Contact With Your Child Has Stopped: What to Do Before the Family Court Treats It as the New Normal
Contact has stopped, your messages are going unanswered, and you may be watching a previously close relationship with your child become more difficult to repair with every passing week. You may have received family court papers, discovered that an existing child arrangements order is not being followed, or be unsure whether you need to apply to court urgently. The most important step is not to reach immediately for labels such as “parental alienation”, but to document what has happened, understand the possible reasons for the breakdown and present the court with a calm, evidence-based and child-focused plan.
Contact Has Stopped: What to Do Before a Child’s Relationship With a Parent Becomes Harder to Repair
One missed weekend may become two. Telephone calls may become shorter, less frequent or stop altogether. A child who was previously happy to spend time with a parent may begin saying that they do not want to go, while the adults disagree sharply about why. By the time family court papers arrive, the parent-child relationship may already feel as though it is slipping away.
When child contact breaks down, time matters. A long interruption may affect familiarity, trust, routine and the practical options available to the court. However, the family court must not assume that stopped contact proves “parental alienation”, deliberate obstruction or manipulation. The court must understand the child’s experiences, investigate any allegations of harm and examine the evidence before deciding what should happen next.
This article explains what parents and litigants in person can do when contact has stopped, how the court approaches allegations of alienating behaviour, when enforcement may be appropriate and how to present a clear, evidence-based and child-focused case.
The central point
A breakdown in contact can become harder to resolve over time, but the passage of time does not prove why the breakdown occurred. The court must distinguish between domestic abuse, harmful parenting, justified rejection, harmful conflict, practical difficulties and any proven alienating behaviours.
When Child Contact Begins to Break Down
Contact does not always stop through one dramatic event. In some cases, the change is gradual:
- weekend arrangements become shorter or less frequent;
- telephone or video calls are missed;
- handover arrangements become increasingly difficult;
- the child begins to express reluctance or anxiety;
- one parent says that the child does not want to attend;
- alternative dates are not offered after missed contact;
- communication between the adults becomes hostile or stops entirely;
- an interim arrangement continues for longer than anyone expected.
A parent who is losing time with their child may feel frightened, angry or desperate. A parent who believes that contact is unsafe may feel pressured, disbelieved or accused of deliberately damaging the relationship. The child may feel caught between adult narratives that they do not fully understand.
The court’s task is not to decide which parent feels more wronged. It is to understand what has happened, identify any risk of harm and determine what arrangements are in the child’s best interests.
Stopped Contact Is Not Proof of “Parental Alienation”
The expression “parental alienation” is frequently used by parents, campaign groups and online communities. It may be the phrase a parent searches for when a child has unexpectedly rejected them or when contact has stopped without an explanation they understand.
However, the modern family justice approach is not to treat parental alienation as a diagnosis or syndrome. The Family Justice Council has stated that so-called “parental alienation syndrome” has no evidential basis. The focus must instead be on the specific behaviour alleged, whether that behaviour is proved and what impact it has had on the individual child.
Cafcass also recognises that there may be many reasons why a child does not want to spend time with a parent. Those reasons may include domestic abuse, fear, harmful parenting, harmful conflict, the child’s own experiences, practical changes, pressure from an adult or a combination of factors.
Current official guidance
- Family Justice Council: Alienating Behaviours
- Family Justice Council Guidance on Responding to a Child’s Unexplained Reluctance, Resistance or Refusal to Spend Time with a Parent and Allegations of Alienating Behaviour
- Cafcass: Understanding Why a Child Does Not Want to Spend Family Time with a Parent
What Are Alienating Behaviours?
Alienating behaviours are not established merely because a child is reluctant, resistant or refusing to spend time with a parent.
The Family Justice Council guidance identifies three elements that must be established before a court can properly conclude that alienating behaviours have occurred:
- The child is reluctant, resistant or refusing to engage in a relationship with a parent.
- The child’s response is not caused by the conduct of the parent seeking the relationship.
- The other parent has engaged in behaviour that has caused the child’s reluctance, resistance or refusal.
This means that the court must consider whether the child has a justified reason for their position. It must also consider whether the alleged behaviour is supported by evidence and whether that behaviour caused or contributed to the breakdown in the relationship.
Do not begin with the conclusion
A parent who repeatedly states that the other parent is an “alienator” may appear to have reached a conclusion before the evidence has been tested. A stronger approach is to identify the specific behaviour, the dates, the evidence and the effect on the child.
Why Might a Child Refuse or Resist Contact?
A child may be reluctant, resistant or refusing to spend time with a parent for many different reasons. The explanation may be simple, complex or mixed.
The court may need to consider whether the child’s position is connected to:
- domestic abuse, including controlling or coercive behaviour;
- fear, distress or a harmful experience;
- the parenting behaviour of the parent seeking contact;
- a child’s justified rejection of a parent;
- harmful conflict between the adults;
- pressure, influence or psychological manipulation;
- the child’s age, maturity, wishes and feelings;
- a long interruption in the relationship;
- practical problems with travel, handovers or routines;
- the child feeling responsible for protecting or supporting a parent;
- a combination of several different factors.
A child’s words must be listened to carefully. They should not be dismissed merely because one parent alleges alienation. Equally, the court may need to consider the circumstances in which the child’s views have developed and whether the child has been exposed to adult information, pressure or conflict.
Why Time Can Matter When Contact Has Stopped
Section 1 of the Children Act 1989 recognises that delay in determining a question about a child is generally likely to prejudice the child’s welfare.
Where a safe and beneficial parent-child relationship has been interrupted, delay may make that relationship more difficult to restore. The child may become accustomed to a new routine. The parent may become less familiar. Anxiety about seeing the parent may increase. A temporary arrangement may begin to look like an established status quo.
However, time must not be used as a reason to force contact before legitimate safeguarding concerns have been examined. The correct approach is to act promptly while remaining focused on safety, evidence and the child’s individual needs.
What the Law Says
Children Act 1989, section 1
The child’s welfare is the court’s paramount consideration when deciding questions about the child’s upbringing. The court must consider the welfare checklist, including the child’s wishes and feelings, needs, the likely effect of any change in circumstances, any harm suffered or risk of harm and the capability of each parent to meet the child’s needs.
Section 1 also requires the court to have regard to the general principle that delay is likely to prejudice the child’s welfare.
Read section 1 of the Children Act 1989
Parental Involvement
The Children Act 1989 contains a presumption that the involvement of a parent in a child’s life will further the child’s welfare unless the contrary is shown. This does not create a presumption of equal time, and it does not require involvement that would place the child at risk of harm.
Read the parental involvement provisions
Domestic Abuse Act 2021, sections 1 to 3
The Domestic Abuse Act 2021 recognises controlling or coercive behaviour as a form of domestic abuse. It also recognises a child as a victim of domestic abuse where the child sees, hears or experiences the effects of the abuse and is related to either party.
Read sections 1 to 3 of the Domestic Abuse Act 2021
Practice Direction 12B: Child Arrangements Programme
Practice Direction 12B provides the procedural framework for private law children’s cases, including applications concerning child arrangements and enforcement.
Practice Direction 12J
Where domestic abuse is alleged, admitted or otherwise raises a concern, the court must consider the effect of that abuse on the child and on the ability of each parent to care for the child safely.
Evidence of Contact Breakdown Is Not the Same as Evidence of Its Cause
A litigant in person may be able to show that contact has stopped. The more difficult question is often why it has stopped and what should happen next.
| Assumption | Better Evidence-Based Approach |
|---|---|
| “The other parent is alienating my child.” | Identify the specific behaviour relied upon, the dates, the available evidence and the effect on the child. |
| “My child’s refusal proves manipulation.” | Consider what the child is saying, whether safeguarding concerns exist and whether alternative explanations may apply. |
| “Every missed contact is deliberate obstruction.” | Record the reason given, whether an alternative was offered and whether a clear pattern exists. |
| “The court must restore contact immediately.” | Explain what safe and proportionate interim step may preserve or rebuild the relationship. |
| “The current status quo proves the arrangement is best.” | Explain how the arrangement arose and whether it continues to meet the child’s welfare needs. |
What to Record When Contact Starts to Break Down
A clear, neutral record may help the court understand what has happened. It may also help a parent distinguish between isolated difficulties and a developing pattern.
A useful contact record may include:
- the date and time of each planned contact;
- the arrangements that had been agreed or ordered;
- whether contact took place;
- the reason given for any missed or shortened contact;
- whether an alternative date or arrangement was offered;
- relevant messages or emails about the arrangements;
- the child’s words or behaviour, recorded neutrally and without interpretation;
- any safeguarding concern raised;
- any attempt to resolve the issue calmly;
- the effect on the child rather than only the effect on the parent.
Record facts, not conclusions
Instead of writing:
“The other parent manipulated the child into refusing contact.”
Consider writing:
“Contact was due to take place on 14 May 2026 at 10:00am. At 9:15am, I received a message stating that the child did not want to attend. I asked whether an alternative date or a video call could be offered. No alternative was provided.”
What Not to Do When Contact Has Stopped
A parent’s response to stopped contact may later be examined by Cafcass or the court. Even where the parent’s distress is entirely understandable, reactive behaviour can make the situation more difficult.
- Do not question, pressure or interrogate the child.
- Do not ask the child to provide evidence or repeat adult allegations.
- Do not send hostile, threatening or repetitive messages.
- Do not describe the other parent as an alienator without a proper evidential basis.
- Do not dismiss allegations of harm merely because contact has stopped.
- Do not attend unexpectedly or attempt to force contact.
- Do not breach an existing court order.
- Do not involve the child in court documents or adult correspondence.
- Do not wait indefinitely if the relationship is deteriorating and no resolution is being attempted.
A practical communication principle
Write every message as though it may later be read by a judge. Keep it brief, respectful, child-focused and directed towards a practical solution.
When There Is No Child Arrangements Order
If no court order exists and parents cannot agree arrangements, a parent may consider applying for a child arrangements order using Form C100.
A child arrangements order can regulate with whom a child is to live, spend time or otherwise have contact. Before applying, a parent will usually need to attend a Mediation Information and Assessment Meeting unless a valid exemption applies.
An application should not simply state that contact has stopped. It should explain:
- the previous arrangements;
- when and how contact changed;
- the reasons given for the change;
- any safeguarding concerns;
- the steps taken to resolve the issue;
- the arrangements being requested;
- why those arrangements promote the child’s welfare.
Applying for a child arrangements order
Form C100: Apply for a Child Arrangements, Prohibited Steps or Specific Issue Order
When an Existing Child Arrangements Order Is Not Being Followed
If a child arrangements order exists and the arrangements are not being followed, a parent may consider applying to the court for enforcement using Form C79.
Enforcement is not automatic. The court will want to understand whether the order has been breached, why the alleged breach occurred and whether there was a reasonable excuse. The court must also consider the child’s welfare and whether the existing order remains workable and appropriate.
Depending on the facts, the court may consider a range of responses, including:
- clarifying or varying the child arrangements order;
- making directions intended to support compliance;
- making an enforcement order where the statutory requirements are met;
- considering compensation for financial loss in an appropriate case;
- requiring further assessment or information;
- considering whether the child arrangements themselves need to change.
Enforcement Legal Framework
Children Act 1989, section 11J
Section 11J provides for enforcement orders relating to a failure to comply with a child arrangements order where the statutory requirements are met.
Read section 11J of the Children Act 1989
Form C79
Form C79 is used to apply for an order related to the enforcement of a child arrangements order or to set aside or change an existing enforcement order.
HMCTS Enforcement Guidance
HM Courts and Tribunals Service publishes guidance explaining when and how a person may apply to enforce a child arrangements order.
Read the CB5 Guidance on Enforcing a Child Arrangements Order
Practice Direction 12N
Practice Direction 12N applies to certain enforcement proceedings under the Children Act 1989.
Read Practice Direction 12N
Enforcement Is Not the Same as Punishment
A parent may understandably feel angry when an order is not followed. However, the purpose of returning to court should not simply be to punish the other parent. The court’s focus remains the child’s welfare and the practical arrangements that should operate in the future.
A well-prepared enforcement application should explain:
- the precise paragraph of the order that has not been followed;
- the dates of the alleged breaches;
- the evidence supporting each alleged breach;
- the explanation given by the other parent;
- whether alternative contact was offered;
- the impact on the child;
- the order or direction being requested;
- why the proposed outcome is in the child’s best interests.
Important
An enforcement application may not be the correct response where new safeguarding concerns have arisen, the existing order is no longer workable or the child’s circumstances have materially changed. The court may need to consider variation, further assessment or another form of case management.
Domestic Abuse and Stopped Contact
Allegations of domestic abuse must not be dismissed as an excuse for stopping contact, nor should stopped contact automatically be treated as evidence of domestic abuse.
Where domestic abuse is alleged, the court may need to determine whether a fact-finding hearing is necessary. It must consider the effect of any abuse on the child, the victim parent and the ability of the parties to participate fairly in the proceedings.
A child may refuse contact because they have seen, heard or experienced the effects of domestic abuse. A parent may also use child arrangements, communication or litigation as part of a wider pattern of controlling or coercive behaviour. These possibilities require careful evidence and proper judicial consideration.
Equally, a parent accused of abuse must be given a fair opportunity to respond to the allegations. The court must make findings based on evidence rather than assumption.
Safety and delay must be considered together
The court should not allow a child’s relationship with a safe parent to deteriorate unnecessarily. It should also not force contact before legitimate safeguarding concerns have been examined.
Possible Child-Focused Steps When a Relationship Needs to Be Rebuilt
The correct approach will depend on the child’s experiences, the findings made by the court, the level of risk and the child’s individual needs.
Depending on the circumstances, possible steps may include:
- indirect contact through letters, cards, messages or video calls;
- supported contact;
- supervised contact;
- a neutral handover arrangement;
- a clearly defined communication method between the adults;
- a gradual reintroduction plan;
- a section 7 report;
- a review hearing after a defined period;
- a fact-finding hearing where disputed allegations must be determined;
- professional support where appropriate and properly directed.
The aim should not be to force a child to accept an adult narrative. The aim should be to identify what is safe, understand what the child needs and create arrangements that promote the child’s welfare.
Cafcass support services
Recent Judicial Guidance: Re Y
In February 2026, the President of the Family Division handed down judgment in Re Y (Experts and Alienating Behaviour: The Modern Approach) [2026] EWFC 38.
The judgment reinforces the Family Justice Council’s guidance and confirms that allegations of alienating behaviour are factual matters for the court. Expert evidence should not be used as a substitute for judicial fact-finding.
This is important because parents may be encouraged to seek an “alienation expert” or to rely on theories about why a child is refusing contact. The modern approach is more disciplined: the court must identify the allegations, determine the facts and then consider what those findings mean for the child’s welfare.
How to Present a Child-Focused Case
Whether you are asking the court to restore contact, enforce an order, vary arrangements or address safeguarding concerns, your case should remain focused on the child.
A well-prepared case may include:
- a concise chronology of the contact arrangements and significant events;
- a clear contact schedule showing what took place and what did not;
- relevant messages, emails or other documents;
- a structured response to allegations made against you;
- a careful explanation of any safeguarding concerns;
- an analysis of any Cafcass safeguarding letter or section 7 report;
- a realistic proposal for safe arrangements;
- a clear explanation of the impact on the child;
- a willingness to reflect on your own conduct and make changes where necessary.
| Less Helpful | More Helpful |
|---|---|
| “The other parent has destroyed my relationship with my child.” | A dated account of the changes in arrangements and the evidence supporting your concerns. |
| “My child has been brainwashed.” | A neutral explanation of the child’s previous relationship, the change in behaviour and the surrounding circumstances. |
| “The court must punish the other parent.” | A clear proposal for arrangements that are workable, safe and in the child’s best interests. |
| A large collection of unindexed screenshots. | A focused selection of relevant documents linked to the issues the court must decide. |
Questions the Court May Need to Answer
- What arrangements previously existed?
- When and why did contact change?
- What is the child saying, and how has the child’s position been understood?
- Has the child experienced domestic abuse, harmful parenting or fear?
- Has either parent exposed the child to adult conflict or information?
- Is there evidence of psychological manipulation or other alienating behaviour?
- Has an existing child arrangements order been breached?
- Was there a reasonable excuse for any non-compliance?
- What interim arrangements are safe and realistic?
- What outcome best promotes the child’s welfare?
When to Seek Support
Cases involving stopped contact can become complex quickly. They may involve allegations of domestic abuse, controlling or coercive behaviour, harmful conflict, safeguarding concerns, enforcement applications, Cafcass recommendations or requests for a fact-finding hearing.
Early preparation may help a litigant in person identify the correct application, organise evidence, avoid unnecessary allegations and present a clear proposal to the court.
JSH Law can assist with:
- reviewing court papers and existing child arrangements orders;
- preparing a contact chronology;
- organising messages, emails and other evidence;
- drafting or reviewing position statements;
- analysing Cafcass safeguarding letters and section 7 reports;
- preparing for enforcement, directions, fact-finding or final hearings;
- supporting litigants in person as a McKenzie Friend where appropriate.
Has Contact With Your Child Stopped?
If contact has suddenly ended, an existing child arrangements order is not being followed or you have received family court papers and do not know what to do next, early preparation can help protect your position.
JSH Law provides structured litigation support and McKenzie Friend assistance for litigants in person in private children proceedings.
Book a 15-minute initial consultation to discuss your situation and whether JSH Law may be able to assist.
Final Thoughts
When child contact breaks down, it is tempting to reach immediately for a label. A parent may believe they are being deliberately excluded. Another parent may believe they are protecting the child. The child may be struggling with experiences or pressures that the adults do not fully understand.
Time may make a safe parent-child relationship harder to repair, but time does not prove the cause of the breakdown. The proper approach is to identify the child’s experiences, examine the evidence, investigate any allegations of harm and seek arrangements that are safe, realistic and consistent with the child’s welfare.
A litigant in person cannot control every part of the family justice process. They can, however, remain calm, document events accurately, avoid unsupported allegations and present the court with a clear, child-focused proposal.
About the Author
Jessica Susan Hill is the founder of JSH Law. She provides structured litigation support and McKenzie Friend services to litigants in person, with a particular focus on private children proceedings, domestic abuse and safeguarding concerns, Cafcass reports, evidence organisation and hearing preparation.
JSH Law is committed to helping litigants in person understand family court procedure, prepare persuasive documents and present their cases clearly and child-centrically.
Regulatory & Editorial Notice
This article is provided for general information and public legal education only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as a substitute for advice on the facts of an individual case.
JSH Law is not a firm of solicitors and is not regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority. JSH Law does not conduct litigation or carry out reserved legal activities. Any assistance provided is subject to the court’s rules, the scope of the agreed service and, where applicable, the court’s permission.
References to legislation, guidance, judgments and third-party organisations are included for commentary and educational purposes. JSH Law is not responsible for the content of external websites.





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