Parenting Plans & Custody

Every Other Weekend: How the Standard Visitation Schedule Works

3 min readUpdated

The every-other-weekend schedule — often called the "standard visitation" schedule — is the most common custody arrangement in US family courts. One parent has the children most of the time (the primary residential parent), and the other parent has them on alternating weekends, usually with an additional weeknight. It is not a 50/50 split, and it is sometimes criticized as outdated, but it remains the default in many cases and genuinely suits some families. Here is how it works and when it makes sense.

What Does the Every-Other-Weekend Schedule Look Like?

In its classic form, the children live primarily with one parent and spend every other weekend — typically Friday evening through Sunday evening — with the other parent. Many versions add a midweek visit or overnight, often a Wednesday dinner, so the gap between visits is not too long.

Day Week 1 Week 2
Mon–Tue Primary Primary
Wednesday Primary (or dinner with other parent) Primary (or dinner with other parent)
Thu Primary Primary
Fri–Sun Other parent Primary

This works out to the non-residential parent having roughly four to six overnights a month, sometimes more once a weeknight overnight and extended summer or holiday time are added.

What Counts as a "Standard" Visitation Schedule?

There is no single national standard — custody is governed state by state — but many courts and parenting-plan templates use a recognizable baseline: alternating weekends, a weeknight visit, split or alternating holidays, and a longer block of summer vacation for the non-residential parent. Some states publish a model or "standard possession" schedule that courts apply unless the parents agree to something different.

The important point is that "standard visitation" is a starting point, not a ceiling. Parents are almost always free to agree on something more generous or more tailored to their children, and courts will generally approve a reasonable agreement the parents reach themselves.

When Is Every-Other-Weekend the Right Choice?

This schedule fits a number of real situations. It works when parents live far apart and a frequent-exchange 50/50 schedule is simply impractical. It can be appropriate when one parent's work involves long hours, travel, or shifts that make equal residential time unworkable. And it is sometimes the arrangement children themselves settle into comfortably, particularly when one home has always been the main base.

That said, the modern trend in many states is toward more shared parenting time where both parents are able and willing, because research generally supports children maintaining strong, active relationships with both parents. If both of you can manage more time, it is worth considering a shared arrangement such as alternating weeks or a 5-2-2-5.

How Can the Non-Residential Parent Maximize Their Time?

If you are the parent with every-other-weekend time, there are several ways to build a fuller relationship within the structure. Adding a consistent weeknight overnight roughly doubles your midweek contact. Negotiating extended summer time — for example, two or three weeks in a block — gives you the kind of relaxed, ordinary time that weekends rarely allow. And being the parent who reliably shows up for school events, medical appointments, and activities keeps you woven into your child's daily life even when they are not staying with you.

Knowing your rights matters too. Our guide to visitation rights for non-custodial parents covers what you are entitled to and how to enforce it if the other parent does not comply.

Can You Change an Every-Other-Weekend Schedule Later?

Yes. As children grow and circumstances change — a parent moves closer, a work schedule eases, a child expresses a wish for more time — many families move from standard visitation toward a more shared arrangement. Doing so usually means modifying your custody order. Our complete guide to modifying a custody agreement walks through how that works and what courts look for.

Writing the Schedule Into Your Parenting Plan

Even a "standard" schedule needs to be written down precisely. Specify which weekends are which (define them by calendar so there is no ambiguity after a holiday), exact pickup and drop-off times and locations, the weeknight arrangement, how holidays alternate, and the summer schedule. Holiday provisions are especially important — see our guide to splitting Christmas, Thanksgiving, and school breaks.

For the full framework, follow our step-by-step parenting plan guide. And if you are weighing every-other-weekend against the shared 50/50 options, our complete custody schedule comparison lays out the full range so you can choose the arrangement that genuinely fits your family.

Tags:#custody schedule#co parenting#parenting plan#visitation

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