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Parenting Plans and Schedules – NC Child Custody

Quick answer: What is a parenting plan in North Carolina? A parenting plan is a written schedule and rule set that defines physical custody (time with each parent), legal custody (decision-making), exchanges, holidays, communication, travel, and conflict-resolution. Common NC schedules include 2-2-3, 2-2-5-5, 3-4-4-3, and week-on/week-off, adjusted for school, distance, and the child’s age.

Build a plan the court will sign and your family can follow. We design age-appropriate schedules, clean exchange rules, holiday rotations, and school/medical decision-making that teachers, doctors, and law enforcement can implement.

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Your North Carolina Parenting Plan Lawyer

Krispen Culbertson, North Carolina family lawyer with 20+ years designing parenting plans and custody schedules—age-based overnights, school-friendly exchanges, holiday rotations, travel rules, and orders that schools and healthcare providers will follow.

Memberships: North Carolina State Bar; local family law sections. Courts: District Court calendars statewide with regular hearings in Guilford County.

Fast answers

Best plan? The one that fits the child’s routine (school, sleep, activities) and minimizes conflict and handoffs.

50/50 vs. primary? Both are common. We match schedule type to distance, work hours, and the child’s needs.

Holiday rotation: Alternate even/odd years, split breaks, and name exact exchange times to avoid disputes.

Make it work: Use clear language—school address for exchanges, grace periods, travel notice, and first-right-of-refusal rules.

Common NC parenting schedules

  • 2-2-3 (younger kids; frequent contact; more handoffs)
  • 2-2-5-5 (steady school nights; predictable blocks)
  • 3-4-4-3 (balanced weekends; stable weekdays)
  • Week-on/week-off (older kids; strong co-parenting; fewer transitions)
  • Primary + alternating weekends (when distance/work limits midweek)

Age-based adjustments

Infants/toddlers: shorter intervals, consistent routines, frequent daytime contact. School-age: protect homework and activities; stable school nights. Teens: keep structure but allow flexibility for sports, work, and social life.

Holidays, breaks, and summers

Alternate even/odd years; specify start/end times (e.g., 6:00 PM). For summers, pick weekly blocks or maintain the school-year pattern with added vacation weeks. Add teacher workdays and early releases to avoid scrambling.

Exchanges, travel, and communication

  • Exchange point: school address when in session; otherwise a neutral public location.
  • Grace period: 15 minutes before late rules apply; written notice for delays.
  • Travel notice: itineraries, lodging, and emergency contacts for out-of-state/overnight trips.
  • Virtual contact: reasonable calls/video; no recording the child.

Define major decisions (health, education, activities, religion). Use joint decision-making with a tie-breaker in limited areas, or allocate domains. Orders should tell schools and doctors exactly whose consent is required.

Long-distance or uneven schedules

Use fewer, longer blocks; add travel cost splits, airport rules, and makeup time for weather or cancellations. Keep the child’s school routine primary.

High conflict? Parenting Coordinator (PC)

Post-order, a PC helps implement details (minor schedule issues, communications). The order must define scope, decision authority, and review/appeal mechanics.

When to modify a plan

If facts materially changed (move, work shift, school issues), seek modification. Bring attendance, grades, activities, and a proposed plan that fits the new reality.

What to bring and your first 72 hours

Documents checklist

  • Current order(s) and any temporary schedules
  • School calendars, bell times, and activities schedule
  • Work schedules and regular childcare arrangements
  • Distance/time between homes and school

Your first 72 hours with our team

1) Routine map
School, sleep, activities, and travel time.

2) Draft options
2-2-3, 2-2-5-5, 3-4-4-3, or week-on/week-off with pros/cons.

3) Holidays
Even/odd rotation, summer blocks, and clear exchange times.

4) Decision rules
Legal custody, tie-breakers, and notice requirements.

5) Finalize & file
Consent order or hearing with clean, agency-ready language.

FAQs

What schedule works best for school?

2-2-5-5 or 3-4-4-3 reduce midweek swaps and keep homework consistent. We match the plan to bell times and activities.

Can we do 50/50 if we live far apart?

It’s harder. Consider longer blocks (week-on/week-off) or primary with extended breaks; the child’s commute should stay reasonable.

How are holidays handled?

Alternate even/odd years and set exact exchange times. Holidays override the regular schedule, then it resumes.

What is a tie-breaker clause?

When parents disagree on a major issue, one parent has final say in that domain after good-faith discussion. Courts expect limited, clear tie-breakers.

Do we need a Parenting Coordinator?

In high-conflict, post-order cases, a PC can resolve day-to-day disputes quickly. The appointment order must define authority and review.

Why North Carolina families choose Culbertson & Associates

  • 20+ years crafting NC parenting plans and schedules
  • Agency-ready language schools and doctors can follow
  • Age-based schedules that reduce conflict and handoffs
  • Settlement-first, trial-ready strategy when needed

Client reviews

★★★★★

B. Carter — “K.E. Culbertson set a school-friendly schedule and clear holiday times. Zero confusion since the order.”

★★★★★

M. Alvarez — “Our plan fits sports and homework. Teachers know exactly who picks up and when.”

★★★★★

T. Jones — “Krispen added tie-breaker language for medical issues. Calm, practical, effective.”

★★★★★

R. Singh — “We live 70 minutes apart. The week-on/week-off plan with travel rules has worked well.”

★★★★★

S. Monroe — “Culbertson and Associates built a plan for our toddler with more frequent contact. It’s thoughtful and stable.”

★★★★★

L. Daniels — “High conflict case. The Parenting Coordinator setup reduced daily fights fast.”

Visit Our Greensboro Office

Culbertson & Associates
315 Spring Garden St Ste #300, Greensboro, NC 27401

(336) 272-4299culbertsonatlaw.com

Hours: Mon–Fri 8:30 AM–5:00 PM • Area served: North Carolina

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