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The landscape of child arrangements reform UK is shifting faster in 2026 than at any point since the Children and Families Act 2014 replaced residence and contact orders with the single Child Arrangements Order. Two parallel reform strands are converging: the Courts and Tribunals Bill, published on 25 February 2026 and now progressing through its parliamentary Committee stage, and CAFCASS’s national rollout of a new private-law model that began in pathfinder areas from January 2026. Together, these changes alter the procedural pathway for every private-law children application filed in England and Wales, from initial triage through to enforcement.
Whether you are a parent facing proceedings, a family solicitor advising clients, or a CAFCASS officer adapting to a revised operational framework, the checklists and timelines below set out exactly what has changed, what is proposed, and what you need to do now.
The reforms fall into two distinct but overlapping categories. Understanding both is essential before diving into the detail.
The Bill, introduced as a Government Bill in the House of Commons, primarily targets the Crown Court backlog, but several of its provisions have a direct or indirect bearing on child arrangements in England and Wales. The key areas that affect family practitioners include:
Running in parallel, CAFCASS has been rolling out its Child-Focused Model, developed through the pathfinder programme in areas such as West Yorkshire, Stoke, Worcester, West Midlands, Hampshire, Isle of Wight and Dorset. The core changes include:
| Date | Event | Practical effect for parents & lawyers |
|---|---|---|
| January 2026 | CAFCASS private-law model (Pathfinder) rollout began in pathfinder areas; training commenced | Early CAFCASS involvement in pathfinder courts; quicker initial triage and Child Impact Reports for families in those areas |
| 25 February 2026 | Courts and Tribunals Bill published (GOV.UK factsheet released) | Start of formal parliamentary process, practitioners should monitor Committee dates and calls for evidence |
| 7 March 2026 | Government stakeholder announcement and media communications | Increased media and stakeholder attention; further local court areas announced for CAFCASS model rollout |
| 25 March 2026 | Public Bill Committee meets for first sitting (Parliament) | Detailed amendment stage, practitioners and representative bodies may submit written evidence |
| April 2026 | CAFCASS training embedded across organisation | CAFCASS officers nationally expected to use private-law model approaches, including early child-voice work and structured assessments |
The Courts and Tribunals Bill was published on 25 February 2026, with an accompanying factsheet setting out the Government’s policy objectives. The Bill’s long title confirms it makes “provision in relation to criminal courts in England and Wales” and also addresses “the leadership of tribunals”, but several of its mechanisms have consequences that ripple into private-law children proceedings.
Caseload reduction and allocation. The Bill’s primary ambition is to reduce the Crown Court open caseload, which the Government’s own impact assessment noted had more than doubled since 2019 and stood at 79,619 cases in September 2025. Although this target is criminal, the practical effect on family courts is significant. Crown Court sitting days are allocated from the same HMCTS budget, and any freeing of judicial and administrative resources has a knock-on effect on family court listing capacity. Industry observers expect the Bill’s caseload provisions to indirectly shorten the wait times for contested children hearings, though the extent of this benefit remains uncertain.
Removing the defendant’s right to elect Crown Court trial in either-way cases. This headline provision is designed to divert cases away from the Crown Court. For family practitioners, the significance lies in its impact on linked criminal and family proceedings, where, for example, a parent faces a criminal charge arising from a domestic-abuse allegation that also underpins a fact-finding hearing in the family court. If certain either-way offences are resolved more quickly in the magistrates’ court, the corresponding fact-finding exercise in family proceedings may receive earlier certainty about criminal outcomes.
Appeals reform. The Bill proposes to reform the appeals process from magistrates’ courts to the Crown Court, replacing certain automatic appeal rights with a permission requirement. While this provision targets criminal appeals, the Bar Council has noted in its Second Reading briefing that any narrowing of appeal rights must be monitored carefully to ensure it does not set a precedent for restricting appellate access in other jurisdictions. Family practitioners should watch for any amendments at Committee stage that could affect the route by which family-court allocation decisions or enforcement orders are challenged.
Child protection and victim measures. The Bill introduces measures that “ensure fairer trials for victims” and “protect children.” These provisions, subject to parliamentary amendment, could introduce stricter controls on cross-examination of vulnerable witnesses and new safeguarding duties that align with the family court’s existing Practice Direction 12J obligations in cases involving domestic abuse.
It is important to note that the Bill remains subject to amendment as it progresses through Committee. The Public Bill Committee met for its first sitting on 25 March 2026, and the Law Society has already provided written evidence raising concerns about practical implementation. Practitioners should monitor the parliamentary Bills tracker for updated provisions.
The CAFCASS changes represent the most immediate, ground-level shift for anyone involved in child arrangements in England and Wales. Unlike the Bill, which requires Royal Assent before taking statutory effect, the CAFCASS model changes are operational and are already being applied in pathfinder courts.
Under the previous model, CAFCASS’s initial role in private-law proceedings was largely confined to completing safeguarding letters (formerly known as Schedule 2 letters) and, where directed, preparing Section 7 welfare reports. Contact with families before the FHDRA was limited.
The private-law model changes this sequence in several important ways:
Timing has been one of the most common concerns raised by solicitors in pathfinder areas. Under the previous framework, Section 7 reports could take 12 to 16 weeks from the date of the court’s direction. Early indications from pathfinder courts suggest that the Child Impact Analysis is being completed more quickly, often before the FHDRA, but that the full welfare report timescale remains broadly similar where a case proceeds to a contested final hearing. Parents should prepare for an initial CAFCASS contact within weeks of their C100 being issued, rather than assuming they have months before engagement begins.
One of the most frequently asked questions in the context of child arrangements reform UK is whether the presumption of parental involvement, enshrined in Section 1(2A) of the Children Act 1989, is being repealed.
The current position is that the presumption has not been repealed. The Courts and Tribunals Bill, as published, does not contain a provision removing or amending Section 1(2A). The presumption remains: unless the court has evidence that involvement of a parent in the child’s life would put the child at risk of suffering harm, the court must presume that the involvement of each parent in the child’s life will further the child’s welfare.
The presumption is not absolute and is regularly displaced in cases involving:
Industry observers expect that the CAFCASS model’s emphasis on earlier child-voice work and pre-FHDRA safeguarding analysis will mean that the presumption is addressed, and where necessary, rebutted, at an earlier stage in proceedings than was previously typical. This represents a significant procedural acceleration for high-risk cases.
The 2026 reforms reinforce what family law has been moving toward for years: court should be the last resort, not the first. Both the Courts and Tribunals Bill’s emphasis on efficient allocation and CAFCASS’s new model actively promote non-court dispute resolution in family law as the preferred starting point.
Understanding the boundary between mediation models and court is particularly important under the new CAFCASS framework, because FCAs will actively explore whether ADR has been properly considered before recommending contested hearing directions.
With CAFCASS now engaging earlier in proceedings, preparation is more important, and more time-sensitive, than ever. The following checklists apply under the new private-law model.
Where a Child Arrangements Order is in force and one parent is not complying, the other parent has several enforcement routes available. The 2026 reforms do not fundamentally change the statutory enforcement framework, but the likely practical effect of quicker CAFCASS involvement and more efficient court listing will be faster access to enforcement mechanisms.
If a child is at risk, parents and solicitors should not wait for the next listed hearing. Immediate protective steps include applying for a non-molestation order under the Family Law Act 1996, seeking a prohibited-steps order to prevent removal from the jurisdiction, and contacting the local authority’s children’s services where there is a child-protection concern. CAFCASS’s earlier involvement under the new model means that safeguarding flags raised before the FHDRA are more likely to result in protective directions at the first hearing.
The parents separated amicably. Both want the child to have a strong relationship with each parent, but they cannot agree on whether midweek overnights are appropriate for a five-year-old. Recommended action: Attend a MIAM, engage with “Our Child’s Plan” through CAFCASS, and propose a trial arrangement. Court is unlikely to be necessary.
The applicant parent alleges a pattern of coercive and controlling behaviour by the other parent. Police reports and a GP letter support the allegations. Recommended action: Apply for a non-molestation order alongside the C100. Ensure all safeguarding evidence is disclosed to CAFCASS at the earliest contact. Prepare for a fact-finding hearing and anticipate that CAFCASS will recommend supervised contact pending findings.
One parent wishes to relocate 150 miles away for a new job, which would disrupt the existing contact arrangements. Recommended action: The relocating parent should file a specific-issue application or seek a variation of the existing order. Both parents should engage with CAFCASS to produce a revised “Our Child’s Plan” that addresses travel logistics, schooling and the child’s existing friendships. The court will apply the welfare checklist and is unlikely to permit a move that is not in the child’s best interests.
The convergence of the Courts and Tribunals Bill and the CAFCASS private-law model rollout marks the most significant procedural shift in private-law children proceedings in over a decade. Whether the Bill completes its passage through Parliament without further amendment remains to be seen, but the operational CAFCASS changes are already live and affecting every new application. The five actions that parents and lawyers should take immediately are clear:
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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