Do Grandparents Have Legal Rights Over their Grandchildren in Illinois?
The short answer is: not automatically. In Illinois, grandparents do not have inherent rights to visit or take custody of their grandchildren. Those rights must be established through the court system by filing a formal petition.
Under 750 ILCS 5/602.9 of the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act, grandparents, along with great-grandparents, step-parents, and siblings, may petition the court specifically for visitation and electronic communication with a grandchild. Electronic communication covers phone calls, video conferencing, email, and similar tools. The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Troxel v. Granville (2000) established that fit parents have a constitutionally protected right to make decisions about their children’s upbringing. Illinois statute reflects this by building a strong presumption in favor of parents, placing the burden squarely on the grandparent to prove their case.
In more serious circumstances, grandparents may also pursue parental responsibilities (custody) under a separate provision of Illinois law, 750 ILCS 5/601.2. This is a distinct legal action with a significantly higher bar, reserved for situations where parents have been found unfit or have voluntarily relinquished custody of the child.
Illinois Terminology: Visitation vs. Parenting Time
In Illinois, “visitation” no longer refers to a parent’s time with their child. That is now called “parenting time.” Visitation specifically means time a non-parent, including a grandparent, spends with a child. If you are a grandparent pursuing time with your grandchild, you are pursuing visitation rights. That is exactly what the law calls it, and exactly what you should be searching for.
When grandparent rights are established, they take one of two primary forms:
Visitation Rights
Court-ordered in-person time and electronic communication with your grandchild, such as phone calls and video visits. Visitation does not grant decision-making authority over the child’s upbringing, but it is the most commonly pursued and most commonly granted outcome in grandparent rights cases.
Parental Responsibilities (Custody)
Full or partial custody of the grandchild, including the authority to make decisions about their education, healthcare, and daily life. This is a distinct legal action governed by a separate statute and carries a significantly higher bar than visitation, reserved for situations where parents have been found unfit or have voluntarily relinquished their own rights.
When Can a Grandparent File for Visitation in Illinois?
Grandparent visitation rights are not available in every situation. Illinois law sets specific thresholds that must be met before a grandparent has the legal standing to file a petition. The child must be at least one year old. You must point to at least one qualifying circumstance from the statute. And even if a qualifying circumstance exists, you must show that you have been unreasonably denied visitation and that this denial is causing, or is likely to cause, real harm to your grandchild.
The Five Qualifying Circumstances Under 750 ILCS 5/602.9
The child’s other parent has died, or has been missing for at least 90 days and has been reported as missing to a law enforcement agency.
A court has determined that one of the child’s parents is incompetent as a matter of law.
One of the child’s parents has been incarcerated in jail or prison for more than 90 days immediately prior to the filing of the petition.
The child’s parents were never married and are not currently living together, the petitioner is a grandparent or great-grandparent of the child, and the parent-child relationship has been legally established with respect to the parent related to the grandparent.
The parents have been granted a dissolution of marriage, divorce, are legally separated, or have a pending dissolution or custody proceeding. At least one parent must not object to the grandparent’s visitation. Any visitation granted cannot diminish the parenting time of the parent who is not related to the grandparent.
What You Must Also Prove: The Unreasonable Denial Standard
Meeting one of the five circumstances gets you in the door, but it does not automatically win your case. Under Illinois law, there is a rebuttable presumption that a fit parent’s decision to deny grandparent visitation is not harmful to the child. To overcome it, you must demonstrate two things:
1. That you have been unreasonably denied visitation by the child’s parent, and
2. That this denial has caused, or is reasonably likely to cause, undue harm to your grandchild’s mental, physical, or emotional health.
Important: What Is Not Sufficient
Being more financially stable than the parents is not enough. Being a loving, involved grandparent is not enough on its own. Illinois courts require specific, demonstrable evidence that the denial of visitation is actively harming the child. This is a genuinely demanding standard and it is where experienced legal representation makes the most significant difference in outcomes.
Visitation, Custody, or Guardianship: Which Path Applies to Your Situation?
Many grandparents come to us unsure of what they’re actually asking the court for. These three remedies are meaningfully different. Pursuing the wrong one, or misunderstanding the standard required, can cost significant time and resources. Here is how they compare.
Visitation Rights
Scheduled time and electronic communication with the grandchild
What you get
In-person visits and electronic communication including calls, video, and email
Parental rights affected
No. Parents retain full authority.
Decision-making
None
Best for
Maintaining an existing relationship
Legal Bar:
Low to Moderate
Requires proving a qualifying circumstance, unreasonable denial, and undue harm to the child. Challenging, but the most accessible of the three options.
Guardianship
Care and decision-making authority without fully severing parental rights
What you get
Legal authority to care for and make decisions on behalf of the child
Parental rights affected
Partially – parents may retain some rights.
Decision-making
Yes
Best for
When parents are temporarily unable to care for the child
Legal Bar:
High
Requires demonstrating that the parents are unable or unfit to care for the child, either temporarily or long-term. Parents may contest and must be shown unfit if they do.
Custody (Parental Responsibilities)
Full parental responsibilities when parents are unfit or have relinquished the child
What you get
Full decision-making authority and physical care of the child
Parental rights affected
Significantly – parents may not even retain visitation.
Decision-making
Yes, full
Best for
Parents unfit or have voluntarily relinquished custody of the child
Legal Bar:
Very High
Requires showing the child is not in either parent’s physical custody, and that parents have voluntarily relinquished the child or been legally deemed unfit. The most difficult standard to meet.
Parental Unfitness
For grandparents pursuing custody, parental unfitness must be legally established. Courts have found unfitness in cases involving documented child abuse or neglect, substance addiction, domestic violence, abandonment, or a prior court finding of endangerment. These are serious determinations, and courts do not make them lightly.
What Happens If the Grandchild Is Adopted?
If your grandchild is adopted by a non-relative, any grandparent visitation rights previously awarded are terminated, even if a visitation order was already in place. One exception applies: if the adopting parties are themselves related to the child, grandparents retain legal standing to petition for visitation under the statute.
Your Grandchild Deserves to Have You in Their Life.
A free consultation costs nothing. Our DuPage County attorneys are available 24/7 and will give you a straight answer about your options, no pressure and no run-around.
Or call us directly: (630) 261-9098
How Illinois Courts Decide Grandparent Visitation Cases
Even after establishing a qualifying circumstance and demonstrating unreasonable denial, a judge weighs a specific set of statutory factors to determine whether visitation is in the child’s best interests. Understanding these factors before you file gives you and your attorney the opportunity to build a case around evidence that speaks directly to what the court is looking for.
1
The Child’s Wishes
Weight given based on the child’s age, maturity, and ability to express independent preferences.
2
The Grandparent’s Health
Whether the grandparent can provide a safe, stable environment during visits.
3
The Child’s Health
How visitation would affect the child’s overall physical and mental wellbeing.
4
Length and Quality of the Relationship
Whether the grandchild and grandparent have a meaningful, established bond backed by regular contact.
5
Grandparent’s Good Faith in Filing
Courts look for genuine motivation, not litigation used as a tool of conflict or pressure.
6
Parents’ Good Faith in Denying
Whether the denial is for the child’s welfare, or appears retaliatory and driven by adult conflict.
7
Amount of Visitation Requested
Proportional, reasonable requests are viewed more favorably than demands that disrupt the child’s existing routine.
8
Evidence of Undue Harm
Specific, concrete facts showing the child is being harmed by the separation. This is the central question in most cases.
9
Ability to Minimize Conflict
Courts strongly prefer arrangements that keep the child insulated from adult conflict. If visits can be structured to reduce friction between the parties, a judge is far more likely to grant them.
Additional considerations in complex cases
- Whether the grandchild lived with the grandparent for six or more consecutive months, with or without a parent present
- Whether the grandchild had frequent, regular contact with the grandparent for 12 or more consecutive months
- Whether the proposed visitation would interfere with the parenting time of the parent who is not related to the grandparent
How the Grandparent Rights Process Works in DuPage County
Grandparent rights cases are rarely quick. Understanding what’s ahead helps you make better decisions at every step and helps you avoid the procedural missteps that can delay or undermine an otherwise strong case.
1
First Step
Assess Your Eligibility
Before filing anything, you need an honest assessment of your situation. Does one of the five circumstances apply? Can you demonstrate unreasonable denial? Is there evidence of harm to the child? The facts of your specific situation determine everything, and this is where the guidance of an experienced attorney carries the most weight.
2
Filing
File a Petition in the Correct Court
You’ll file a Petition for Non-Parent Visitation or Parental Responsibilities at the circuit court in the county where your grandchild lives. If a divorce or custody case is already open, your petition typically files in that same proceeding. For DuPage County cases, that means the 18th Judicial Circuit Court in Wheaton, Illinois.
3
Service
Serve the Other Parties
All relevant parties, typically the child’s parents, must be formally and properly served with notice of the petition. Improper service is one of the most common causes of early delays in these cases, and it is entirely avoidable with proper legal guidance.
4
Preferred Path
Explore Negotiation or Mediation
Illinois courts strongly encourage families to resolve these disputes outside a courtroom when possible. A negotiated visitation agreement is typically faster, less expensive, and far less adversarial than a contested hearing. Our attorneys are experienced negotiators who can work directly with the other side without escalating the conflict.
5
If Needed
Court Hearing
If no agreement is reached, the case proceeds to a hearing. Both sides present testimony, documentation, and in some cases expert witnesses. The judge applies the nine statutory factors to determine whether visitation is in the child’s best interests and what that visitation should look like.
6
After the Order
Enforcement and Modification
A court-ordered visitation schedule is legally enforceable. If a parent violates it, legal remedies are available. If circumstances change substantially for either party, the order can be revisited through a modification petition.
We Represent Both Grandparents and Parents
Many grandparent rights attorneys only represent one side. We don’t. Our family law attorneys at Dolci Weiland & Sendlak regularly represent both grandparents seeking access and parents who are responding to a petition. That dual perspective makes us more effective advocates for both.
For Grandparents
Seeking Access to Your Grandchild
You’ve been cut off from your grandchild and aren’t sure where to start or whether your situation even qualifies. You want straightforward answers and progress, not a run-around.
You need an attorney who will advocate effectively without adding fuel to an already difficult family situation. We’ll give you an honest assessment of your case, explain your options clearly, and fight for your relationship with your grandchild when the evidence supports it.
For Parents
Protecting Your Parental Rights
A grandparent has filed (or threatened to file) a petition, and you want to understand your rights as a parent. Illinois law is on your side. The legal presumption is that a fit parent’s decisions about their child’s relationships are sound.
An experienced attorney can help you assert that presumption confidently and protect your parental authority. We’ll review the petition, assess the strength of the grandparent’s case, and build a clear response strategy.
Frequently Asked Questions About Grandparents’ Rights in Illinois
Generally, no. Illinois law does not provide a qualifying circumstance for enforced visitation with an intact, two-parent household where both parents are fit and living together. The five qualifying circumstances under 750 ILCS 5/602.9 all involve some form of parental absence, legal proceeding, or family separation. If both parents are present, married, and living together, a grandparent typically does not have legal standing to petition for visitation.
“Unreasonable denial” means that a parent is withholding visitation without a legitimate, child-centered reason for doing so. Courts distinguish between a parent who has genuine, documented concerns about the grandparent’s fitness or the child’s safety, and a parent who is denying access out of personal conflict, spite, or as a way to punish the grandparent. If the denial appears to be motivated by adult grievances rather than the child’s welfare, it is more likely to be found unreasonable.
The child’s wishes are one of the nine factors the court considers, but they are not the only factor, and they are not automatically decisive. The weight given to a child’s preferences depends on the child’s age, maturity, and ability to form independent views. A very young child’s expressed reluctance, for example, may be given less weight than an older teenager’s considered preference.
Yes. A court-ordered visitation arrangement can be modified or revoked if circumstances change substantially. This can be initiated by either party. Additionally, under Illinois law, visitation rights are automatically revoked if the grandparent is convicted of first-degree murder of the child’s parent, grandparent, or sibling.
It depends heavily on whether the case is contested or resolved through negotiation. An agreed-upon visitation arrangement reached outside of court can be formalized relatively quickly. A fully contested case that proceeds to a hearing can take considerably longer, often many months, depending on the court’s schedule and the complexity of the facts involved.
Not always. Many grandparent visitation matters are resolved through negotiation or mediation, resulting in an agreed order that is then submitted to and approved by the court. This is often the faster, less expensive, and less damaging route – particularly when there’s a chance of preserving some level of working relationship between the parties. However, if the other side is unwilling to negotiate, litigation is the necessary path.
Yes, in certain circumstances. Illinois law recognizes step-parents as eligible petitioners under 750 ILCS 5/602.9, and step-grandparents may have standing depending on the specific facts and their relationship to the child. These cases can be more nuanced, and the specific circumstances matter considerably. We recommend speaking with one of our attorneys about the details of your situation.
If the child is adopted by a non-relative, any previously granted grandparent visitation rights are terminated. However, if the adoption is by a relative (for example, a step-parent who is married to one of the child’s parents), the grandparent retains standing to petition for visitation under the statute.
No. The petition must be filed in the circuit court of the county where the child currently resides. If your grandchild lives in Cook County, for example, the petition would be filed there, not in DuPage. If your grandchild lives within DuPage County, the 18th Judicial Circuit Court in Wheaton is the correct venue.
Our family law attorneys operate in several counties throughout the Greater Chicago area. Reach out and we will help you navigate the complexities of filing and proceeding with you petition.