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Last updated: 30 April 2026
The national rollout of child focused courts in England in 2026 marks the most significant structural change to private children proceedings in a generation. On 17 March 2026 the Ministry of Justice confirmed that the Child-Focused Courts model, tested since 2022 in a series of Pathfinder pilots, would be expanded across every family court in England and Wales. Alongside this, Practice Direction 27A (PD27A), which amends the Family Procedure Rules, came into force on 2 March 2026, introducing new procedural requirements for child-arrangements cases. CAFCASS has simultaneously launched an updated private-law model that changes how officers assess families and engage with children.
Together, these reforms alter the timetable, process and expectations for every parent involved in a contested child-arrangements dispute, and every solicitor advising them.
Three interconnected family court changes in 2026 took effect within weeks of each other. Understanding how they fit together is essential for anyone involved in a private children case.
What this means for parents:
What this means for solicitors:
Child-Focused Courts are a redesigned approach to handling private-law children cases, the disputes between separated parents about where a child lives, how much time they spend with each parent, and other aspects of parental contact. The model places the child’s welfare, voice and safety at the centre of every procedural step, from the initial application through to the final order. According to the Courts and Tribunals Judiciary, judges in Child-Focused Courts follow specialist workflows designed to reduce delay, identify risk early, and tailor the court’s response to each family’s circumstances.
The core principles include dedicated judicial continuity (the same judge handling the case throughout), early and robust safeguarding checks, structured engagement with CAFCASS, and active encouragement of non-court dispute resolution wherever it is safe to do so. Cases involving domestic abuse or child-protection concerns are identified and managed through a distinct safety pathway from the very first hearing.
The Child-Focused Courts model evolved from the Private Law Pathfinder pilot, which began in 2022 in a limited number of court areas. The pilot tested whether a more interventionist, child-centred approach to private children proceedings could reduce delay, improve outcomes for children, and better protect victims of domestic abuse. Evaluations found that the pilot areas achieved earlier resolution of disputes and improved engagement from both parents and CAFCASS officers. The success of those pilots led directly to the MoJ decision in March 2026 to roll the model out nationally.
The MoJ’s announcement on 17 March 2026 confirmed that the Child-Focused Courts model is being expanded to all family courts across England and Wales. This means every designated family court, from major hearing centres to smaller satellite courts, is expected to adopt the child-focused approach for new private-law children applications.
If you are unsure whether your local court has fully implemented the new model, you can check the Courts and Tribunals Judiciary website or contact your local family court listing office directly. Early indications suggest that larger courts in metropolitan areas were among the first to transition operationally, while smaller courts may take slightly longer to complete staff training and workflow adjustments.
| Rollout phase | Court areas | Status (as of April 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Phase 1 (Pathfinder pilots, 2022–2025) | Dorset, North Wales, Birmingham (and other initial pilot sites) | Fully operational, model embedded |
| Phase 2 (expanded pilots, 2024–2025) | Additional court areas across England and Wales | Fully operational, transitioned to national model |
| Phase 3 (national rollout, March 2026 onwards) | All remaining family courts in England and Wales | Implementation underway, courts adopting new workflows |
For parents: If you are making a new C100 application, your case will be handled under the child-focused court process regardless of your location. Speak to a family solicitor if you are unsure how the changes affect an existing case.
CAFCASS (the Children and Family Court Advisory and Support Service) plays a central role in every contested child-arrangements case. Under the new private-law model launched alongside the child focused courts in England in 2026, the way CAFCASS officers work with families is changing in several important respects.
Historically, CAFCASS involvement in a private-law case typically began with a safeguarding letter, a short document based on checks with police and local authority records, filed before the first hearing. The court would then decide at the first hearing whether to order a full Section 7 welfare report, which could take many weeks to complete. Under the updated CAFCASS private-law model, the emphasis shifts towards earlier, more meaningful engagement with families and, crucially, with the child.
Key changes to expect:
In practical terms, parents should expect to hear from their allocated CAFCASS Family Court Adviser (FCA) earlier in the proceedings than they might have experienced under the old model. The FCA may contact you by telephone or invite you to a meeting before the first hearing. You will be asked about your child’s daily routine, your relationship with the other parent, any safety concerns, and what outcome you believe is best for your child.
If your child is of sufficient age and understanding, the FCA may arrange to speak with them directly, either in person, by video, or by telephone. The purpose is to understand your child’s perspective in their own words, not to put the child in the middle of the dispute. The FCA’s observations and analysis will then inform the court at the first hearing, giving the judge a much clearer picture from the start.
What parents can expect: Be prepared to engage with CAFCASS early, be honest and child-focused in your communications, and understand that the FCA’s role is to advise the court, not to take sides.
If you have concerns about domestic abuse, coercive control, or risks to your child’s safety, raise these immediately, both with CAFCASS and, if you have one, with your solicitor. Under the new model, CAFCASS has reinforced its commitment to identifying and responding to domestic abuse at the earliest possible stage. You can raise concerns directly with your allocated FCA, or contact CAFCASS’s main enquiry line. If you are in immediate danger, call 999. For specialist support, organisations such as Refuge offer confidential advice and can help you understand your options.
Practice Direction 27A (PD27A) is the procedural backbone of the child-focused court process. It came into force on 2 March 2026, amending the Family Procedure Rules to align court management of private children cases with the principles of the Child-Focused Courts model. For parents and practitioners alike, PD27A introduces changes that affect how a case is managed from the moment an application is issued.
The core objectives of PD27A are to:
In practice, PD27A means that judges at the first hearing (the First Hearing Dispute Resolution Appointment, or FHDRA) will take a more interventionist approach. They will review CAFCASS’s safeguarding information, assess whether the case is suitable for dispute resolution or needs to proceed on a safety pathway, and set a tighter timetable for any further hearings or reports.
The following simplified timeline shows how a typical private-law child-arrangements case progresses under PD27A and the child-focused court process:
| Stage | Old process (pre-2026) | PD27A changes (2026 onwards) | What this means for parents |
|---|---|---|---|
| Safeguarding | CAFCASS safeguarding letter based on database checks; limited pre-hearing contact | Enhanced safeguarding including earlier contact with parents and, where appropriate, the child | You may hear from CAFCASS sooner and be asked more detailed questions before the first hearing |
| First hearing (FHDRA) | Often procedural; limited judicial case management; frequently adjourned for reports | Stronger judicial oversight; court identifies safety pathway or dispute resolution track immediately | Expect the judge to take a more active role and set clearer expectations at the first appointment |
| Welfare reports | Full Section 7 reports often ordered routinely; lengthy waiting times (12–16 weeks common) | Focused, issue-specific analysis where needed; full reports reserved for complex cases | Reports should be more targeted and delivered faster, reducing overall delay |
| Dispute resolution | Encouraged but inconsistently applied | Integrated into court directions at every stage; structured options offered | You will be actively directed towards mediation or other resolution methods unless safety prevents it |
| Overall timeline | Cases frequently lasted 40–52 weeks or longer | Target for most cases to resolve within 20–26 weeks | Your case should progress faster, with fewer unnecessary adjournments |
If you are a parent about to attend a hearing in a child-focused court, understanding the child-focused court process step by step can help reduce anxiety and ensure you are properly prepared. Here is what to expect before, during and after a typical hearing.
Before your hearing date, you should have received correspondence from CAFCASS and, if legally represented, directions from your solicitor about what documents to prepare. Under the child-focused court process, the court expects both parents to have considered dispute resolution options before the first hearing. Your solicitor (if you have one) should file a position statement summarising your proposals for the child arrangements 2026 and any welfare or safety concerns.
CAFCASS will have filed its safeguarding information with the court, and you should ask your solicitor for a copy. If you are a litigant in person (representing yourself), you can request this from the court office. Review the safeguarding letter carefully, it forms the basis of the judge’s initial understanding of your case.
At the FHDRA in a Child-Focused Court, the judge takes an active, structured role. The hearing typically follows this sequence:
After the FHDRA, you will receive a written order setting out what was decided and what steps must be taken next. If a consent order was reached, it will record the agreed child arrangements. If the case continues, the order will specify the timetable for further evidence, CAFCASS involvement and any future hearings. Comply with every direction promptly, the child-focused model places a premium on progress, and failure to meet deadlines may result in the court drawing adverse inferences or making orders in your absence.
Industry observers expect that straightforward cases, where both parents engage constructively and there are no safety concerns, may resolve well within the 20-week target, particularly at the FHDRA or DRA stage. Complex cases involving allegations of abuse, parental alienation, or intractable disputes will inevitably take longer, but the structured timetable should still reduce overall delay compared to the pre-2026 position.
Proper preparation is one of the most important things you can do when attending a child-arrangements hearing. The following child arrangements hearing checklist covers what you need to gather, what to think about, and how to present yourself.
Documents to bring:
Preparation and behaviour:
This checklist is intended as a general guide. Your solicitor can provide advice tailored to the specific circumstances of your case.
Mediation and alternative dispute resolution remain central to the child-focused court process. Under the reformed system, the expectation that parents will engage with mediation is reinforced, but so are the safeguards for situations where mediation is not appropriate or safe.
When mediation is required or encouraged: Before issuing a C100 application, most applicants must attend a MIAM. This requirement has not changed under the 2026 reforms. At the FHDRA, the judge will actively explore whether the parents can be directed to mediation or another dispute-resolution process. The Family Mediation Council has welcomed the Child-Focused Courts rollout, emphasising that early and effective mediation can resolve parental contact changes without the need for a contested hearing.
When mediation is not appropriate: Mediation is not suitable in every case. If there are allegations or evidence of domestic abuse, coercive control, or serious welfare concerns, the court will not direct mediation unless it is satisfied that appropriate safeguards are in place and both parties can participate freely and safely. There are specific exemptions from the MIAM requirement for victims of domestic abuse, and these exemptions continue to apply under PD27A.
If you are worried about domestic abuse or your child’s safety: Refuge has responded to the expansion of Child-Focused Courts by highlighting the importance of robust safety screening throughout the process. If you are experiencing domestic abuse, tell your solicitor, tell CAFCASS, and tell the court. You can also contact the National Domestic Abuse Helpline (run by Refuge) on 0808 2000 247, available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. If you are in immediate danger, call 999.
The family court changes 2026 require immediate action from every family law practice handling private children work. The following steps are recommended:
The following table summarises the key legislative and rollout dates that practitioners and parents need to be aware of in relation to child focused courts in England in 2026.
| Date | Event | Practical effect |
|---|---|---|
| 2 March 2026 | PD27A Family Procedure Rules amendments come into force | New procedural rules apply to all private children proceedings, revised directions timetables, enhanced safeguarding steps, and stronger first-hearing case management take effect. |
| 17 March 2026 | MoJ announces national rollout of Child-Focused Courts (GOV.UK press release) | National rollout confirmed, all family courts in England and Wales to implement the Child-Focused Courts model for private-law children cases. |
| March–April 2026 | CAFCASS issues guidance on private-law model rollout | CAFCASS operational changes take effect, enhanced safeguarding, earlier parent and child engagement, and streamlined reporting begin across all areas. |
| 23 March 2026 | Family Mediation Council publishes response to rollout | Sector guidance on mediation’s role within Child-Focused Courts; confirmation that MIAM requirements and mediation referral pathways continue. |
| March 2026 onwards | Refuge responds to expansion of Child-Focused Courts | Charity guidance on domestic-abuse safety screening; recommendations for survivors navigating the new court model. |
The child focused courts in England 2026 reforms represent a fundamental change in how children cases are handled. Whether you are a parent navigating a separation or a practitioner advising clients, understanding PD27A, the CAFCASS private-law model and the child-focused court process is essential to achieving the best outcome for the child.
If you need advice on a child-arrangements dispute, contact an accredited family solicitor, ideally one who is a member of Resolution and experienced in children proceedings under the new model. You can find a UK family solicitor through Global Law Experts to connect with a specialist who can guide you through the process.
If you are at immediate risk:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact David Wilkinson at Slater Heelis Solicitors, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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