Visitation Rights and Parenting Time in West Virginia and Ohio
We handle visitation matters from our offices in Buckhannon, Clarksburg, Morgantown, Parkersburg, and Canton, Ohio.
How Visitation Is Determined
Visitation and parenting time are typically established as part of a custody determination, whether that occurs during a divorce, a paternity case, or a standalone custody proceeding. When one parent is awarded primary physical custody, the other parent is usually granted a parenting time schedule that ensures ongoing, regular contact with the children.
In both West Virginia and Ohio, the guiding principle for all visitation decisions is the best interests of the child. Courts recognize that children benefit from having strong relationships with both parents, and there is a general presumption in favor of granting meaningful parenting time to the noncustodial parent unless specific safety concerns exist.
Factors Courts Consider
When establishing a visitation schedule, courts evaluate factors including the age and developmental needs of the child, the distance between the parents’ homes, each parent’s work schedule and availability, the child’s school schedule and extracurricular commitments, the quality of the child’s relationship with each parent, the child’s preference (if the child is mature enough to express a reasoned opinion), each parent’s willingness to support the child’s relationship with the other parent, and any history of domestic violence, substance abuse, or other conduct that could affect the child’s safety.
Types of Visitation Schedules
Standard Visitation
A standard or traditional visitation schedule typically gives the noncustodial parent alternating weekends (Friday evening through Sunday evening), one midweek visit or overnight, alternating holidays and school breaks, and extended time during the summer. This type of schedule is common when one parent has primary custody and the other parent lives relatively close by. The specific details — pickup and drop-off times, holiday rotation, and summer scheduling — are spelled out in the parenting plan or court order.
Extended or Liberal Visitation
When circumstances allow and both parents are cooperative, the court may grant more expansive parenting time that goes beyond the standard schedule. Extended visitation may approach a near-equal time split, such as alternating weeks or a 5-2-2-5 rotation. These arrangements work best when the parents live near each other, communicate well, and prioritize consistency for the children.
Supervised Visitation
In cases where there are concerns about a child’s safety during unsupervised contact with a parent, the court may order supervised visitation. This means that the parent’s time with the child must take place in the presence of an approved third party — either a professional supervisor at a designated visitation center or a trusted individual approved by the court. Supervised visitation may be ordered when there is a history of domestic violence or abuse, substance abuse concerns, mental health issues that could affect the child’s safety, a parent who has been absent from the child’s life for an extended period and needs to rebuild the relationship gradually, or allegations of neglect or endangerment.
Supervised visitation is intended as a protective measure, not a punishment. In many cases, it is a temporary arrangement that can be modified to unsupervised visitation once the parent has addressed the underlying concerns and demonstrated that the child will be safe in their care.
Virtual Visitation
As technology has become a more central part of daily life, many parenting plans now include provisions for virtual visitation — regular video calls, phone calls, or other electronic communication between the child and the noncustodial parent. Virtual visitation is particularly useful when the parents live far apart, but it can supplement any parenting time schedule. It does not replace in-person contact but can help maintain the parent-child bond between visits.
Grandparent and Third-Party Visitation
Grandparent visitation rights are more limited than parental rights, and the requesting party must demonstrate that visitation is in the child’s best interests. Courts balance the grandparent’s relationship with the child against the parents’ constitutional right to make decisions about their child’s upbringing. Our attorneys can advise grandparents and other family members on whether they have standing to seek visitation and what evidence will be needed to support their request.
Client Reviews
Visitation and Relocation
Relocation cases often involve a modification of both custody and visitation. Our attorneys handle these cases on behalf of both relocating parents and parents seeking to prevent a relocation that would harm their relationship with their child.
When Visitation Rights Are Denied
Enforcement of the visitation order can be pursued through the court. Remedies may include contempt of court proceedings, which can result in fines or jail time for the violating parent, makeup parenting time to compensate for missed visits, modification of the custody arrangement if the pattern of interference is severe or ongoing, and attorney’s fees and costs.
It is important to remember that child support and visitation are separate legal obligations. A parent cannot withhold visitation because the other parent is behind on child support, and a parent cannot stop paying child support because they are being denied visitation. Both issues must be addressed through proper legal channels.
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Family Law Legal Team
Family Law Attorneys
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Parental Alienation and Its Impact on Visitation
Parental alienation — where one parent deliberately undermines the child’s relationship with the other parent — can severely damage visitation rights. Alienating behavior may include making negative or false statements about the other parent to the child, interfering with phone calls or communication, creating scheduling conflicts to prevent visits, involving the child in adult disputes, and encouraging the child to reject the other parent. Courts take parental alienation seriously, and evidence of alienating behavior can result in significant consequences for the offending parent, including a change in custody.
Why Choose Klie Law Offices
Your relationship with your children is too important to leave to chance. At Klie Law Offices, our family law attorneys are dedicated to protecting and strengthening the parent-child relationship through well-crafted parenting plans, vigorous enforcement of visitation rights, and thoughtful advocacy in modification proceedings. We represent both custodial and noncustodial parents and work to achieve outcomes that serve the children’s best interests while respecting both parents’ rights.
Protect Your Parenting Time
Whether you need to establish a visitation schedule, enforce an existing order, or modify your parenting plan due to changed circumstances, contact Klie Law Offices to speak with an experienced family law attorney, or schedule an appointment online. We serve families from our offices in Buckhannon, Clarksburg, Morgantown, and Parkersburg in West Virginia, and Canton in Ohio.
Office Locations
Buckhannon
Buckhannon, WV 26201
Parkersburg
Parkersburg, WV 26101
Clarksburg
Clarksburg, WV 26301
Morgantown
102, Morgantown, WV 26508
Canton, OH
Suite 606
Canton OH, 44718
The first thing you’ll notice when you come to our Law Offices is that we’ll listen to your story. We want to know what you’re going through and what you need. Then, we’ll explain how West Virginia law applies to your specific situation and what your legal options are. There are no cookie-cutter answers here. We create a legal strategy tailored to each client’s individual needs.
Depending on your situation, we will find the right path forward. We are adept at resolving your legal matters through negotiation and mediation whenever possible. But we also won’t hesitate to take your case to trial if that’s what it takes to get the best possible outcome for you.
If you’re facing a legal challenge and need someone in your corner, don’t wait to get the help you deserve. Contact Klie Law Offices today to schedule a confidential consultation and take the first step toward a solution that works for you.






























