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Grandparents Rights

It is very common nowadays for grandparents to provide care for their grandchildren so that the parents can continue to work and financially support their family.

We also sometimes see cases where parents have separated and there has been a disagreement between the parents and grandparents and the grandchildren have not been allowed to see the grandparents as a result.

Under the law currently, grandparents do not have an automatic right to make an application to the Court for an order to see their grandchildren.

If a grandparent cannot agree arrangements to see their grandchildren with the parent(s) and they feel the need to involve a Court, the grandparent must first get the Court’s permission to make an application.  This step means that a grandparent must satisfy a Court that the application is an appropriate one to make.  The idea of this is that any malicious or duplication of applications, can be avoided.

If parents have separated and one of them is applying to the Court to sort out childcare arrangements, it is probably not worthwhile grandparents making a separate application at the same time.  If the circumstances are different, it may be worth exploring the options, with an application to the Court being the last resort.  Mediation or a collaborative process may still be available to grandparents and parents where these sorts of issues arise.

In a situation where a grandparent needs to have a grandchild live with them, they do not have any formal legal rights to make decisions for that child just because the child stays with them, even with the parent’s consent.  It may be necessary to make an application to the Court to regularise the position in the event that either or both of the parents are unable to look after the child and the grandparent needs to be able to act as the parent otherwise would.