$299 Flat fee, no surprises
Parenting Plan Builder

A plan built around your children.
Not around the conflict.

Walk through our guided questionnaire. We turn your answers into a detailed, child-focused parenting plan covering every situation your family will face. Lawyer-ready. Province and state specific.

✓ All Canadian provinces ✓ All 50 US states ✓ Holiday schedules included ✓ Decision-making framework ✓ Dispute resolution clauses

Your plan will cover:

Regular parenting schedule (week-to-week)
Holiday and school break allocation
Shared decision-making framework
Communication rules between parents
Extra-curricular and education decisions
Travel and relocation provisions
New partner introduction guidelines
Dispute resolution process
Review and amendment schedule
Start building your plan →
Step 1 of 8
Your family
Basic information about both parents and your children. This is used to personalise your plan.
Used to assess distance between homes for transfer logistics.
Step 2 of 8
Regular parenting schedule
Choose the schedule that best fits your family. This is the week-to-week arrangement. Holiday schedules are set separately.
📅
2-2-3 Rotating Schedule
Children alternate 2 days with Parent A, 2 days with Parent B, then 3 days alternating. Equal time close to 50/50. Common for shared parenting in Ontario and BC.
Mon
A
Tue
A
Wed
B
Thu
B
Fri
A
Sat
A
Sun
A
Week 2 reverses. Results in equal 50/50 split.
🔄
Week On / Week Off
Children spend a full week with each parent, alternating every Monday (or Sunday). Good for school-aged children and parents who live close by. Simple and predictable.
Mon
A
Tue
A
Wed
A
Thu
A
Fri
A
Sat
A
Sun
A
Following week fully with Parent B. Alternates every 7 days.
📊
3-4-4-3 Schedule
Children spend 3 days with one parent, 4 with the other, then 4 and 3 the following week. Equal over two weeks. Gives longer blocks with each parent.
Mon
A
Tue
A
Wed
A
Thu
B
Fri
B
Sat
B
Sun
B
Week 2: 4 days A, 3 days B. Equal over 14-day cycle.
🏠
Primary Residence with Weekend Access
Children live primarily with one parent (Parent A). Parent B has every other weekend and one weeknight per week. Roughly 80/20. Best when significant distance exists between parents.
Mon
A
Tue
B
Wed
A
Thu
A
Fri
A
Sat
A
Sun
A
Every other weekend with Parent B. Can be adjusted.
✏️
Custom / Flexible Schedule
None of the above fits your situation. Describe your preferred schedule and we will build the plan around it.
Step 3 of 8
Holidays & special days
Choose how you want holidays divided. These override the regular schedule. You can set specific rules or alternate each year.
How will you handle holidays generally?
Alternate annually
Each holiday alternates between parents each year. Parent A gets Christmas in odd years, Parent B in even years, etc.
Split each holiday
Each holiday is divided (e.g., Christmas Eve with one parent, Christmas Day with the other). Requires more coordination.
Specific holidays how will these work?
Step 4 of 8
Decision-making responsibility
Who makes major decisions about health, education, religion, and extracurriculars? This section sets the framework.
Overall decision-making arrangement
Shared / Joint Decision-Making
Both parents make major decisions together. Disagreements go to mediation or a parenting coordinator. Most common in shared parenting arrangements.
Primary with Consultation
One parent holds final decision-making authority after consulting the other. Useful when communication is difficult or distance is significant.
Specific decisions who has authority?
Step 5 of 8
Communication between parents
Clear communication rules reduce conflict and protect your children from being caught in the middle.
Primary communication method
✉️
Email only
Written record. Good when conflict is present. Response within 24–48 hours expected.
📱
Co-parenting app
OurFamilyWizard or similar. Structured, logged, and referee-able. Recommended when conflict is elevated.
💬
Text or phone
Less structured but more immediate. Works well when conflict is low and both parents can maintain boundaries.
Step 6 of 8
Travel, relocation & extras
Rules around travel, school and extracurriculars, and what happens if one parent wants to move.
Step 7 of 8
If you can't agree
Every parenting plan needs a process for resolving disagreements. This protects children from being caught in the middle when parents can't agree.
Parenting Coordinator
A neutral professional (often a social worker or psychologist) who mediates parenting disputes and can make binding decisions. Costs shared equally.
Mediation
A family mediator facilitates a resolution. Non-binding but structured. Good when parents can communicate but need a neutral third party.
Collaborative process
Both parents and their lawyers meet collaboratively to resolve disputes without going to court.
Court as last resort
Either parent may apply to court only after attempting mediation. Court applications should be a last resort.
Step 8 of 8
Final details & delivery
Almost done. Add your contact details and any additional notes. Your parenting plan will be delivered to your email.
10% discount applied automatically at checkout.
What happens next
Clicking Submit takes you directly to secure checkout ($299). Your questionnaire is saved automatically. Once payment is confirmed, your parenting plan is drafted and delivered within 24 hours, formatted to your jurisdiction, reviewed against current family law standards, and ready for your lawyer to sign off.
By submitting this form, you confirm that the information provided is accurate to the best of your knowledge. FairWell provides document guidance not legal advice. Your plan should be reviewed by a qualified family lawyer in your jurisdiction before signing.

Your plan is on its way.

We've received everything. You'll get a payment link by email within a few minutes. Once payment is confirmed, your parenting plan will be delivered within 24 hours.

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Step 1 of 8
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