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Visitation and the Alcoholic Parent: How Drinking Problems Affect Parenting Time

If alcohol is hurting your parenting time, you’re in a race to prove change. Start now, document everything, and don’t wait for the court to tell you what to do.

The direct effects of alcohol misuse, as outlined below, are bad enough. The indirect effects may be even worse – at least when it comes to child custody and visitation.

Alcohol abuse issues usually mean the person is unaware of the problem, doesn’t take it seriously, or perhaps worst of all, knowingly refuses to get help. Any of those responses can create serious problems in family court when a judge is deciding how much time that parent will get with their child.

Since the early 2000s, Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) has aggressively pushed for ignition interlock device (IID) laws, citing evidence that breathalyzers attached to vehicle ignition systems significantly reduce the number of fatal alcohol-related crashes. 

Somewhat similarly, in the custody context, a court-ordered personal breathalyzer can significantly reduce parenting-time problems caused by alcohol. Voluntary use is even better. When a parent recognizes the problem, appreciates its severity, and does something about it, some of the indirect visitation-related effects go away.

Nevertheless, the direct effects of alcohol abuse on parenting – unreliability, unpredictability, and potential safety risks – remain. In many cases, these effects sharply limit or even eliminate visitation rights.

Editor’s note: When we talk about an “alcoholic,” we’re referring to someone who is struggling with an alcohol use disorder. While the term “alcoholic” is still widely used, it is outdated and can sometimes carry negative connotations and judgment, which can hinder understanding and compassion. In certain instances, we do include “alcoholic” to ensure that a wide range of individuals – who adopt a wide range of terms – can easily find and access our resources. However, it’s more accurate and empathetic to use the phrase “person with an alcohol use disorder.” This term reflects the complexity of the condition rather than ascribing it to someone as a personality trait. 

Understanding the problem: Why courts care about alcohol use when determining visitation

Long-term alcohol abuse creates serious health problems which, in many cases, are fatal. But for purposes of this discussion, we’re more concerned about the short-term behavioral effects that directly affect a parent’s ability to exercise visitation rights.

As a side note: An alcohol abuse problem doesn’t necessarily mean a person is a “drunk.” Genetic and other factors often come into play.

But in most states, family courts don’t care about the source of a disability. They only care about its general effects, and specifically, how it impacts the best interests of the child—which is the standard for determining custody and visitation.

Unreliability: Missed pickups, forgotten events – and lost visitation

Alcohol abuse breeds unreliability. By definition, an addiction to anything, good or bad, interferes with daily activities. That interference often affects pick-up, drop-off, and other everyday child custody matters. 

man in red crew neck t-shirt and black pants holding white and black labeled pack
Photo by afiq fatah on Unsplash

Furthermore, alcohol causes short term-memory problems. Here’s an example I’ve seen before:

Junior texts Dad about his choir concert tomorrow night. Dad promises to be there, but since he’s drinking at the time, he doesn’t remember the concert. So, he no-shows. Mom gleefully brings up this parenting failure the next time the two are in court.

Unpredictability: Mood swings that disrupt parenting time

We all undergo mood swings, such as happy and sad. Alcohol magnifies these emotions: Happy becomes ecstatic and sad becomes depressed. If Mom has a few glasses of wine before Dad drops off Junior, she might be fine at 7:00.

But by 9:00, her alcohol-enhanced mood swings kick in. When she gets angry at Junior because he doesn’t use a coaster, she blows up.

a person standing in the middle of a street
Photo by Jon Tyson on Unsplash

This unpredictability is especially serious if the parents have small children. Kids this age cling to predictability like a drowning man clings to a life raft. Take away the life raft, and the man (or child) drowns.

Safety risks: When drinking makes parenting time dangerous

I listed this effect last because, in most cases, it’s hypothetical. A lawyer gravely argues that “if” Dad causes a DUI crash, Junior could be killed. 

(Yes, and “if” your grandmother had wheels, she’d be a streetcar).

More often than not, safety is a straw that breaks the camel’s back. If the court is already concerned about predictability and reliability, a safety risk is too much.

How courts respond: Supervised visitation and other restrictions

Hopefully, that discussion made the point that the gravity of the situation is serious. 

When these cases go to court, for many alcoholic parents, co-parenting laws save the day, at least in part. An unpredictable, unreliable, and possibly dangerous father is better than no father at all. Therefore, supervised visitation is the most common child custody effect of alcohol abuse.

Most courts allow private third parties to supervise visitation. This supervisor may be someone the parent doesn’t like, such as a mother-in-law. 

But if a parent faces supervised visitation, don’t take it lying down. Remote alcohol monitoring BAC test results transmitted to the other parent prior to drop-off mitigate the unpredictability effect. So do BAC test results from strategic times during the week, such as Saturday nights.

In some cases, supervised visitation takes place at CPS-monitored play areas or maybe public places, like the park or McDonald’s. These arrangements are basically horrible for everyone involved, but in a non-co-parenting state, they may be the best any lawyer can do.

What evidence do judges need to limit visitation?

Now, let’s get to some nuts and bolts.

The judge may limit visitation, as outlined above, if the other parent establishes a verifiable problem and ill effects. 

Drinking, even moderate drinking, meets the burden of proof in child custody cases, which is usually a preponderance of the evidence (more likely than not). But this habit may not satisfy the burden of persuasion.

Once is happenstance, twice is coincidence, and thrice is enemy action.”

For example: If I don’t have an alibi for a certain night, more likely than not, I committed an unsolved axe murder across town. But my lack of an alibi is probably not persuasive.

A little more evidence, such as a prior DUI, doctor’s instructions to stop drinking, or a rehab visit, is usually enough to get over the hump.

The effects of alcohol abuse usually follow the James Bond rule. In Goldfinger, Ian Fleming wrote that “Once is happenstance, twice is coincidence, and thrice is enemy action.”

Significantly, coming into court half-cocked on this issue generally does more harm than good. If Mom cannot prove that Dad has an alcohol problem and that problem adversely affects the best interests of the child, Mom appears petty and vindictive.

Guidance for concerned parents: Modification issues

The onset or removal of an alcohol-related disability is one of the most common reasons parents seek to modify visitation and custody orders. We’ve already covered what happens when the problem starts; the process for proving recovery works much the same way.

Portable breathalyzer-led systems can be a game-changer because they provide hard evidence – meeting both the burden of proof and the burden of persuasion.

Now, judges don’t always order them due to privacy concerns, and that’s actually an advantage. How? When a parent chooses to use one voluntarily, it signals to the court that they’re serious about addressing their alcohol problem – and judges love that.

Think of the James Bond rule: Almost anyone can stay sober for a month or two, but three months starts to look like a real pattern. To prove that pattern, testing should be frequent (about ten times a week) and at unpredictable times.

Timing matters. Most states require a one-year wait before you can file a motion to modify visitation. If you plan to file, start voluntary testing at least three months before that date. Filing exactly one year to the day after the last order shows you’ve been serious and consistent. Because when you’re considering how to regain custody as a parent, it’s crucial to demonstrate your commitment to being a responsible caregiver.

When a parent successfully removes the disability, the court will usually lift visitation restrictions and may even open the door to more balanced parenting schedules. Extended weekends—starting Thursday and ending Monday—are a good example. That arrangement brings the timeshare much closer to 50/50.

But don’t assume that sobriety alone guarantees a change. Custody modifications are like boxing matches: if the challenger doesn’t clearly beat the champion, the champion keeps the belt. An alcoholic parent needs to prove both chemical change (documented BAC results) and behavioral change (demonstrating they truly parent differently now).

Visitation and the alcoholic parent: The bottom line

Alcohol misuse can wreck a parent’s visitation rights – sometimes temporarily, sometimes for good.

Judges look at reliability, emotional stability, and safety above all else. If drinking disrupts pickups, fuels volatility, or creates risk, the court will limit parenting time, often through supervision or strict conditions.

The good news is that restrictions aren’t always permanent. Consistent sobriety (proven through credible testing) and steady, responsible behavior can rebuild trust with the court.

In other words, fixing the problem isn’t just good for your health. It’s the only way to protect or restore your time with your child.

About The Author

Bret Thurman
Bret Thurman
J.D.
Bret Thurman is a Dallas-based legal writer who practiced law in Texas for over twenty years. His writing focuses on cri... Read More

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