Wyoming Child Custody: How Judges Decide
In Wyoming, custody decisions are based on the best interest of the child. The state has a presumption favoring joint custody — meaning both parents share decision-making and time with the children.
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Legal Custody
The right to make major decisions about your child's life: education, healthcare, religion, activities. In Wyoming, joint legal custody is the default presumption.
Physical Custody
Where the child actually lives day-to-day. Joint physical custody means roughly equal time. Primary custody means one parent has the child most of the time.
Best Interest Factors in Wyoming
Common Custody Schedules
Alternating weeks (50/50)
One week with each parent. Works best when parents live close together.
2-2-3 rotation (50/50)
Shorter stretches — 2 days, 2 days, 3 days alternating. Better for younger children.
Every other weekend + weekday
Primary parent has child most of the time; other parent gets every other weekend plus a weekday. Roughly 80/20.
3-4-4-3 schedule (50/50)
3 days/4 days one week, then 4 days/3 days the next. Consistent midweek transitions.
Mistakes That Hurt Custody Cases
- ✗Badmouthing the other parent in front of children
- ✗Denying court-ordered parenting time
- ✗Moving away with children without court permission
- ✗Posting negative things about your spouse on social media
- ✗Using children as messengers or spies
- ✗Being inflexible to punish the other parent
Every situation is different
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Legal Disclaimer: This article covers Wyoming divorce law for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change frequently. Always consult a licensed Wyoming family law attorney for advice specific to your situation.