Nebraska Dissolution With Children — Custody, Parenting Plan, and Child Support (2026)
Nebraska's approach to children in dissolution is governed by the Nebraska Parenting Act — one of the more prescriptive state-level frameworks in the country.
Nebraska Parenting Act — Governs All Child Matters
The Nebraska Parenting Act (Neb. Rev. Stat. § 43-2921 et seq.) establishes standards for all Parenting Plans and parenting decisions in dissolution cases. Courts apply these standards; self-represented litigants must ensure their Parenting Plans comply.
Key principles:
- Both parents should have meaningful involvement in the child's life
- The best interests of the child govern all decisions
- Parenting Plans must be comprehensive and specific
Mandatory Parenting Education — Cannot Finalize Without It
When minor children are involved, both parents must complete an approved parenting education program before the dissolution can be finalized. This is a hard requirement — not optional.
What is it? Typically a 3–6 hour program (in-person or online) designed to help parents understand the impact of dissolution on children and how to co-parent effectively. Often called "Parenting Through Divorce," "Parenting Through Separation," or a county-specific name.
Certificate: Each parent receives a completion certificate. Both certificates must be filed with the District Court. The dissolution cannot be finalized until both are filed.
Finding an approved program: Ask your District Court clerk or check nebraskalegalhelp.org for your county's approved list.
Nebraska Custody Framework
Legal Custody
- Joint legal custody: Both parents share major decisions — education, healthcare, religion — preferred when parents can cooperate
- Sole legal custody: One parent has authority — ordered when the other parent is unfit, abusive, or cooperation is genuinely impossible
Physical Custody
- Primary physical custody: Child primarily lives with one parent; other has regular parenting time
- Joint physical custody: Substantial time with each parent — may affect child support calculation
Parenting Plan — Nebraska Parenting Act Requirements
The Parenting Plan must comply with the Nebraska Parenting Act and address:
- Each parent's residential address
- Legal custody designation
- Regular parenting time schedule (school year and summer)
- Holiday and school break schedule (Thanksgiving, Christmas, spring break, summer)
- Birthday and special occasion schedule
- Transportation and exchange logistics
- Communication between parents (method, frequency, response times)
- Communication between child and each parent
- Healthcare decision-making (emergency and non-emergency)
- Educational enrollment and school activity decisions
- Extracurricular activity decisions
- Procedure for making schedule changes
- Relocation: advance notice required; procedure for modification
- Dispute resolution: mediation before court filing (Nebraska Parenting Act preferred method)
Nebraska Child Support Guidelines — Income Shares Model
Nebraska uses the income shares model — both parents' incomes contribute to the support obligation.
Process:
- Determine both parents' adjusted gross monthly income
- Use the Nebraska Child Support Schedule (income look-up table by combined income and number of children)
- Allocate proportionally based on each parent's share of combined income
- Add adjustments for health insurance premium (child's share), work-related childcare, parenting time credit (if applicable)
Duration: Nebraska child support continues until the child turns 19 — one of the longer durations in the US.
Income Withholding Order: Nebraska courts routinely enter IWOs directing the employer to deduct support.
Forms and worksheet: supremecourt.ne.gov
Last reviewed: March 2026 | Nebraska Parenting Act governs all child matters | Mandatory parenting education — REQUIRED before finalization | Parenting Plan must comply with NE Parenting Act | Income shares child support | Support ends at 19 | Neb. Rev. Stat. § 43-2921 | supremecourt.ne.gov | nebraskalegalhelp.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.