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Shared Custody and Out‑of‑court Divorce in Poland: a Practical 2026 Guide for Separating Parents

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Last reviewed: May 14, 2026

Poland’s family‑law landscape shifted decisively on 16 March 2026 when the Sejm approved the 2025–2026 reform package, replacing the concept of “parental authority” (władza rodzicielska) with “parental responsibility” (odpowiedzialność rodzicielska) and opening an administrative, out‑of‑court divorce pathway for eligible couples. For parents navigating separation, shared custody in Poland is no longer an informal judicial workaround, it is now an expressly encouraged framework. This guide walks separating parents, mediators and family law professionals through every practical step: eligibility for the new divorce route, how to build an enforceable shared parenting plan, mediation strategies and the legal and therapeutic tools available to prevent parental alienation.

Key Facts: Poland’s 2026 Family‑Law Reform at a Glance

Date Event Practical Impact for Parents
16 March 2026 Sejm approved the 2025–2026 family‑law reform package, administrative/out‑of‑court divorce pathway; statutory shift to “parental responsibility”; stronger encouragement of shared custody Opens a new administrative divorce route and creates statutory incentives for negotiated shared custody, parents should evaluate eligibility and begin gathering documents immediately
1 January 2024 Family benefit (“Family 800”) increased to PLN 800 per child per month This benefit remains available under both custody models; include it in shared‑custody financial planning
2025–2026 Publication of academic analyses on shared custody dilemmas (Kamińska et al., Prawo w Działaniu) These studies inform best practices on risk factors and help guide legal strategy

What “Shared Custody” and “Parental Responsibility” Mean Under Polish Law

  • Parental responsibility (new term). Under the reform, both parents retain equal decision‑making power over the child’s upbringing, education, healthcare and residence, regardless of marital status.
  • Shared custody (piecza współdzielona). A parenting arrangement in which the child spends a similar or roughly equal amount of time living with each parent after separation.
  • Distinction from sole custody. In a sole‑custody arrangement, one parent is the primary caretaker while the other typically receives scheduled contact time. Shared custody distributes both time and responsibility more evenly.

Old vs New: From “Parental Authority” to “Parental Responsibility”

Aspect Pre‑Reform (“Parental Authority”) Post‑Reform (“Parental Responsibility”)
Terminology Władza rodzicielska Odpowiedzialność rodzicielska
Default after divorce Court could restrict one parent’s authority Joint responsibility is the statutory default; restriction requires specific grounds
Day‑to‑day decisions Parent with full authority decided alone on non‑essential matters Each parent may make routine decisions when the child is in their care; major decisions require joint agreement
Shared physical custody Not explicitly regulated, applied by courts on a case‑by‑case basis Expressly recognised; courts encouraged to order alternating residence when consistent with the child’s welfare

According to the Polish government’s guidance on custody matters, granting parents joint exercise of parental responsibility means they can and must exercise the same rights and obligations towards the child. Only in matters of minor importance may each parent act independently, consulting and obtaining the approval of the other parent afterwards.

Practical Meaning for Day‑to‑Day Decisions

Under the reformed framework, routine matters, such as choosing after‑school activities, scheduling doctor’s visits for minor illnesses, or signing homework, fall within the scope of the parent who has the child at that time. Significant decisions, school enrolment, elective surgery, relocation, passport applications, require the agreement of both parents. If parents cannot agree, either may apply to the family court for a ruling.

Out‑of‑Court Divorce in Poland 2026: Eligibility, Timeline and Documents

  • New administrative route. The 2026 reform introduces a pathway for divorce by administrative decision, bypassing the regional court process entirely.
  • Core eligibility. Both spouses must consent to the divorce without a fault determination. They must have no common minor children or have reached a comprehensive parenting agreement (including shared custody or contact arrangements) that is consistent with the child’s welfare.
  • Where to apply. Applications are filed at the civil‑registry office (Urząd Stanu Cywilnego) of the couple’s last common place of residence.

Who Qualifies for the Administrative Route?

Industry observers expect the administrative divorce pathway to be available to couples who meet all of the following criteria:

  • Both spouses agree that the marriage has irretrievably broken down.
  • Neither spouse requests a fault determination.
  • The couple has either no common minor children or a signed, comprehensive parenting plan addressing custody, contact, child support and residence.
  • Both parties agree on the division of the marital home (or waive claims to it) and on maintenance between spouses.
  • Neither spouse is under guardianship or incapacitated.

If any of these conditions is unmet, for example, if there is a dispute over fault, assets or child arrangements, parents must follow the traditional court‑based divorce process.

How to File: Step‑by‑Step

  1. Prepare the parenting agreement. Draft a shared parenting plan (see the template section below) that covers residence, schedules, decision‑making, child support and holiday arrangements.
  2. Attend mediation (recommended). While not strictly mandatory for the administrative route, a certified mediation agreement strengthens the enforceability of the parenting plan.
  3. Gather required documents: valid IDs for both spouses; full copy of the marriage certificate; children’s birth certificates; the signed parenting plan; mediation agreement (if available); a joint declaration that the marriage has permanently broken down.
  4. Submit application jointly at the competent civil‑registry office.
  5. Waiting period. A statutory reflection period applies (early indications suggest 30 days) during which either spouse may withdraw.
  6. Administrative decision. If no withdrawal occurs, the registrar issues a divorce decision.

Sample Timeline

Stage Estimated Duration
Drafting parenting plan + mediation 2–6 weeks
Document gathering 1–2 weeks
Filing at civil‑registry office 1 day
Statutory reflection period ~30 days
Decision issued Within days of reflection period ending
Total (estimate) 2–3 months

By comparison, a contested court divorce in Poland typically takes 6–18 months. The administrative route represents a significant acceleration for couples who can reach agreement.

Choosing Shared Custody in Poland: A Decision Matrix for Parents

The central question separating parents face is straightforward: Can we use the new out‑of‑court divorce route and secure a shared‑custody arrangement, and if so, what evidence, documents and strategies do we need?

Shared custody is not appropriate in every case. The family court, or, under the new route, the administrative authority reviewing the parenting plan, evaluates whether the proposed arrangement serves the child’s best interests. Academic research on shared custody in Polish family law notes that families practising this model remain relatively rare, in part due to social, cultural and legal barriers. The 2026 reforms are designed to lower those barriers, but parents should assess their own circumstances realistically.

When Shared Custody Works Well

  • Both parents live in reasonable geographic proximity (ideally within the same city or school district).
  • Both parents are actively involved in the child’s daily life and have been so throughout the marriage.
  • Communication between parents is functional, conflict exists but can be managed through clear protocols.
  • The child is of an age and temperament that adapts well to two households.
  • Neither parent poses a safety risk (no domestic violence, substance abuse or neglect).

When Sole Custody May Be More Appropriate

  • There is documented domestic violence or abuse.
  • One parent has a history of substance abuse that affects caregiving capacity.
  • Parents live far apart, making regular alternation impractical for schooling.
  • One parent is largely absent from the child’s life and has no established caregiving routine.

Evidence That Helps Secure a Shared Custody Order

  • School and nursery records showing involvement of both parents (pick‑ups, parent‑teacher meetings).
  • Medical records demonstrating both parents attend health appointments.
  • Documentation of existing informal shared‑care arrangements (calendars, messages).
  • Character references from teachers, family or therapists.
  • A detailed, workable parenting plan that addresses logistics, costs and dispute resolution.

Structuring a Shared Parenting Plan in Poland: Template and Negotiation Tips

A well‑drafted shared parenting plan is the backbone of any shared‑custody arrangement. Under both the court and administrative divorce routes, the plan must demonstrate that the proposed arrangement is consistent with the child’s welfare. Below is a practical template parents can adapt.

Sample Schedules for 50/50 Shared Custody

  • Week‑on / week‑off. The child alternates full weeks with each parent. Best suited to older children who can handle longer separations from either parent.
  • 2‑2‑3 rotation. The child spends two days with Parent A, two days with Parent B, then three days with Parent A, reversing the following week. Ensures neither parent goes more than three days without contact.
  • Alternating weekends + midweek split. The child lives primarily in one household during the school week, with the other parent taking every weekend plus one or two midweek overnights. Easier for school logistics, though not a strict 50/50.

Core Elements of an Enforceable Parenting Plan

  • Residence schedule. Specify days, times and handover locations. Include a holiday and vacation calendar (Christmas, Easter, summer, long weekends).
  • Decision‑making protocol. List which decisions are “major” (requiring joint agreement) and which are “routine” (decided by the parent in care at the time).
  • Communication protocol. Define how parents communicate (email, co‑parenting app, text), response‑time expectations, and rules for phone/video contact when the child is with the other parent.
  • Financial arrangements. Specify child‑support amounts, how extraordinary expenses (medical, tutoring, extracurriculars) are split, and payment schedules.
  • Dispute resolution clause. Require mediation before either parent may apply to the court for a modification.
  • Review mechanism. Include a date (e.g., annually) to review and adjust the plan as the child grows.

Making the Plan Enforceable

For maximum enforceability, parents should have the parenting plan certified by a mediator and, where possible, approved (homologated) by the family court. A court‑approved plan carries the force of a judicial order and can be enforced through standard execution proceedings if one parent fails to comply. Alternatively, if parents use the administrative divorce route, they should ensure the plan is attached to and referenced in the registrar’s divorce decision.

Financials: Child Support, Alimony and Expenses Under Shared Custody

Child Support Basics

Polish law does not provide a fixed formula for child support (alimenty). Courts, or, by agreement, parents themselves, determine the amount based on two factors: the justified needs of the child and the earning capacity of each parent. Under shared custody, where both parents bear roughly equal day‑to‑day costs, the support obligation may be reduced or adjusted to reflect the actual financial burden each parent carries. This does not mean shared custody eliminates support obligations: if one parent earns significantly more, a balancing payment will typically be expected.

Splitting Variable Costs

Parents should agree in advance how to handle costs that do not recur on a fixed monthly basis:

  • Extraordinary medical expenses (orthodontics, therapy, surgery), typically split 50/50 or proportionally by income.
  • Education‑related costs (tutoring, school trips, uniforms), allocate responsibility clearly.
  • Extracurricular activities, specify who decides and who pays; consider a cap on unilateral commitments.

The Family 800 benefit (PLN 800 per child per month) continues to be paid regardless of custody arrangement. Parents should agree which parent receives the benefit or how to split it. Under shared custody, the benefit is typically allocated to the parent who receives it by default, but a written agreement can redirect or apportion it.

Mediation and Negotiations: A Practical Checklist for Shared Custody in Poland

Mediation for divorce in Poland is an increasingly central tool, especially under the 2026 reforms. A certified mediation agreement can serve as the foundation of the parenting plan filed with either the court or the civil‑registry office.

Preparing for Mediation

  • Collect financial documents: payslips, tax returns, bank statements, property valuations.
  • List the child’s weekly schedule: school hours, extracurriculars, medical appointments.
  • Prepare a draft parenting‑plan proposal (use the template above as a starting point).
  • Identify non‑negotiable priorities and areas where flexibility is possible.
  • Choose a certified family mediator, the court maintains a register of approved mediators.

The Mediator’s Role

The mediator is a neutral facilitator, not a decision‑maker. They guide both parents through the agenda, residence schedules, decision‑making authority, finances, holidays, and help draft a written agreement. The mediator does not provide legal advice. Each parent should consult independently with a family lawyer in Poland before, during or after mediation to ensure the agreement protects their rights.

When to Escalate to Court

Mediation is voluntary. If negotiations break down, or if one parent refuses to participate, engages in bad faith, or raises safety concerns, the other parent should seek legal counsel and file a custody application with the family court. Courts retain full authority to order shared custody, sole custody, or restricted contact based on the child’s best interests.

Parental Alienation in Poland: Signs, Legal Steps and Therapeutic Strategies

Parental alienation, where one parent systematically undermines the child’s relationship with the other, is a growing concern in Polish family law. The 2026 reforms do not create a standalone statutory offence of parental alienation, but they strengthen the court’s ability to modify custody arrangements swiftly when alienating behaviour is demonstrated.

Warning Signs

  • The child suddenly refuses contact with one parent without credible explanation.
  • The child uses adult language or phrases that mirror the other parent’s complaints.
  • One parent consistently interferes with scheduled contact (cancellations, late handovers, “forgotten” plans).
  • The child is given information about legal or financial disputes that is not age‑appropriate.
  • One parent makes unfounded allegations of abuse or neglect to authorities.

Immediate Legal Remedies

  • Application for enforcement of contact order. If a contact schedule is already in place and is being obstructed, the affected parent may apply to the court for enforcement, including financial penalties.
  • Emergency custody modification. In severe cases, the court can modify custody arrangements on an urgent basis to protect the child’s relationship with both parents.
  • Guardian ad litem. A court‑appointed guardian may be assigned to represent the child’s independent interests.

Therapy and Reunification Programs

Courts increasingly refer families to psychological assessment and reunification therapy when alienation is suspected. A forensic psychologist’s report can serve as critical evidence. Parents who suspect alienation should begin documenting incidents immediately, save messages, emails, screenshots of social‑media posts, and keep a dated log of all missed or obstructed contact.

Practical Next Steps: What to Do in the First 30, 90 and 180 Days

Timeframe Actions
First 30 days Consult a family lawyer; assess eligibility for administrative divorce; begin gathering documents (marriage certificate, birth certificates, financial records); discuss preliminary custody preferences with co‑parent; consider interim living arrangements
30–90 days Engage a certified mediator; draft shared parenting plan; agree on temporary custody schedule; notify schools and healthcare providers of dual‑household arrangements; open separate financial accounts if not already done
90–180 days Finalise and sign parenting plan; file for administrative or court divorce; apply for temporary court orders if needed; establish ongoing communication protocols; schedule first parenting‑plan review date

Conclusion: Taking Action on Shared Custody in Poland

The 2026 reforms mark the most significant modernisation of child custody in Poland in decades. For the first time, shared custody has explicit statutory encouragement, and parents who can agree on a comprehensive parenting plan have access to a faster, administrative divorce route. The central question, Can I use the new out‑of‑court divorce and secure an enforceable shared custody arrangement?, now has a clear answer: yes, provided both spouses consent, agree on parenting arrangements consistent with the child’s welfare, and meet the eligibility criteria outlined above.

Success depends on preparation. Parents who invest in mediation, build a detailed and realistic shared parenting plan, and address financial and alienation risks proactively will be in the strongest position, whether they proceed administratively or through the courts. For tailored guidance on shared custody in Poland, consult a qualified family law professional familiar with the 2026 reforms.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dr. Honorata Janik-Skowrońska at Law Firm Honorata Janik-Skowrońska, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. OKOLSKI, Shared custody of children: new regulations and the direction of changes in Polish law
  2. iws.gov.pl, Dilemmas of shared custody in Polish family law (Kamińska, Prawo w Działaniu)
  3. Gov.pl, Custody matters (Stop child abductions)
  4. European e‑Justice Portal, Parental responsibility: child custody and contact rights (Poland)
  5. ResearchGate, Dilemmas of shared custody in Polish family law
  6. DivorceInPoland.com, Shared custody
  7. EEJTR, Joint Physical Custody After Parental Separation
  8. Gov.pl, Family 800 benefit

FAQs

What is an out‑of‑court divorce in Poland and who can use it?
The 2026 reform introduces an administrative divorce pathway handled by the civil‑registry office. It is available to couples who mutually agree the marriage has broken down, do not request fault determination, and have either no minor children or a comprehensive, signed parenting agreement in place.
In shared custody, the child alternates roughly equal time between both parents’ homes, and both retain full parental responsibility for major decisions. In sole custody, one parent is the primary caretaker while the other exercises scheduled contact rights. The reforms make joint parental responsibility, and shared physical custody, the encouraged default.
Choose a practical rotation (week‑on/week‑off or 2‑2‑3), ensure both homes are near the child’s school, and include holiday and vacation schedules. Demonstrate that both parents have the infrastructure (living space, stable work schedule) to support the arrangement.
Begin documenting every incident: save messages, keep a dated log of missed or obstructed contact, and screenshot relevant communications. Consult a family lawyer immediately about enforcement of existing court orders and, if necessary, apply for an emergency custody modification.
It can. Because both parents bear direct daily costs under shared custody, courts typically adjust support payments to reflect the actual financial burden. However, if income levels differ significantly, balancing payments remain likely. Extraordinary expenses (medical, educational) should be addressed explicitly in the parenting plan.
Legal representation is not mandatory for administrative divorce, but it is strongly recommended when there are complex assets, international elements, pre‑existing court orders, or any history of domestic abuse. A lawyer can also review the parenting plan to ensure it is enforceable.
Jurisdiction depends on habitual residence. If one or both spouses are habitually resident in Poland, the administrative route may be available. Cross‑border couples should also consider EU Regulation Brussels IIa (recast) for recognition of the divorce abroad and seek specialist cross‑border family law advice.
Have the plan certified through court‑approved mediation, then file it for judicial homologation (court approval). A court‑approved plan has the same enforcement power as a judicial order. If using the administrative route, attach the plan to the divorce application so it is referenced in the registrar’s decision.

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Shared Custody and Out‑of‑court Divorce in Poland: a Practical 2026 Guide for Separating Parents

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