Everything a father needs to walk into MA Probate & Family Court prepared, confident, and ready. Print this, read it twice, and bring it with you. This is your playbook.
Your child must have lived in MA for at least 6 consecutive months before filing (UCCJEA home state rule, M.G.L. c. 209B). If your child recently moved to MA, you may need to wait.
Sign a Voluntary Acknowledgment of Parentage at the hospital or town clerk, or file a Complaint to Establish Parentage (CJD 106). Without established parentage, you have no legal rights to custody or parenting time.
If you're seeking shared custody, you must submit a shared custody implementation plan at trial (M.G.L. c. 208, § 31). It must include education, health care, dispute resolution, and residential/visitation schedules. Use our Parenting Plan Template to prepare this.
Even a one-hour consultation can save you thousands. Free options:
The Probate & Family Court in the county where the child lives (for unmarried parents) or where you and your spouse lived together (for divorce). Find your court at mass.gov.
In person at the clerk's office, by mail, or online via eFileMA. The clerk issues a summons.
The complaint and summons must be served on the other parent by a sheriff, constable, or authorized person ($50–$75). You cannot serve them yourself. File proof of service with the court. Keep copies of everything.
Eligible if income ≤125% of federal poverty level OR receiving MassHealth, SNAP, TAFDC, or SSI. Covers filing fees, court costs, and service fees.
MA Probate & Family Court doesn't have a published formal dress code, but court notices print "proper dress required" in bold. Judges notice how you present yourself.
If coming from work and can't change, tell your attorney so they can inform the judge.
DadHelp · Document Pack for Massachusetts · Not legal advice · dadcourthelp.com
This guide is educational. We are not attorneys. Always consult a qualified MA family law attorney.