Kentucky Dissolution of Marriage With Children — Custody and Child Support (2026)
Kentucky favors joint custody and maximum involvement of both parents in children's lives. A Parenting Plan is required in all dissolution cases involving minor children.
Kentucky's Custody Framework
Legal Custody
Authority to make major decisions about education, healthcare, religious upbringing, and activities.
- Joint legal custody: Both parents share major decisions — strongly preferred by Kentucky courts
- Sole legal custody: One parent has authority — ordered when joint custody is not in the child's best interest
Physical Custody — Primary Residential Parent
Where the child lives.
- Joint physical custody (shared parenting): Child spends substantial time with each parent
- Primary residential parent: The parent with whom the child primarily resides
- Timesharing schedule: Specific schedule for when child is with each parent
Kentucky's presumption: Since 2018, Kentucky law (KRS 403.270) establishes a rebuttable presumption in favor of joint custody and equal timesharing (50/50). Courts start with this presumption and deviate based on evidence and best interest factors.
Best Interest Factors — KRS 403.270
The court determines custody based on the best interest of the child, considering:
- Wishes of the child's parent(s)
- Wishes of the child (if mature enough)
- Interaction and interrelationship with parents, siblings, and other significant persons
- Child's adjustment to home, school, and community
- Mental and physical health of all individuals involved
- Domestic violence or abuse (any domestic violence is a major factor)
- Extent to which each parent facilitated and encouraged child's relationship with the other parent
- Information from a domestic violence program (if applicable)
- Child's need to have a continuing and meaningful relationship with both parents
- Ability of each parent to provide security and routine
The Parenting Plan
All custody arrangements must be in a written Parenting Plan filed with the court and incorporated into the Decree. Kentucky courts provide a model Parenting Plan form.
Parenting Plan must include:
- Legal custody designation (joint or sole)
- Physical custody and primary residential parent designation
- Regular parenting schedule (school year and summer)
- Holiday and vacation schedule (with specific holidays listed by name)
- Transportation responsibilities
- Decision-making protocol for joint legal custody
- Communication procedures
- Relocation provisions (Kentucky has specific notice requirements for relocation)
- Method for resolving parenting disputes
Kentucky Child Support Guidelines — KRS 403.212
Kentucky uses the Income Shares Model — both parents' incomes are used to calculate support.
Key inputs:
- Both parents' combined monthly gross income
- Number of children
- Cost of child care related to employment or education
- Health insurance premiums for the child
- Extraordinary medical expenses
- Other children the parent is legally obligated to support
Support ends at age 18, or age 19 if still in high school.
Calculator: Complete the Kentucky Child Support Worksheet (AOC-MISC.3 or equivalent). Kentucky's online guidelines calculator may be available through courts.ky.gov.
Health Insurance
The Separation Agreement (and Parenting Plan) must address:
- Which parent maintains health insurance for the child
- How uninsured medical expenses are divided
- Who claims the child as a dependent for tax purposes (alternate years is common)
Last reviewed: March 2026 | Joint custody presumption — KRS 403.270 | Parenting Plan required | Income shares child support | Support ends at 18 (or 19 if in high school) | courts.ky.gov/forms
SoLongSoulmate.com Editorial Team
Researched using official state court websites and verified legal aid resources. Filing fees and procedures verified June 2026. General legal information only — not legal advice.
Last reviewed: March 2026 · Verify current fees and forms with your local court before filing.