Arkansas Divorce with Children
Everything you need to know about divorce with children in Arkansas — custody types, child support guidelines, parenting plans, and protecting your children through the process. Updated for 2026.
Types of Custody in Arkansas
Legal Custody
The right to make major decisions about your child's education, healthcare, religion, and welfare.
Physical Custody
Determines where the child lives on a day-to-day basis and the parenting time schedule.
"Best Interests of the Child" Factors
Arkansas courts consider multiple factors when determining custody arrangements:
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Divorce.ai helps you build a comprehensive parenting plan that meets Arkansas court requirements.
Child Support in Arkansas
Effective July 1, 2020, Arkansas uses the Income Shares model under Administrative Order No. 10 (Arkansas Child Support Guidelines). Both parents' gross incomes are combined and the child support obligation is calculated based on the combined income and the number of children. Each parent's share is proportional to their percentage of the combined income. The model is based on the concept that the child should receive the same proportion of parental income as if the parents lived together.
Official Arkansas child support calculator →Factors Considered
Protect your children through the process
Divorce.ai helps you create a child-focused parenting plan and prepares all custody-related Arkansas forms.
What Goes in a Parenting Plan?
A comprehensive parenting plan should cover:
Regular Parenting Schedule
Week-by-week schedule of where the child lives and when transitions occur.
Holiday & Vacation Schedule
How holidays, school breaks, and vacation time are divided between parents.
Decision-Making Authority
Who makes decisions about education, healthcare, extracurriculars, and religious upbringing.
Communication Rules
How the child communicates with the non-custodial parent (phone, video calls, etc.).
Transportation & Exchange
Who handles pickups/dropoffs and where exchanges occur.
Dispute Resolution
How disagreements about the parenting plan will be resolved (mediation first, then court).
Relocation Rules
Notice requirements and procedure if either parent wants to move.
Tips for Protecting Your Children During Divorce
Never speak negatively about the other parent in front of your children. It puts them in the middle and can harm your custody case.
Maintain routines. Keep school, activities, and daily routines as consistent as possible during the transition.
Communicate openly with your children in age-appropriate ways. Let them know the divorce is not their fault.
Consider counseling. A child therapist can help children process their emotions during this time.