What is legal custody?
Legal custody is the legal right to make major decisions about your children, such as non-emergency health care and choice of school and religion. Custody is different from physical placement.
What options are there for legal custody?
There are two types of legal custody in Wisconsin:
- joint legal custody, when both parents have equal rights to make major decisions about their children.1
- sole legal custody, when only one parent has the right to make such decisions.2
In general, the court will assume that joint legal custody between both parents is in the best interest of the child.3
1 Wis. Stat. § 767.001(1s)
2 Wis. Stat. § 767.001(6)
3 Wis. Stat. § 767.41(2)(am)
What is physical placement?
When physical placement of the child is with you, you have the right to make routine daily decisions about your children's care such as bedtime, study time, diet, extracurricular activities, social activities, and discipline.
Wis. Stat. § 767.001(5)
What is a parenting plan?
Usually, in any case involving annulment, divorce, legal separation, paternity, custody, or child support in which legal custody or physical placement is challenged, a party seeking legal custody or physical placement has to file a parenting plan with the court if:
- the judge waives the requirement to attend mediation, or
- if the parties attend mediation and do not reach an agreement.2
1 Wis. Stat. § 767.41(1m)(a)-(o)
2 Wis. Stat. § 767.41(1m)
What is a guardian ad litem?
In a case involving the family (paternity, legal custody, physical placement, and support cases), a guardian ad litem is an attorney who acts as an advocate for the best interests of a minor child during litigation.1
1 See generally Wis. Stat. § 767.407
Should I start a court case to ask for supervised visitation?
However, if there is no current court case, please get legal advice BEFORE you start a court case to ask for supervised visits. We strongly recommend that you talk to an attorney who specializes in custody matters to find out what you would have to prove to get the visits supervised and how long supervised visits would last, based on the facts of your case.
In the majority of cases, supervised visits are only a temporary measure. Although the exact visitation order will vary by state, county, or judge, the judge might order a professional to observe the other parent on a certain amount of visits or the visits might be supervised by a relative for a certain amount of time -- and if there are no obvious problems, the visits may likely become unsupervised. Oftentimes, at the end of a case, the other parent ends up with more frequent and/ or longer visits than s/he had before you went into court or even some form of custody.
In some cases, to protect your child from immediate danger by the abuser, starting a case to ask for custody and supervised visits is appropriate. To find out what may be best in your situation, please go to WI Finding a Lawyer to seek out legal advice.




