What Does 50/50 Custody Actually Look Like? 8 Real Schedule Examples
When parents agree to "50/50 custody," they often picture a single arrangement — but equal time can be organized in many different ways, and the version you choose makes a big difference to your daily life. 50/50 simply means each parent has the children roughly half the time. How you split that half is where the real decision lies. Here are eight real schedules that all achieve an even split, with calendars, so you can see what 50/50 actually looks like in practice.
What Does 50/50 Custody Mean?
50/50 custody — also called equal or shared parenting time — means the children spend about half their overnights with each parent. It is distinct from legal custody, which is about who makes major decisions (medical, education, religion). You can have 50/50 physical custody with either shared or sole legal custody; the two are separate questions. For the full distinction, see our guide to joint custody versus sole custody.
The eight schedules below are all ways of dividing physical time evenly. They differ in how long each block is and how often the children move between homes.
1. The 2-2-3 Schedule
Two days with Parent A, two with Parent B, three with Parent A — then it flips. No child goes more than three days without seeing either parent, which is why this is the go-to for toddlers and young children. It involves the most frequent transitions of any 50/50 schedule. See our full 2-2-3 guide.
2. The 5-2-2-5 Schedule
Each parent has the same two fixed weekdays every week, with the weekend alternating to form rolling five-day blocks. Predictable and settled — a favorite for school-age children. See our full 5-2-2-5 guide.
3. The 2-2-5-5 Schedule
The close cousin of the 5-2-2-5: same fixed weekdays and alternating weekend, arranged as two-two-five-five over the fortnight. Day to day it feels almost identical. See our full 2-2-5-5 guide.
4. Week-On, Week-Off (Alternating Weeks)
One full week with each parent. The simplest 50/50 schedule, with only one handover a week — ideal for older children and lower-conflict (or carefully managed high-conflict) situations, though the week-long gap is too long for the very young. See our full alternating-weeks guide.
5. The 3-4-4-3 Schedule
Three days, then four, then four, then three — the longer block alternates so the time evens out. A middle ground between the short hops of a 2-2-3 and the long stretch of alternating weeks. See our full 4-3 and 3-4-4-3 guide.
6. Alternating Weeks With a Mid-Week Overnight
A week-on, week-off base with one mid-week overnight for the off-duty parent. This keeps the simplicity of alternating weeks while shortening the longest gap — a popular tweak for families who like the structure of full weeks but want more frequent contact for a younger school-age child.
7. Alternating Weeks With a Mid-Week Dinner
The same idea, lighter touch: instead of an overnight, the off-duty parent has the children for dinner once mid-week. It adds connection without an extra overnight handover, and works well when an overnight would disrupt school-night routines.
8. The 2-2-3 With Fixed Weekdays
A variation that keeps the frequent contact of the 2-2-3 but anchors certain weekdays to each parent for predictability, blending the toddler-friendly frequency of a 2-2-3 with some of the routine benefits of a 5-2-2-5. It suits families transitioning a younger child toward a more structured school-age schedule.
How Do You Choose Between These 50/50 Schedules?
The deciding factors are your child's age, how close you live to each other, and how well you can cooperate. Younger children need the frequent contact of options 1, 6, 7, or 8. School-age children usually do best with the predictable weekdays of options 2, 3, or 5. Teenagers often prefer the simplicity of option 4. The closer you live and the better you cooperate, the more transitions you can sustain.
For a structured walk-through of that decision, see our guide to choosing the right custody schedule for your family, and our best custody schedules by age breakdown.
Does 50/50 Custody Mean No Child Support?
Not necessarily. Even with equal time, child support is often still payable when there is a meaningful income difference between the parents, because support is intended to keep the child's standard of living consistent across both homes. The exact calculation varies by state. Our guide to child support in America explains how time-sharing and income interact.
Making Your 50/50 Schedule Official
Whichever 50/50 arrangement you choose, it only protects your children if it is written into a clear, enforceable parenting plan: the exact rotation, handover times and locations, holiday overrides, and a review clause for as your children grow. Follow our step-by-step parenting plan guide and check the result against our legal checklist. For more on whether equal time is right for your kids in the first place, see our deeper look at how 50/50 custody works.
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