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Illinois · IL

Illinois Parenting Plan Guide

What you need to file a parenting plan in Illinois — the state's terminology, required forms, education requirements, and a free template to build from.

Informational only. This is not legal advice. Confirm every requirement with a Illinois family-law attorney before filing.

Standard term used
Parenting Plan
Parent education class
Required in most cases
Filing note
Illinois abolished the terms 'custody' and 'visitation' in 2016 — use 'parental responsibilities' and 'parenting time.'
Official state courts site

What a Illinois parenting plan should cover

  • Legal custody: who makes decisions about school, healthcare, and religion.
  • Physical custody: the residential schedule for weekdays, weekends, and holidays.
  • A specific weekly or two-week custody schedule (2-2-3, 2-2-5-5, week-on/off, etc.).
  • Holiday and school-break rotation, usually alternating odd/even years.
  • Transportation and exchange rules — who drives, where, and at what time.
  • Communication rules between parents and between each parent and the child.
  • How future disputes will be handled (mediation, parenting coordinator, or court).

A simple Illinois parenting plan template

Copy this outline into a document, fill in the specifics, and review with an attorney before filing with the Illinois courts.

ILLINOIS PARENTING PLAN

1. PARTIES
   Parent A: __________________________
   Parent B: __________________________
   Child(ren):
     Name / DOB: ______________________

2. LEGAL DECISION-MAKING
   [ ] Joint    [ ] Sole (Parent A)    [ ] Sole (Parent B)
   Notes: ____________________________

3. RESIDENTIAL SCHEDULE (Parenting Plan)
   Regular schedule (specify pattern):
   ____________________________________
   Start date of cycle: _______________

4. HOLIDAYS & SCHOOL BREAKS
   Alternating odd/even years:
     Thanksgiving:   A odd / B even
     Winter break:   ______________
     Spring break:   ______________
     Summer:         ______________
     Birthdays:      ______________

5. EXCHANGES
   Location: __________________________
   Time: ______________________________
   Transportation responsibility: _____

6. COMMUNICATION
   Between parents: [ ] app  [ ] email  [ ] text
   Parent-child while at other home:
     Frequency: ______  Method: ______

7. DECISION FRAMEWORK FOR DISPUTES
   Step 1: Direct discussion (written)
   Step 2: Mediation
   Step 3: Court

8. SIGNATURES
   Parent A: _______________  Date: ___
   Parent B: _______________  Date: ___

Parent education class

Illinois requires most divorcing parents with minor children to complete a court-approved parenting education program before the final decree. Check with your local Illinois family court for approved providers — many offer online courses that can be completed in a single evening.

Put your Illinois parenting plan into practice

CustodyTrac keeps both parents on the same custody calendar, logs every exchange and message, and produces court-ready PDFs — free forever.

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