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What to Bring to Custody Mediation — Complete Checklist

April 2026 • 6 min read

Mediation is often your best chance to resolve a custody dispute without the unpredictability of trial. A mediator can't force an agreement, but a well-prepared parent who walks in with organized evidence and a clear proposal has a significant advantage over one who shows up hoping to "just talk it out."

This checklist covers everything you should bring and prepare before your mediation session.

Before Mediation: Preparation

Most of the work happens before you walk in the door. The day of mediation is about presenting what you've already organized.

Pre-Mediation Checklist

Documents to Bring

Essential Documents

Supporting Evidence (if relevant)

How to Present Your Case to the Mediator

The mediator is not a judge. They don't decide who wins. Their job is to help both parents find common ground. Your goal is to make it easy for the mediator to understand your position and carry your strongest arguments to the other room.

The golden rule of mediation: The parent who appears more reasonable, more organized, and more focused on the child — rather than on winning — usually gets the better outcome. Judges and mediators notice preparation. They also notice chaos.

What NOT to Bring

After Mediation

If you reach an agreement, it will typically be written up as a stipulation or consent order and submitted to the judge. Review every word before signing — once it's a court order, it's binding.

If mediation fails, you're headed to trial. Everything you prepared for mediation becomes your trial prep foundation. Nothing is wasted.

Prepare for mediation in hours, not weeks

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