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Sole Care vs Shared Parenting in South Africa: Which Arrangement Is Better for Your Children?

By Mandy Simpson
– posted 1 hour ago

When parents separate in South Africa, the question of sole care vs shared parenting becomes the single most consequential decision affecting their children’s daily lives, emotional wellbeing and long-term development. The Children’s Act 38 of 2005 does not prescribe a default arrangement; instead, it requires every decision about a child’s care, contact and guardianship to be guided by the best interests of that child. At Mandy Simpson Attorneys, I advise parents and practitioners through this process every week, and I have seen first-hand how the right arrangement, chosen carefully and supported by evidence, protects children, while the wrong one causes lasting damage.

This guide walks you through the legal test South African courts apply, the practical factors that tip the scales, sample timetables for shared care, the circumstances in which sole care may be essential, and how to draft a parenting plan that will withstand judicial scrutiny.

What This Guide Covers and Who It Is For

This article is written for separated or divorcing parents, family-law practitioners, paralegals and in-house legal teams who need a jurisdiction-specific, evidence-based comparison of the two primary care arrangements available under South African law. Whether you are preparing court papers or simply trying to understand your options, the information below draws on statutory authority, the role of the Family Advocate and the principles our courts consistently apply.

Before going further, a few key terms need clarification. Under the Children’s Act 38 of 2005, the old language of “custody” and “access” has been replaced:

  • Care. The right and responsibility to provide a child with a home, daily supervision and guidance. This is what most people still think of as “custody.”
  • Contact. The right to maintain a personal relationship with the child and to communicate regularly, previously termed “access.”
  • Guardianship. The authority to make major decisions on behalf of the child, including consent to medical treatment, schooling, travel documents and marriage.
  • Parenting plan. A written agreement between parents that records how care, contact and guardianship responsibilities will be shared or allocated.

Understanding these distinctions matters because a court may order shared care but sole guardianship, or sole care but generous contact. The arrangements are not binary, they sit on a spectrum, and the specifics are tailored to each child’s circumstances. It is therefore important not to assume that a parent awarded sole care will automatically have sole guardianship; the court may allocate these responsibilities separately depending on the circumstances.

The Legal Test: The Children’s Act and “Best Interests of the Child”

Section 7 of the Children’s Act 38 of 2005 sets out the factors a court must consider when determining what serves a child’s best interests. While courts retain a discretion as to the weight afforded to each factor in a particular case, they are required to consider the statutory factors as part of a holistic, multi-factor analysis. The Constitutional Court has repeatedly affirmed that the best interests of the child are “of paramount importance in every matter concerning the child,” a principle enshrined in section 28(2) of the Constitution.

In my experience, courts approach the sole care vs shared parenting question by weighing the following statutory factors:

  1. The nature of the personal relationship between the child and each parent. Courts look at who the child is emotionally bonded with and who has been the primary caregiver.
  2. The attitude of each parent toward the child and toward exercising parental responsibilities. A parent who actively encourages the child’s relationship with the other parent is viewed more favourably.
  3. The capacity of each parent to provide for the child’s emotional, intellectual, physical and social needs.
  4. The likely effect on the child of any change in circumstances. Stability is heavily weighted, particularly for younger children.
  5. The practical difficulty and expense of the child having contact with a parent. Geographic distance between parents’ homes is a material consideration.
  6. The child’s age, maturity, stage of development, gender, background, and any relevant characteristics.
  7. The child’s physical and emotional security and intellectual, emotional, social and cultural development.
  8. Any disability or chronic illness the child may have.
  9. The need to protect the child from physical or psychological harm. This includes harm caused by domestic violence, abuse or neglect.
  10. The child’s views, where the child is of sufficient age and maturity.

No single factor is determinative. Courts conduct a holistic assessment, and the weight given to each factor depends on the evidence before them. This is where careful preparation, and the role of the Family Advocate, becomes critical.

Practical Factors Courts and Family Advocates Consider

The Office of the Family Advocate, established under the Mediation in Certain Divorce Matters Act and operating within the Department of Justice and Constitutional Development, plays a central role in care disputes. When the court requests a report, the Family Advocate investigates the children’s living conditions, interviews both parents, speaks to the children (where appropriate) and consults with teachers, social workers and psychologists.

From what I am seeing in practice, these are the practical factors that most commonly influence whether a court orders shared care arrangements in South Africa or sole care:

Evidence Factor

How to Demonstrate It

Weight in Court

Parental cooperation

Communication records, mediation participation, willingness to agree on a parenting plan

High, significant conflict and an inability to cooperate may weigh against extensive shared care arrangements

Geographic proximity

Distance between homes, school-route logistics, commute evidence

High, children need practical consistency

History of abuse or neglect

Protection orders, police reports, social worker reports, medical records

Very high, may disqualify shared care entirely

Child’s established routine

School records, extracurricular enrolments, healthcare schedules

Moderate to high, courts resist unnecessary disruption

Parental capacity and availability

Work schedules, support networks, evidence of active caregiving

High, the parent must be practically available

Child’s expressed wishes

Family Advocate interview, child psychologist report

Moderate to high, increases with the child’s age and maturity

Substance abuse or mental health concerns

Medical records, rehabilitation reports, expert testimony

High, court will require evidence of treatment and sustained recovery

In my advice to clients, I always stress that the Family Advocate’s report is not binding on the court, but it carries significant persuasive authority. A parent who is well-prepared for the Family Advocate interview, honest, child-focused and supported by documentary evidence, positions themselves far more favourably than one who is defensive or evasive.

When Shared Care Is Workable: Examples and Sample Timetables

Shared care arrangements in South Africa exist on a spectrum. At one end is a near-equal time split; at the other is a primary-residence arrangement with generous midweek and weekend contact. The key question is whether the arrangement serves the child’s stability, not whether it satisfies each parent’s desire for equal time.

In my view, shared care is often most successful when four conditions are present: both parents live in reasonably close proximity (ideally within the same school catchment area), both parents demonstrate a consistent willingness to cooperate, the child is of an age and temperament that allows them to adapt to two households, and both homes offer adequate physical and emotional environments.

Sample Schedules

The following are common shared-care timetables I discuss with clients. None is prescribed by statute, they are practical frameworks that courts and parents have found workable:

  • 2-2-3 rotation. The child spends two days with Parent A, two days with Parent B, then three days with Parent A. The following week the pattern reverses. This is the most common shared-care arrangement for younger school-age children because it limits the longest stretch away from either parent to three days.
  • Alternating weeks. The child spends one full week with each parent, alternating on a set day (often Sunday evening or Monday morning). This suits older children and teenagers who manage transitions more easily and benefit from longer uninterrupted periods in each home.
  • School-week split. One parent has the child during the school week (Monday to Friday), while the other has every weekend plus one or two midweek overnights. This works where one parent lives closer to the school or has work schedules better aligned with school hours.

Parenting-Plan Clauses for Shared Care

A parenting plan South Africa courts will endorse should include specific, enforceable provisions. For shared care, I recommend the following clauses:

  • Handover protocol. Specify the time, location and method of handover (e.g., one parent drops off at school; the other collects).
  • Holiday and special-day allocation. Define how school holidays, public holidays, birthdays and religious observances are divided, preferably on a rotating annual basis.
  • Communication during the other parent’s time. Set reasonable parameters (e.g., one phone or video call daily at an agreed time).
  • Decision-making authority. State whether major decisions (schooling, medical procedures, international travel) require joint consent or whether one parent has final say in specified areas.
  • Right of first refusal. If one parent cannot be with the child during their allocated time, the other parent has the first option to take the child before a third-party caregiver is engaged.

When Sole Care May Be Safer or Necessary

While many parents still use the term “sole custody”, the Children’s Act refers to “care”. Sole care is not a punishment for the other parent. It is a protective measure ordered when shared care would expose the child to harm or instability. Courts do not take this step lightly, and a parent seeking sole care will generally need to place sufficient evidence before the court to demonstrate that such an arrangement best serves the child’s interests.

In my practice, I have seen sole care ordered in the following circumstances:

  • Domestic violence or abuse. Where there is credible evidence that the other parent has physically, sexually or emotionally abused the child or the applicant parent in the child’s presence. Protection orders, criminal charges and medical evidence are directly relevant.
  • Substance misuse. Active, untreated drug or alcohol dependency that compromises the parent’s ability to provide safe care. Courts will distinguish between historical substance issues with demonstrated rehabilitation and ongoing, unresolved addiction.
  • Neglect or abandonment. A parent who has been absent from the child’s life for extended periods, failed to contribute to the child’s maintenance, or left the child unsupervised or in unsafe conditions.
  • Parental alienation. Conduct aimed at frustrating or undermining the child’s relationship with the other parent. While allegations of parental alienation are raised frequently in litigation, courts generally require clear and reliable evidence, often including expert input from psychologists, social workers or the Family Advocate, before making findings of this nature.
  • Inability to cooperate. Where one parent consistently undermines court orders, refuses to adhere to parenting plans, or weaponises the child in the parental dispute. Courts view this as contrary to the child’s best interests.
  • Relocation. Where one parent intends to relocate domestically or internationally in a way that would make shared care impractical. Relocation disputes frequently require courts to reconsider existing care arrangements and may result in primary care being exercised predominantly by one parent, with structured contact for the other.

My advice to practitioners preparing a sole-care application: build your evidence file methodically. Affidavit allegations without supporting documentation carry less weight than police reports, social worker assessments, school records showing missed days, or expert opinions from psychologists. The Family Advocate will independently investigate, and their findings often determine the outcome.

Making a Parenting Plan That the Court Will Accept

The Children’s Act 38 of 2005 encourages parents to reach agreement through a parenting plan rather than through contested litigation. A well-drafted parenting plan South Africa courts endorse is detailed, practical and child-focused. It should address every foreseeable area of potential conflict and include mechanisms for resolving disputes that do arise.

Where appropriate, a parenting plan may need to be registered with the Family Advocate, or made an order of court, to ensure that it is formally recognised and enforceable.

At a minimum, a parenting plan should cover:

  • Residence schedule. Precisely when the child will be with each parent, including weekdays, weekends, holidays and special occasions.
  • Education. Which school the child will attend, who is responsible for fees, how school-related decisions are made.
  • Healthcare. Who takes the child to routine medical appointments, how decisions about non-emergency medical treatment are made, and which medical aid the child is enrolled under.
  • Religious and cultural upbringing. Especially relevant in multi-faith or multi-cultural families.
  • Relocation clause. Notice requirements and consent procedures if either parent wishes to move more than a defined distance from the current residence.
  • Communication protocols. Rules governing phone calls, video calls and social-media interaction between the child and the non-resident parent.

A note on the so-called “70/30 rule” that parents sometimes raise: this is not a legal standard in South Africa. It is a parental heuristic suggesting that one parent has the child approximately 70 per cent of the time. Courts do not apply it as a rule; they assess each case individually based on the best interests of the child.

Dispute Resolution and Variation Mechanisms

Every parenting plan should include a tiered dispute-resolution clause: first, direct negotiation between the parents; second, mediation with a qualified family mediator; and only then, application to court. This reduces the cost and emotional toll of litigation and signals to the court that the parents are committed to cooperative problem-solving.

The plan should also include a review clause, for example, a commitment to review the arrangement annually, or when the child reaches a specified developmental milestone (such as starting school or entering high school). Courts can vary parenting orders where there has been a material change of circumstances affecting the child’s welfare.

Court Process, the Family Advocate and Evidence Strategy

Understanding the procedural steps helps parents and practitioners prepare effectively. The timeframes below are approximate and may vary considerably depending on the court, the complexity of the matter, the availability of expert reports, and the workload of the Family Advocate. The table below outlines the typical stages of a care dispute in South Africa:

Stage

What Happens

Estimated Timeline

1. Application or summons

The applicant files papers in the High Court (divorce) or Children’s Court (non-divorce care disputes).

Day 1

2. Rule 43 / interim relief

Where urgent, a parent applies for interim care and contact pending the final hearing.

2–6 weeks after filing

3. Family Advocate referral

The court or a party requests a Family Advocate investigation. The Family Advocate interviews parents, children, teachers and other relevant persons.

4–12 weeks for the report

4. Expert reports

Psychologists, social workers or other experts prepare reports on the child’s needs and parental capacity.

4–8 weeks (concurrent with Family Advocate)

5. Mediation / settlement

Parties attempt to agree on a parenting plan, often facilitated by a mediator or the Family Advocate.

Ongoing

6. Trial

If no agreement is reached, the matter proceeds to trial. Evidence is led, witnesses are cross-examined, and the court makes a final order.

12–24 months from application (depending on court roll)

7. Final order

The court grants a care order, contact order and, where appropriate, a guardianship order, often incorporating a parenting plan.

At conclusion of trial

A critical point for practitioners: the Family Advocate’s investigation is not a formality. In my experience, the Family Advocate’s recommendation carries significant persuasive weight and is frequently considered by courts when determining what arrangement serves the child’s best interests. Prepare your client by ensuring they can demonstrate child-focused decision-making, a stable home environment, and a genuine willingness to facilitate the child’s relationship with the other parent.

On costs: contested care disputes can become expensive. Legal fees, expert reports, the Family Advocate process, and the duration of litigation all contribute. In many cases, investing in mediation and a professionally drafted parenting plan is both cheaper and better for the child than a protracted court battle.

Sole Care vs Shared Parenting: Side-by-Side Comparison 

Factor

Shared Parenting

Sole Care

Day-to-day residence

Child spends substantial time with both parents; may be equal or near-equal

Child lives mainly with one parent; the other parent has contact rights

Decision-making

Generally joint or shared for major issues (schooling, health, travel)

Day-to-day decision-making is typically exercised by the parent with care, although guardianship arrangements may remain joint unless a court orders otherwise

When courts favour this arrangement

High parental cooperation, close geographic proximity, child’s stability and expressed wishes

Safety concerns, parental incapacity, serious misconduct, inability to cooperate

Evidence typically required

Demonstrated co-parenting ability, stable home environments, workable parenting plan

Evidence of risk or inability of the other parent, expert reports, Family Advocate findings

Typical court outcome

Detailed parenting plan enforced with a review clause

Longer-term residence order; contact may be supervised or limited as needed

Effect on the child’s relationship with both parents

Preserves meaningful relationships with both; requires child to manage two households

Stronger anchor with one parent; risk of weakened bond with the other unless contact is structured carefully

Making the Right Decision for Your Child

The question of sole care vs shared parenting in South Africa is never answered in the abstract. Every child’s circumstances are different, and the answer depends on the specific evidence: the parents’ capacity, their willingness to cooperate, the child’s needs, and whether safety concerns exist. In my experience, the best outcomes result from parents who set aside their own grievances and focus relentlessly on what their child actually needs, not what feels fair to them.

If you are navigating this decision, I encourage you to seek professional advice early. A well-prepared case, supported by evidence and anchored in the statutory framework of the Children’s Act, gives your child the best chance of an arrangement that truly serves their interests. You can find a family lawyer in South Africa through the Global Law Experts directory, or explore the family law practice area for specialist practitioners across jurisdictions.

Need Legal Advice?

For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mandy Simpson at MANDY SIMPSON ATTORNEYS.

Sources

  1. South African Government, Children’s Act 38 of 2005
  2. Parliament of South Africa, Children’s Act 38 of 2005 (PDF)
  3. SAFLII, Children’s Act Consolidated Text
  4. Department of Justice and Constitutional Development, Office of the Family Advocate
  5. Constitutional Court of South Africa, Judgments Collection
  6. Department of Social Development, National Child Care and Protection Policy

FAQs

How does a South African court decide between shared care and sole care?
Courts apply the best-interests test under section 7 of the Children’s Act 38 of 2005. They weigh factors including the child’s age and stability, each parent’s capacity, safety concerns, the child’s views (if sufficiently mature), school and community ties, and the Family Advocate’s report. The parent seeking a particular arrangement carries the burden of showing it serves the child.
“Joint custody” is not a formal term in South African law. The Children’s Act replaced it with concepts of care, contact and guardianship. Shared parenting describes an arrangement where both parents exercise significant care responsibilities, but the legal order specifies the details of residence, contact and decision-making authority separately.
Yes. Primary residence is awarded based on the best interests of the child, not the gender of the parent. Fathers who demonstrate that they are the primary caregiver, that their home offers stability, and that primary residence with them serves the child’s welfare can and do obtain primary residence orders.
At minimum: a clear residence schedule, decision-making rules for health and education, handover arrangements, communication protocols, holiday allocation, a dispute-resolution mechanism (typically mediation before court), and a review or variation clause. Courts favour plans that are specific, practical and child-centred.
The Family Advocate is a legal officer within the Department of Justice and Constitutional Development who investigates children’s circumstances, interviews parents and children, and prepares a report with recommendations for the court. While the report is not binding, it carries substantial persuasive weight and is followed by courts in the majority of cases.
Yes. A party may apply to court to vary a care or contact order where there has been a material change of circumstances affecting the child’s best interests. Examples include a parent’s relocation, a change in the child’s needs as they grow older, or new safety concerns. The court will again apply the best-interests standard.
Timelines vary, but a fully contested matter, from application through Family Advocate investigation, expert reports and trial, typically takes twelve to twenty-four months. Interim relief (such as a Rule 43 application) can secure temporary care and contact arrangements within two to six weeks of filing.
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Sole Care vs Shared Parenting in South Africa: Which Arrangement Is Better for Your Children?

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