Texas law gives significant weight to parental rights — but meaningful legal paths exist for grandparents when a child's welfare is at risk or threshold conditions are met. Our firm evaluates each situation honestly and pursues the strongest available option. Free consultation.
Texas law gives significant weight to parental rights. The U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Troxel v. Granville, 530 U.S. 57 (2000), held that fit parents have a constitutionally protected right to make decisions about their children's care and upbringing — including decisions about grandparent contact. Texas courts honor that principle. A grandparent cannot obtain court-ordered visitation simply because they want it or because a parent has limited contact.
That said, Texas Family Code Chapter 153 provides specific, meaningful legal paths for grandparents when the right circumstances exist. Understanding exactly what those circumstances are — and how to build the evidentiary record to meet the applicable legal standards — is what determines whether a grandparent has a viable case.
A grandparent may request reasonable visitation if at least one of the child's parents has not had their rights terminated, at least one of the statutory threshold conditions is met, and the grandparent proves by a preponderance of the evidence that denial of access would significantly impair the child's physical health or emotional well-being.
In cases where the child's safety is genuinely at risk, a grandparent may also seek managing conservatorship — effectively custody — under TFC § 153.131. This requires showing that placing the child with a parent would significantly impair the child's physical health or emotional development. The standard is demanding, but courts act when the evidence supports it.
One of the most important things an attorney can do in a grandparents' rights case is provide an honest assessment upfront. Texas law is not favorable to grandparent visitation petitions when parents are fit and together. Where threshold conditions are met and the evidence of significant impairment is strong, there is a real legal path. Where those conditions are not met, filing anyway wastes time, money, and emotional energy — and can damage relationships further. Our attorneys give every client a candid evaluation before advising them to file.
Grandparent cases often arise alongside or within child custody proceedings. Understanding how conservatorship works in Texas is essential context for grandparent rights matters.
141 N. San Jacinto Street
Conroe, TX 77301
Mon–Thu: 8:30 AM – 5:30 PM
Fri: 8:30 AM – 12:00 PM
Sat–Sun: By Appointment
To obtain court-ordered visitation, a grandparent must clear two distinct hurdles under Texas Family Code § 153.433 — meeting the threshold conditions is necessary but not sufficient. The significant impairment showing is equally required.
Building the evidentiary record to meet these standards is where the legal work happens. Where the facts support a petition, our attorneys prepare a thorough case. Where they do not, we say so clearly.
When a parent dies and the surviving parent severs grandparent contact, Texas law provides one of the clearest paths to court-ordered visitation. Courts carefully consider the surviving parent's fitness, the existing relationship, and the impact of continued contact on the child.
When one parent is incarcerated and the other limits grandparent contact, grandparents may have standing to petition for visitation. These cases often involve grandparents who have been primary caregivers during the incarceration and whose continued presence is demonstrably important to the grandchild's stability.
When parental substance abuse, neglect, domestic violence, or serious instability puts a grandchild at risk, grandparents may petition for managing conservatorship under TFC § 153.131. Courts can move quickly in emergency situations. The evidentiary standard is high but courts act decisively when genuine safety is at issue.
Under TFC § 102.004 (as amended by HB 2350, eff. Sept. 1, 2025), a grandparent who has had substantial past contact with the grandchild may intervene in a pending divorce or SAPCR proceeding to seek their own orders. Relatives within the fourth degree of consanguinity now have expanded intervention rights.
When a court has found one of the child's parents to be incompetent, the grandparent threshold condition under TFC § 153.433 is satisfied. The grandparent must still show significant impairment from denial of access, but the threshold hurdle is cleared by the court's incompetency finding.
If a grandparent already has a court order for visitation and the parent is violating it, enforcement options are available including contempt of court. Documenting the violations, preserving communications, and acting promptly are essential steps before filing for enforcement.
When a grandchild faces immediate danger — from parental drug use, domestic violence, or neglect — Texas courts can issue emergency temporary orders quickly. A grandparent who believes a grandchild is in immediate danger should contact an attorney immediately rather than waiting for the situation to escalate.
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Conroe, TX 77301
Mon–Thu: 8:30 AM – 5:30 PM
Fri: 8:30 AM – 12:00 PM
Sat–Sun: By Appointment
Our firm handles grandparent visitation and conservatorship matters throughout the Greater Houston area — including Conroe, The Woodlands, Spring, Tomball, Magnolia, Willis, and Montgomery in Montgomery County, and Houston, Cypress, Humble, Kingwood, Katy, Sugar Land, and Pearland in Harris County. We also serve clients in Fort Bend County, Brazoria County, and Waller County. Free consultations are available by phone or online.
Yes — but only under specific circumstances. Texas Family Code § 153.433 establishes the framework for grandparent visitation, and it requires meeting both a threshold condition and a significant impairment showing.
The constitutional backdrop matters: in Troxel v. Granville, 530 U.S. 57 (2000), the U.S. Supreme Court held that fit parents have a constitutionally protected liberty interest in the care and custody of their children — including decisions about who their children spend time with. Texas courts apply this principle strictly.
Effective September 1, 2025, SB 2052 added significant new procedural requirements. Under new TFC § 102.0031, a grandparent filing a SAPCR must now attach an affidavit to the petition attesting — with supporting facts — that denial of relief would significantly impair the child's physical health or emotional development. Courts are required to dismiss the suit if the affidavit is missing or if its facts, taken as true, would be insufficient to support the relief requested.
Under Texas Family Code § 153.433(a), a grandparent may request reasonable visitation only if at least one of the child's parents has not had their parental rights terminated, and at least one of the following conditions is met:
Meeting a threshold condition is necessary but not sufficient. The grandparent must still prove significant impairment from denial of access — that is the second, equally required hurdle.
Note: Effective September 1, 2025, HB 2350 expanded the degree of consanguinity for relatives filing conservatorship suits from the third to the fourth degree — meaning great-grandparents and other extended relatives now have a clearer path to file a SAPCR. The threshold conditions for grandparent visitation under § 153.433 itself were not changed.
Under Texas Family Code § 153.433(a)(2), the grandparent must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that denial of access to the grandchild would significantly impair the child's physical health or emotional well-being.
This is a demanding standard. Texas courts have consistently held that loss of a beneficial or even close grandparent-grandchild relationship does not by itself constitute significant impairment. Evidence of actual harm — documented emotional regression, behavioral changes tied to the loss of contact, or concrete welfare concerns — is typically what moves the needle.
Effective September 1, 2025, SB 2052 added a codified rebuttable presumption to TFC § 153.002: a parent is presumed to act in the child's best interest, and a nonparent seeking relief must overcome this presumption. In modification cases, the nonparent must rebut the presumption by clear and convincing evidence — a higher standard than the preponderance standard that previously applied.
Yes. Under Texas Family Code § 153.131, a grandparent may be appointed managing conservator of a grandchild by filing a SAPCR and rebutting the parental presumption. The grandparent must show that appointing a parent as managing conservator would significantly impair the child's physical health or emotional development.
Effective September 1, 2025, HB 2350 expanded standing for grandparents and relatives within the fourth degree of consanguinity to request managing conservatorship. SB 2052 added TFC § 102.0031, requiring grandparents filing an original SAPCR to attach an affidavit attesting with supporting facts that denial of the requested relief would significantly impair the child. Courts must dismiss if the affidavit is absent or facially insufficient.
Yes. Under Texas Family Code § 102.004, a grandparent who has had substantial past contact with the grandchild may be permitted to intervene in a pending divorce, SAPCR, or other family law proceeding. Intervention allows the grandparent to become a party, participate in proceedings, and seek their own orders regarding access or conservatorship.
Effective September 1, 2025, HB 2350 substantially restructured § 102.004, adding new subsections distinguishing between relatives within the fourth degree of consanguinity and unrelated persons, and clarifying intervention rights. Relatives within the fourth degree — including grandparents and great-grandparents — have expanded intervention rights under the revised statute.
SB 2052 also established that nonparents intervening in a pending suit must comply with the new affidavit requirement under TFC § 102.0031. A vague or conclusory affidavit will not survive a motion to dismiss.
Consult a family law attorney before taking any action. Texas grandparent visitation law is highly specific and was significantly amended effective September 1, 2025 by HB 2350 and SB 2052. An attorney can assess whether threshold conditions under TFC § 153.433 are met, evaluate whether the new affidavit requirement under TFC § 102.0031 can be satisfied, and advise on realistic options before you file. A deficient affidavit results in mandatory dismissal under the 2025 amendments.
Taking informal action — confronting the parent, involving third parties, or attempting to see the grandchild without the parent's consent — can complicate your legal position. Document your prior relationship with the grandchild, preserve any communications, and speak with an attorney first.
Our firm serves clients throughout Conroe, Houston, and Greater Houston. We provide honest assessments of your situation — including when a filing is and is not advisable. Consultations are free and confidential.
(713) 352-6900
This firm represents clients throughout Montgomery, Harris, Fort Bend, Brazoria, and Waller Counties — with our office based in Conroe, steps from the Montgomery County Family Law Courts.
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Attorney advertising. Fritz and Phillips, PC is a Texas law firm. The information on this website is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or establish an attorney-client relationship. Prior results do not guarantee similar outcomes. Jessica Fritz (TX Bar 2008) and Keith Phillips (TX Bar 2016) are the attorneys responsible for this content.