Maine Divorce With Children — Custody and Child Support (2026)
Maine courts apply a "best interests of the child" standard under 19-A M.R.S. § 1653. When minor children are involved, both parents must complete a parent education program.
Parent Education Program — Mandatory
Both parents must complete a court-approved parent education program when minor children are involved. This program — typically a few hours — helps parents understand how divorce affects children and how to co-parent effectively.
Certificate requirement: Each parent receives a completion certificate and must file it with the District Court. The divorce cannot be finalized until both certificates are on file.
Finding the program: Contact your District Court clerk for a list of approved programs in your county. Online options may be available. Cost: approximately $30–$60 per parent.
Maine Custody Framework
Parental Rights and Responsibilities
Maine uses the term "parental rights and responsibilities" (not custody and visitation).
- Shared parental rights and responsibilities: Both parents share major decisions — strongly preferred in Maine when parents can communicate
- Sole parental rights and responsibilities: One parent has final authority — when cooperation is impossible or domestic violence is present
Primary physical residence
- Primary residence: Child primarily lives with one parent
- Shared residence: Substantial parenting time with each parent
Best Interests of the Child — Maine Factors (19-A M.R.S. § 1653)
Maine courts consider all relevant factors:
- The child's age, developmental needs, and adjustment to home, school, and community
- The child's relationship with each parent
- The preference of the child (if of sufficient age)
- Each parent's ability to cooperate and communicate with the other
- Each parent's ability to meet the child's needs
- History of domestic abuse
- Each parent's work schedule and availability
- The child's need for stability and continuity
- Any other relevant factor
Domestic violence: 19-A M.R.S. § 1653(6) — courts give substantial weight to evidence of domestic abuse.
Parenting Plan — Required
A comprehensive Parenting Plan must be filed with the District Court. It must address:
- Parental rights and responsibilities (shared or sole)
- Primary residence and regular parenting schedule
- Holiday and vacation schedule
- Healthcare decision-making
- Educational decisions and information sharing
- Transportation and exchange
- Communication between parents
- Relocation provisions
- Dispute resolution
Maine Child Support — Income Shares (19-A M.R.S. § 2006)
Maine uses an income shares model:
- Determine both parents' gross monthly income
- Apply standard deductions
- Use Maine Child Support Guidelines table
- Allocate proportionally between parents by income share
- Adjust for health insurance, childcare, and parenting time
Duration: Maine child support generally continues to age 18 or high school graduation (whichever is later, not to exceed age 19).
Income Withholding Order: Routinely issued with every child support order.
Last reviewed: March 2026 | Parent education required — both parents — cannot finalize without certificates | 19-A M.R.S. § 1653 best interests | Shared parental rights and responsibilities preferred | Parenting Plan required | Income shares child support (19-A M.R.S. § 2006) | Support ends at 18/HS graduation | courts.maine.gov | ptla.org
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.