Colorado parents can grant temporary guardianship of a minor child to another adult — for medical care, school enrollment, military deployment, or other limited purposes — without surrendering parental rights.
Published May 8, 2026
## Temporary guardianship of a minor in Colorado
**Temporary guardianship** lets a parent authorize another trusted adult to make medical, educational, and day-to-day decisions for a minor child for a limited time — without ending parental rights.
## Common reasons for temporary guardianship
- **Military deployment** — Family Care Plans require it
- **Medical emergency** — parent hospitalized / incapacitated
- **Travel / extended business trip**
- **Substance abuse treatment** — temporary placement during rehab
- **Education** — child living with grandparent during school year
- **Foreign exchange / boarding school**
- **Incarceration** — short-term
- **Child living temporarily with relatives** for stability reasons
- **Foster relative placement**
## Two main paths
**1. Notarized parental authorization affidavit.** Most states allow parents to sign a notarized form authorizing a specific person to:
- Consent to medical care
- Enroll child in school
- Make day-to-day decisions
- Travel with the child (sometimes)
Generally accepted by schools, doctors, and dentists. Sometimes called a **Caregiver Affidavit** or **Designation of Standby Guardian**. State-specific forms.
**2. Court-ordered temporary guardianship.** Filed in family / juvenile / probate court:
- Parental consent typically required (but not always)
- Court order has more weight
- Can specify time period
- May be necessary for major decisions (surgery, public assistance, school discipline)
- Can be open-ended ("until further order") or fixed term
## Standby guardianship
Many states have specific **standby guardianship** statutes for parents with serious illness:
- Parent designates guardian who takes effect on triggering event
- Triggering event: parent's incapacity, death, or specific signed consent
- Allows parent to plan ahead while retaining custody
- Common for parents with cancer, HIV, terminal illness
## What temporary guardianship typically authorizes
- Medical / dental decisions
- School enrollment + records access
- Day-to-day care decisions
- Travel decisions
- Communication with parent
- Discipline (within reasonable limits)
- Religious practice (consistent with parent's wishes)
## What it typically does NOT authorize
- Major surgery (some states require court order)
- Adoption or termination of parental rights
- Changes to legal custody
- Marriage of minor
- Joining military
- Long-term moves out of state
- Changing the child's surname
## Required documentation
**Parental authorization form** typically requires:
- Parent's full name + signature
- Designated guardian's full name
- Child's full name + DOB
- Specific powers being granted
- Time period
- Notary acknowledgment
- Sometimes 2 witnesses
**Court guardianship petition** requires:
- Filed petition with court
- Notice to other parent (if living)
- Notice to child (if old enough)
- Background check on proposed guardian
- Sometimes home study
- Hearing
- Court order
## Who can be a temporary guardian
Most states require:
- Adult (18+)
- No felony / child abuse conviction
- Capable and willing to serve
- Generally a relative or close family friend
- Sometimes a court-vetted nonrelative
## When parental consent isn't required
Court can grant guardianship without parental consent when:
- Parents are unfit / abusive / neglectful
- Parents have abandoned the child
- Parents are incarcerated for extended periods
- Parents are deceased / missing
- Best interests of child clearly require it
These cases involve more procedural protections (notice, hearings, often counsel for parents).
## Termination
Temporary guardianship typically ends when:
- Specified time period expires
- Parent revokes (in most cases)
- Parent demonstrates ability to resume care
- Court terminates (after hearing)
- Triggering event ends (e.g., parent returns from deployment)
- Child reaches age of majority
## Differences from custody / adoption
- **Custody** — long-term legal arrangement; ends parental rights only in extreme cases
- **Adoption** — permanent termination + transfer of parental rights
- **Foster care** — state-supervised placement after CPS involvement
- **Temporary guardianship** — non-permanent; preserves parental rights
## What you should do
If you need temporary guardianship in Colorado: most situations resolve with a notarized affidavit (county courthouse / online forms / state DCFS website). For sensitive situations (medical decisions, contested), file a court petition. Most Colorado family-law attorneys offer flat-fee guardianship work or free / low-cost legal aid for emergencies.
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*This guide is general information about Colorado law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. Temporary-guardianship procedures vary. Talk to a licensed Colorado family-law attorney about your specific situation.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.