid mediation)
2

Try mediation or NCDR

Non-court dispute resolution — mediation, collaborative law, arbitration (IFLA scheme), private FDR. Many cases resolve without court.

3

Apply on C100

If court proceedings necessary, file Form C100 specifying the orders sought (Lives With / Spends Time With / Specific Issue / Prohibited Steps).

Fee: £255
Forms at This Stage
4

FHDRA (First Hearing Dispute Resolution Appointment)

First substantive hearing usually 4–6 weeks after issue. Court explores whether case can be resolved by agreement; if not, sets directions including possible Section 7 (welfare) or 37 (s.37 investigation) report by Cafcass.

Possible Outcomes
  • Agreed Child Arrangements Order
  • Directions for further hearings
  • Cafcass involvement
5

Fact-finding (if alleged domestic abuse)

Where one party alleges domestic abuse and the other denies it, the court may hold a Fact-Finding Hearing to determine findings on the balance of probabilities. Practice Direction 12J governs.

6

Welfare hearing / final hearing

Court applies the welfare checklist (s.1(3) Children Act 1989) and decides on the arrangements that best serve the child's welfare.

Evidence Needed
  • Position statements
  • Cafcass report
  • Witness evidence on welfare matters
Possible Outcomes
  • Child Arrangements Order
  • Specific Issue Order
  • Prohibited Steps Order
  • No Order (where the child's welfare is best served by parents agreeing without court intervention)

Official Sources