Oklahoma child-relocation requires court approval (or other parent's consent) for most moves that materially affect parenting time. 60 days written notice.
Published May 6, 2026
## Moving with a child after a custody order in Oklahoma
If you have a custody order or shared parenting plan in Oklahoma, you generally CAN'T just move with the child — at least not far enough to disrupt the other parent's relationship — without either the other parent's consent or court approval.
### Oklahoma relocation framework
- **Notice required:** 60 days written notice.
- **Standard the court applies:** Statutory 9-factor test (43 OS 112.3); 60-day notice.
## What counts as relocation
Most states define relocation by:
- **Distance** — typical thresholds: 50 miles, 100 miles, out of school district, out of state
- **Effect on parenting time** — moves that materially reduce the other parent's contact
- **Duration** — moves of 60+ days (some states)
Moves down the street usually don't trigger relocation rules; moves to another state almost always do.
## What courts consider
Across states, the universal factors include:
1. **Reason for the move** — job, education, family support, new spouse, escape from abuse
2. **Reason for any opposition** — genuine concern about parenting time vs vindictiveness
3. **Quality of life impact** on the child — better/worse schools, neighborhood, extended family
4. **Existing relationship** between the child and each parent
5. **Feasibility of preserving the non-moving parent's relationship** through extended summers, holidays, video calls, travel
6. **Child's preferences** if old enough
7. **The proposed parenting schedule** post-move
## Common reasons relocation is approved
- **Better job opportunity** — significant income, career advancement
- **Family support network** — moving near grandparents, siblings
- **Educational opportunity** — for a parent or child
- **Military orders** — service members usually get expedited approval
- **Domestic violence escape** — courts strongly favor protecting the abused parent and child
- **Remarriage** — combined household typically a factor
## Common reasons relocation is denied
- **No real reason** beyond convenience or whim
- **Apparent purpose to interfere** with non-moving parent's relationship
- **Move that severely disrupts established schooling, therapy, special needs services**
- **Move to a place where parenting-time arrangement isn't realistic**
- **History of relocation by the same parent** to evade prior orders
## Pre-emptive relocation provisions
Many parenting plans include a **geographic restriction** ("the children's primary residence shall be within X county / school district / 50-mile radius"). If you have such a clause, moving outside it without court approval is a violation that can result in custody being changed.
## Process for getting approval
1. **Notify the other parent in writing** — using the state's required form/timeline
2. **Try to negotiate a new parenting plan** — courts strongly prefer parental agreements
3. **If no agreement, file a petition** to modify the parenting order
4. **Mediation** — required in most jurisdictions before the judge hears it
5. **Hearing** — both sides present evidence, judge applies the statutory factors
6. **Order** — granting move with new parenting schedule, OR denying move
## What happens if you move without approval
Moving without complying with the relocation rules can result in:
- **Court orders requiring return** of the child
- **Change of custody** to the non-moving parent
- **Contempt of court** — fines, attorney fees, possible jail
- **Loss of credibility** in any future custody dispute
Don't move first and ask for forgiveness later — the costs are too high.
## Special considerations
**Domestic violence.** Most states have expedited or simplified relocation rules when the moving parent and child are escaping abuse. Document the abuse and seek a protective order alongside the relocation request.
**Military deployment.** SCRA (federal Servicemembers Civil Relief Act) protects military parents from custody changes solely due to deployment.
**International relocation.** International moves face additional scrutiny — Hague Convention countries vs non-Hague countries; passport restrictions; bonding requirements.
## What you should do
If you're considering a move with your child in Oklahoma, get a family-law attorney involved BEFORE you commit to a job, sign a lease, or pull the child from school. Most Oklahoma family-law attorneys offer paid initial consultations and can run a realistic case-strength assessment for $200-$500. Once you're committed to the move, your leverage drops.
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*This guide is general information about Oklahoma law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. Relocation cases are intensely fact-specific. Talk to a licensed Oklahoma 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.