Log scheduled vs actual — both halves

The unit of proof is the pair: what the plan said, and what happened. For every exchange record the scheduled date and time, the actual time (or no-show), who initiated any change, the stated reason, and whether makeup time was agreed and later honored. Log it the same day. The pattern this builds answers the questions that actually get asked: How much time did each parent really have? Who cancelled, how often, with how much notice? Did makeup time materialize? A parenting time log with a hundred boring, consistent entries is exactly what "proof" looks like.

Third-party corroboration

Your log is stronger when disinterested records echo it:

  • School and daycare sign-in/out sheets — who dropped off and picked up.
  • Activity rosters and coaches — who brought the child to practice.
  • Medical and dental visit records — which parent attended.
  • Travel confirmations for trips taken with the child.
  • Receipts from the zoo, the cinema, the restaurant — dated, placed, and mundane.

None of these were created to help you, which is precisely their value. You don't need to collect them all continuously — know they exist, and align your log with the reality they'll confirm.

Photos, done tastefully

A few dated photos from your weekends — the hike, the birthday, homework at the kitchen table — corroborate presence and are worth taking anyway. Original files keep their timestamp metadata; that's enough. What to avoid: photographing the other parent at exchanges, staging evidence shots of the child, or turning every visit into a documentation session. The child's experience of the weekend matters more than its evidentiary value — and a child who feels surveilled tells someone.

Counting time correctly

Jurisdictions commonly count overnights; some count hours. Percentages drive support calculations more often than custody labels do. Whichever applies to you, a complete log converts either way — see the parenting time calculator guide for tracking planned vs actual vs missed vs made-up time so the arithmetic is a filter, not a project. In Casewell, parenting time entries export as a dated PDF filtered to exactly the date range in question.

If time is being interfered with

Denied or chronically disrupted parenting time is a legal issue, not just a logging one. Document each instance factually — request, denial or obstruction, exact words, effect on the child — the way missed handovers are documented, and take the pattern to your attorney rather than self-remedying (withholding support or grabbing extra time creates problems that outlive the dispute). The record's job is to make the pattern undeniable; the remedy's job belongs to the court.

What counts as proof of parenting time?

A contemporaneous log of scheduled vs actual time, corroborated by third-party records — school sign-outs, activity attendance, appointment records — plus dated photos and receipts from time actually spent.

How do courts count parenting time?

Most commonly by overnights, sometimes by hours, and the split often feeds support calculations. Keep a complete log and the counting method becomes arithmetic rather than argument.

What should I do if my parenting time is being denied?

Document every instance factually — the scheduled time, what happened, exact communications — and raise the pattern with your attorney. Don't retaliate by withholding support or self-adjusting the schedule.

How Casewell can help

Casewell helps you keep calm, timestamped, organized documentation with attachments and PDF exports for attorney review, family court preparation, mediation, or your own records.

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