Family Law

Parenting Time Percentage Calculator - Texas

State guidelines research · April 2026 · Editorial standards

Reviewed by TheLegalCalc Editorial TeamLegal disclaimer

Legal information only. Results are estimates for planning purposes and do not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by state and change over time. Always consult a licensed attorney for your specific situation.

Calculate parenting-time percentage from annual overnights for custody planning and child-support worksheet preparation. This Parenting Time Percentage estimate is tailored for Texas.

Estimate based on Texas's guideline model. How we calculate this

How the Texas Parenting Time Percentage calculator works

Parenting Time Percentage analysis in Texas should start with governing legal authority, then move to arithmetic. Federal context: Custody jurisdiction in interstate matters often references UCCJEA fr...

Texas parenting time percentage laws: what you need to know

Texas possession schedules are a first‑class topic because they interact with child support enforcement culture and guideline deviation arguments in ways outsiders miss. The familiar Standard Possession Order (SPO) framework—see Tex. Fam. Code § 153.3101 and related provisions—often produces roughly ~42% of overnights/year for the noncustodial parent in many configurations (your exact calendar still matters). Parents can also adopt an Expanded SPO by agreement under § 153.317, which changes pickup/dropoff windows and can materially change counted time even when people still call it “standard” colloquially. That matters for support because Texas guideline child support is usually anchored in § 154.125 percentages of the obligor’s net resources, but extensive custody can be a deviation context—different from California, where timeshare is embedded directly in Fam. Code § 4055 through H%. New York, meanwhile, does not import Texas’s SPO template at all; parenting time there is resolved under best interests standards and case‑specific orders (Dom. Rel. Law § 240), which makes cross‑state “percent parenting time” comparisons misleading unless you translate schedules into each state’s actual legal test. Use this tool to sanity‑check overnights and possession patterns; then confirm order language, holidays, and travel with Texas counsel.

Frequently asked questions

The standard model divides annual overnights by 365 and converts that to a percentage. This metric is widely used in custody and support worksheet contexts. It is a planning metric, not a custody order by itself.

Both states use UCCJEA-based frameworks, but implementation details differ through state statutes and local court practice. Texas Family Code § 152.201 is a key jurisdiction provision. California applies parallel Family Code jurisdiction concepts under its UCCJEA adoption.

Overnights often drive worksheet inputs that influence support calculations and parenting-plan evaluation. Small overnight changes can shift support transfers meaningfully when parental incomes are far apart.

No. It does not award conservatorship, legal custody, or decision-making rights. Courts evaluate best-interest factors and evidence under state law; this calculator only quantifies overnight allocation.

Yes, if you aggregate school-year, summer, holiday, and special-period schedules into annual overnights. One-period assumptions can misstate real yearly allocation and create avoidable worksheet disputes.

Track actual overnights with verifiable records. Courts and agencies may rely on documented practice where orders and reality diverge materially. Record quality is critical in enforcement or modification proceedings.

Not automatically, but it is often a major support input. Final support still depends on state guidelines, income evidence, add-ons, and judicial findings. Use this as an input component, not a final order proxy.

It is most vulnerable when overnight records are inaccurate, schedules are mid-transition, jurisdiction is contested, or orders contain non-standard time allocations. Worksheet assumptions should be validated against actual parenting patterns.

  • U.S. Government Publishing Office — eCFR (current federal regulations)
  • Official state legislature and court websites for your selected state
  • National Conference of State Legislatures — state law surveys

Citations are for research and verification. Statutes, thresholds, and agency guidance change; confirm the current text with official sources or a licensed attorney in your state.

Legal Disclaimer: The results provided by TheLegalCalc are estimates for informational purposes only and do not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by state and change frequently. Always consult a licensed attorney in your state before making legal decisions.

State-specific legal disclaimer

No attorney-client relationship is formed by using this parenting-time percentage calculator. Results are estimates only and do not determine custody rights, jurisdiction, or final support obligations under California family law, Texas Family Code Chapter 152, or other state statutes. Verify assumptions with current court orders and state law before relying on this output.

Related Tools

Child Support Calculator

Estimate support obligations by state

Explore tool ->

Child Care Cost Share Calculator

Estimate childcare cost allocations

Explore tool ->

Retroactive Child Support Calculator

Estimate historical support obligations

Explore tool ->