Your Family Court Case Is Taking Too Long: How to Stop Delay Damaging Your Child and Your Position
You received family court papers because something important needed to be decided, but weeks have turned into months and you still do not know when the case will move forward. Contact may have stopped, interim arrangements may be becoming entrenched, and every delay may feel as though it is quietly changing your child’s life. Family court delay is not just frustrating for parents: the Children Act 1989 recognises that delay is likely to prejudice a child’s welfare. The key is knowing how to raise the problem clearly, comply with every direction and ask the court for a practical, child-focused next step.
Family Court Delays Are Harming Children: What Litigants in Person Can Do When Their Case Is Drifting
You applied to the family court because something important needed to be decided. Perhaps contact has stopped, allegations have been made, a child arrangements order is being breached, or your child’s relationship with a parent is deteriorating while you wait. Then the weeks become months, another hearing is listed, another report is requested, and the case begins to feel less like a route to resolution and more like a test of endurance.
For many litigants in person, delay is one of the most difficult parts of private children proceedings. It can drain finances, increase anxiety, harden parental positions and leave children living with uncertainty. The law recognises this. Under the Children Act 1989, delay in determining a question about a child is generally likely to prejudice that child’s welfare.
However, not every delay is unnecessary. Courts must sometimes take time to complete safeguarding checks, investigate allegations of domestic abuse, obtain a Cafcass report, hear evidence or ensure that a final decision is safe. The real question is whether the time being taken is necessary for the child’s welfare—or whether the case is drifting because the issues have not been properly identified, directions have not been followed or the next decision has not been clearly defined.
The central point
Family court delay is not merely an inconvenience for adults. A child’s life continues while proceedings are ongoing. Relationships may weaken, interim arrangements may become entrenched, anxiety may increase and important decisions about the child’s future may remain unresolved.
Why Family Court Proceedings Can Feel Like a Test of Endurance
Parents usually enter the family court hoping for clarity. They want the court to understand what has happened, assess any risks and make arrangements that protect the child’s welfare.
The reality can feel very different. A parent may experience:
- long periods between hearings;
- temporary arrangements continuing for months;
- repeated requests for statements, reports or updated evidence;
- delays in Cafcass or local authority assessments;
- adjournments because documents are missing or directions have not been followed;
- uncertainty about what the next hearing is intended to decide;
- financial pressure from legal fees, travel, time away from work or repeated preparation;
- emotional exhaustion and a growing fear that the case is moving further away from resolution.
That experience should not be dismissed. A parent who is anxious, exhausted or overwhelmed may find it harder to prepare clearly, respond proportionately or remain focused on the child. The longer a case continues, the more important it becomes to distinguish between understandable frustration and the practical steps that may help the court move the case forward.
What the Latest Family Court Statistics Show
The latest published Ministry of Justice statistics show that Children Act private law cases disposed of during 2025 took an average of approximately 37 weeks. During October to December 2025, the average time was 35 weeks.
Those figures represent an improvement compared with the previous year, but they still mean that many families spend a substantial part of a child’s year waiting for proceedings to conclude.
Cafcass has also reported a significant level of demand in private law children’s cases. Between April 2025 and March 2026, Cafcass received 42,172 new private law children’s cases.
Current data and official sources
Delay Is a Welfare Issue, Not Just a Procedural Problem
The family court is not simply managing paperwork. It is making decisions about a child’s home, relationships, safety and future.
While proceedings continue:
- a child may become accustomed to an interim arrangement;
- a relationship with a parent, sibling or wider family member may weaken;
- a child may become anxious about what will happen next;
- parents may become more entrenched in their positions;
- conflict may increase;
- school terms, birthdays, holidays and important life events may pass without clarity;
- evidence may become more difficult to obtain or interpret over time.
This does not mean that the court should rush to make an unsafe decision. It does mean that every stage of the proceedings should have a clear purpose and that unnecessary delay should be avoided wherever possible.
What the Law Says About Delay
Children Act 1989, section 1(2)
Where the court is considering a question about a child’s upbringing, it must have regard to the general principle that any delay in determining that question is likely to prejudice the child’s welfare.
Read section 1 of the Children Act 1989
Family Procedure Rules 2010, Part 1
The overriding objective requires the court to deal with cases justly, having regard to any welfare issues involved. This includes dealing with cases expeditiously and fairly, saving expense, dealing with cases proportionately and ensuring that cases are dealt with by an appropriate level of judge.
Read Part 1 of the Family Procedure Rules
Practice Direction 12B: Child Arrangements Programme
The Child Arrangements Programme provides the procedural framework for private law children’s cases and is designed to support a consistent and effective approach to resolving disputes about children.
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. Speed must never come at the expense of proper safeguarding.
Necessary Delay and Avoidable Delay Are Not the Same
It is understandable to want a case resolved quickly. However, a fast decision is not necessarily a fair or safe decision. Some cases require careful investigation before the court can determine what arrangements are in the child’s best interests.
| Delay May Be Necessary Where | Delay May Be Avoidable Where |
|---|---|
| Safeguarding checks are outstanding. | A party repeatedly fails to comply with court directions. |
| The court needs to determine disputed allegations of domestic abuse. | Statements, schedules or evidence are filed late without good reason. |
| A Cafcass section 7 report or local authority assessment is required. | The real issues have not been narrowed or clearly identified. |
| The child’s wishes, feelings or circumstances need proper assessment. | The court bundle is incomplete, disorganised or excessive. |
| Expert evidence is genuinely necessary and has been permitted by the court. | Repeated applications are made without a clear evidential or procedural purpose. |
| The court needs evidence before deciding whether contact can take place safely. | An outstanding action is not chased or raised promptly. |
A credible litigant in person should acknowledge the difference. Simply telling the court that the proceedings are taking too long may not be enough. The court is more likely to be assisted by a concise explanation of:
- what remains outstanding;
- why it matters;
- how the delay is affecting the child;
- what practical direction or decision is being requested.
Why Interim Arrangements Matter
An interim order is not a final determination of the case. It may be made before all allegations have been tested, before a section 7 report has been completed or before the court has heard full evidence.
However, interim arrangements can become significant when they continue for a long period. A child may become settled into a routine. A parent-child relationship may strengthen, weaken or change. A temporary absence of contact may become harder to repair. A pattern that was intended to last for a few weeks may remain in place for many months.
That does not mean that the court should preserve an unsafe arrangement merely because it has existed for some time. It does mean that parents should take interim hearings seriously and should not assume that all important issues can simply be left until the final hearing.
Important
Do not agree to an interim arrangement that you believe is unsafe merely because you feel pressured to appear cooperative. Equally, do not oppose a safe interim arrangement simply because it is not the final outcome you want. Explain your position clearly, identify the evidence and keep the focus on the child’s welfare.
What Litigants in Person Can Do When a Case Is Drifting
A litigant in person cannot control the court diary, judicial availability or professional workloads. However, there are practical steps that may reduce avoidable delay and protect your position.
1. Read Every Order Carefully
Court orders are not merely records of what happened at the hearing. They usually contain the directions that control the next stage of the case.
After each hearing, identify:
- what you must do;
- what the other party must do;
- what Cafcass, the local authority or another professional must do;
- the deadline for each action;
- the date and purpose of the next hearing;
- whether any documents must be filed, served or included in a bundle.
Create a simple directions checklist and update it as each task is completed.
2. Comply With Directions on Time
Late statements, missing evidence and failure to serve documents can cause adjournments and damage credibility. If you cannot meet a deadline, raise the problem promptly rather than waiting until the deadline has passed.
Do not assume that sending a document to the other party is the same as filing it with the court. Filing and service are separate procedural steps.
3. Keep a Case Chronology
A chronology can help you identify whether the case is genuinely drifting and explain the history clearly.
A useful chronology may include:
- the date proceedings began;
- the date of each hearing;
- the purpose and outcome of each hearing;
- the dates of court orders;
- deadlines imposed by the court;
- dates when documents were filed or served;
- missed deadlines or outstanding actions;
- significant changes in the child’s circumstances;
- the effect of delay on the child.
4. Identify the Actual Blockage
Avoid broad statements such as “nothing is happening” or “the court is ignoring me”. Instead, identify the specific issue preventing progress.
For example:
- the section 7 report has not been filed;
- the other party has not filed a statement;
- a fact-finding hearing has not yet been listed;
- the court has not determined whether expert evidence is required;
- the order does not clearly state the next step;
- an interim arrangement is no longer workable;
- there has been a material change in the child’s circumstances.
5. Narrow the Issues
Cases become harder to resolve when every disagreement is treated as equally important. The court may be assisted if the parties can identify:
- what is agreed;
- what remains disputed;
- which allegations require findings;
- which documents are relevant to those issues;
- what decisions the court must make.
Narrowing the issues does not mean abandoning legitimate concerns. It means helping the court focus its time on the matters that genuinely affect the child’s welfare.
6. Organise Evidence Properly
Hundreds of screenshots, lengthy emails and repeated allegations can make a case harder to understand. Evidence should be relevant, proportionate and connected to the issue the court is being asked to decide.
| Less Helpful | More Helpful |
|---|---|
| “The case has been going on forever.” | A dated chronology showing the length of proceedings and the outstanding steps. |
| “The other parent keeps delaying everything.” | A clear record of specific missed directions, dates and resulting consequences. |
| A large collection of unindexed messages. | A small number of relevant documents linked to the issues the court must decide. |
| A position statement focused on unfairness to the parent. | A child-focused explanation of the impact of delay and the next step requested. |
7. Raise Missed Deadlines Promptly and Proportionately
If a direction has not been complied with, consider whether the issue can be resolved by a short, professional communication. Keep the tone factual and avoid accusatory or emotional language.
Where appropriate, identify:
- the relevant paragraph of the order;
- the deadline that has passed;
- the document or action that remains outstanding;
- the practical impact on the next hearing;
- the reasonable step you propose.
Do not copy the court into every disagreement between the parties. The court is not a general correspondence service, and unnecessary emails may obscure genuinely important issues.
8. Explain the Impact on the Child
The court’s focus is the child’s welfare. A parent may feel devastated by delay, but the most persuasive explanation will usually identify how the delay affects the child.
For example:
- the child has not seen a parent or sibling for a significant period;
- the child remains uncertain about where they will live;
- the child is approaching a school transition;
- the child’s anxiety or behaviour has changed;
- an interim arrangement is disrupting education, healthcare or routine;
- the child’s relationship with a parent is becoming harder to repair.
9. Propose a Realistic Next Step
A court is more likely to be assisted by a specific, workable proposal than by a general complaint.
Depending on the case, a parent may ask the court to consider:
- a clear deadline for an outstanding report or statement;
- a review hearing;
- listing a fact-finding hearing where findings are necessary;
- clarifying the purpose of the next hearing;
- directions for a concise schedule of allegations;
- an interim arrangement pending final determination;
- a timetable that reflects an important date in the child’s life.
The appropriate request will depend on the facts, the existing order and the stage of the proceedings.
10. Prepare Properly for Every Hearing
Court time is limited. A hearing may be adjourned or fail to achieve its purpose if the parties are not ready, the documents are missing or the issues are unclear.
Before a hearing, make sure you understand:
- what type of hearing it is;
- what decisions the court can make at that hearing;
- what evidence the court has been directed to read;
- what orders you are asking for;
- what you say should happen next;
- how your proposal promotes the child’s welfare.
A useful position statement structure
A concise position statement may explain:
- When the proceedings began.
- What the court has already decided.
- What issue remains outstanding.
- What direction or evidence is still required.
- How the delay is affecting the child.
- What specific order or next step you respectfully ask the court to consider.
The position statement should not attempt to repeat every event in the history of the case. Its purpose is to help the court understand your position for the hearing in front of it.
Example Wording for a Child-Focused Position Statement
“The proceedings have been ongoing since [date]. The principal outstanding issue is [briefly identify issue]. The order dated [date] required [identify action] by [deadline], but this remains outstanding.”
“The delay is affecting the child because [brief child-focused explanation]. I respectfully ask the court to consider [specific direction, listing or interim arrangement], so that the case can progress safely and proportionately.”
“I remain willing to comply with all directions and to consider any safe, child-focused steps that may assist the court in resolving the outstanding issues.”
When Delay May Require Urgent Attention
Not every delayed case is urgent. However, some circumstances may require prompt consideration because the child may be at immediate risk or because an important decision cannot safely wait.
Examples may include:
- an immediate safeguarding concern;
- a child being removed, retained or relocated without agreement or permission;
- contact stopping suddenly where there is no apparent safeguarding reason;
- a serious deterioration in a child’s relationship with a parent or sibling;
- an imminent school, medical or relocation decision;
- repeated breaches of a child arrangements order;
- a material change in circumstances that affects the child’s safety or welfare.
Parents should avoid describing every disagreement as urgent. An unsupported urgency application may use court time, increase conflict and undermine credibility. Where urgency is relied upon, explain the facts, the evidence, the risk and the precise order being requested.
Do not contact the judge directly
A litigant in person should not attempt to communicate privately with the judge about the substance of the case. Any communication with the court should be appropriate, procedural, copied to the other party where required, and consistent with the court’s rules and existing directions.
Domestic Abuse Cases Must Not Be Rushed
Delay can be harmful, but so can a decision made without properly addressing domestic abuse.
Where allegations of domestic abuse are relevant to the child arrangements application, the court may need to determine whether a fact-finding hearing is necessary. It may also need to consider the impact of the alleged abuse on the child, the victim parent and the ability of the parties to participate fairly in the proceedings.
A parent should not be pressured into unsafe arrangements simply because the case has been ongoing for a long time. Equally, allegations should be set out clearly and supported by evidence where available so that the court can determine what findings are necessary.
Speed and safety must work together
The aim is not the fastest possible decision at any cost. The aim is a safe, fair and effective decision made without unnecessary delay.
Child Focused Courts: Will the New Model Reduce Delay?
In March 2026, the Government announced that the private law reform model previously known as the Pathfinder pilot would be expanded across England and Wales under the name Child Focused Courts.
The model is intended to improve the experience of children and families by taking a more investigative and child-focused approach. The Government reported that cases in pilot areas had been resolved up to seven and a half months faster and that backlogs had reduced significantly.
The national expansion is an important development. However, the success of any reform will depend on adequate resources, proper safeguarding, effective case management and whether children and families experience genuinely faster and safer outcomes in practice.
Recent family justice reform
Common Mistakes When Parents Feel Their Case Is Taking Too Long
1. Sending Repeated Emotional Emails
Repeated emails may not speed up the case and can make it harder for the court or professionals to identify the important issue. Keep communications concise, factual and purposeful.
2. Making Unnecessary Applications
An application should have a clear legal and practical purpose. Repeated applications may increase delay, cost and conflict.
3. Failing to Comply While Complaining About Delay
A parent who has missed their own deadlines may find it harder to persuade the court that the case is being delayed by others. Protect your credibility by complying promptly and keeping evidence of filing and service.
4. Focusing Only on the Parent’s Distress
The court will understand that proceedings are stressful, but the legal focus is the child. Explain how delay affects the child’s welfare, stability, relationships and needs.
5. Overloading the Court With Evidence
More evidence is not always better evidence. A focused chronology, relevant documents and a clear explanation of the issues are usually more useful than a large volume of repetitive material.
6. Treating Every Adjournment as Proof of Bias
Adjournments can be deeply frustrating, but they do not necessarily show that the court is biased or unwilling to decide the case. Consider the reason for the adjournment and what can be done to ensure the next hearing is effective.
7. Allowing Frustration to Damage Credibility
Anger, accusations and hostile language may distract from a strong case. Calm, structured and child-focused preparation is more persuasive.
How JSH Law Can Help When Your Case Is Drifting
A litigant in person may know that something is wrong but struggle to identify the procedural step needed to move the case forward. JSH Law can assist with structured preparation, including:
- reviewing court orders and identifying outstanding directions;
- preparing a clear procedural chronology;
- organising evidence and identifying the strongest documents;
- drafting or reviewing a position statement;
- analysing a Cafcass safeguarding letter or section 7 report;
- helping identify the issues the court must decide;
- preparing for an interim, directions, fact-finding or final hearing;
- supporting a litigant in person as a McKenzie Friend where appropriate.
Has Your Family Court Case Stalled?
If you have received court papers, are waiting months between hearings or do not know what you need 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
Family court proceedings should not become a test of which parent can endure the most delay, stress or expense. The Children Act recognises that delay may prejudice a child’s welfare, and every stage of a case should move towards a safe and effective decision.
At the same time, parents should be realistic. Some cases require careful investigation, particularly where domestic abuse, safeguarding concerns or disputed allegations are involved. The answer is not speed at any cost. It is disciplined case management, proper evidence, compliance with directions and a relentless focus on the child’s timetable rather than the adults’ conflict.
A litigant in person cannot control every part of the family justice system. They can, however, prepare carefully, identify the real blockage, explain the welfare impact of delay and ask the court for a clear, proportionate next step.
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, statistics, judgments and third-party organisations are included for commentary and educational purposes. JSH Law is not responsible for the content of external websites.




