Expanded Standard Possession Order in Texas (2026): The Complete Guide
Texas courts now apply the Expanded Standard Possession Order by default for parents living within 50 miles of each other. Noncustodial parents get approximately 46–48% of annual parenting time — nearly double what the old schedule provided. Here is exactly what the ESPO schedule looks like, how the 2026 holiday rotation works, what changed and when, and how to make sure your divorce decree gets it right the first time.
If you are going through a divorce in Texas and you have children, the possession schedule written into your Final Decree of Divorce will govern your life for years. Get it right and you have clarity, consistency, and protected time with your kids. Get it wrong — or rely on a vague verbal agreement — and you have no enforceable rights at all.
The good news: Texas law has never given noncustodial parents more time than it does right now. Here is what you need to know.
What Changed in 2026 — The ESPO Is Now the Default
For decades, the Standard Possession Order (SPO) was the default Texas custody schedule. The noncustodial parent got the 1st, 3rd, and 5th weekends of each month, a Thursday evening visit from 6:00–8:00 p.m., alternating holidays, and 30 days of summer. That worked out to roughly 80–90 overnights per year — about 20–24% of a child’s time.
Texas Senate Bill 1936, effective September 1, 2021, created a stronger Expanded Standard Possession Order and made it the default schedule for parents within 50 miles of each other. As of 2026, Texas courts apply the ESPO presumptively — meaning you no longer have to ask for it. It is the starting point unless the court finds a specific reason to deviate.
SPO vs. ESPO — The Side-by-Side You Need
| Schedule Element | Standard SPO (Old Default) | Expanded ESPO (2026 Default) |
|---|---|---|
| Weekend start | Friday 6:00 p.m. | School dismissal Friday |
| Weekend end | Sunday 6:00 p.m. | School resumption Monday morning |
| Thursday visit | 6:00–8:00 p.m. only | School dismissal Thursday → school Friday (overnight) |
| Monday school holiday | Weekend ends Sunday 6 p.m. | Possession extends through Tuesday morning |
| Annual overnights | ~80–90 nights | ~160–175 nights |
| Annual parenting time | ~20–24% | ~46–48% |
| School pickup/dropoff | Timed to 6 p.m. — often disrupts evenings | Aligned with school schedule — no midday handoffs |
| Distance requirement | N/A (applies statewide) | Within 50 miles of child’s primary residence |
| Summer possession | 30 days for parents within 100 miles — same under both schedules | |
The ESPO Schedule in Detail — What Each Period Looks Like
Tex. Fam. Code § 153.312
- 1st, 3rd, 5th weekends — Fri 6pm to Sun 6pm
- Thursday evenings — 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. only
- 30 days summer (within 100 miles)
- Alternating Thanksgiving & Christmas
- Spring break in even years
- Father’s Day / Mother’s Day always with parent
Tex. Fam. Code § 153.317
- 1st, 3rd, 5th weekends — school dismissal Fri to school Mon
- Thursday overnight — school dismissal to school Fri
- Monday school holiday extension — through Tue morning
- 30 days summer (within 100 miles)
- Same holiday rotation as SPO
- Father’s Day / Mother’s Day always with parent
The 2026 Holiday Schedule — Even Year Rotation
2026 is an even-numbered year. The Texas Standard Possession Order rotates certain holidays between parents based on odd and even years. Here is the full 2026 rotation for parents within 100 miles of each other:
| Holiday | 2026 (Even Year) | 2027 (Odd Year) |
|---|---|---|
| Thanksgiving | Custodial parent | Noncustodial parent |
| Christmas — First Half | Noncustodial (school dismissal – Dec 28 noon) | Custodial parent |
| Christmas — Second Half | Custodial (Dec 28 noon – day before school) | Noncustodial parent |
| Spring Break | Noncustodial parent | Custodial parent |
| Father’s Day | Always with father — overrides regular schedule | |
| Mother’s Day | Always with mother — overrides regular schedule | |
| Child’s Birthday | Alternates annually — check your specific order | |
Summer notice deadline: April 1
Under the Texas Standard Possession Order, the noncustodial parent must provide written notice of selected summer possession dates by April 1 each year. Missing this deadline can affect your ability to choose your dates. If no notice is given, the default summer period applies. If you are filing for divorce now with children, make sure your decree is finalized and your summer notice goes out before April 1.
The 50-Mile Rule — Why Distance Controls Your Schedule
The single most important geographic factor in a Texas possession schedule is whether the parents live within 50 miles of each other, measured by Texas Family Code § 153.252. The 50-mile threshold determines:
- Whether the ESPO applies. Parents within 50 miles get the expanded schedule. Parents more than 50 miles apart get a long-distance schedule instead — typically more summer time and extended holiday periods instead of weekly exchanges.
- Whether Thursday overnight possession is practical. A mid-week overnight requires the child to travel to school from the noncustodial parent’s home. At 50+ miles that is not feasible.
- What happens if a parent moves. If either parent relocates beyond 50 miles after the order is entered, a modification may be necessary. Your decree should include geographic restriction language if appropriate.
“The 50-mile rule is the most consequential number in Texas custody law right now. Parents who are on the line — say, 48 miles apart versus 52 miles — can end up with dramatically different possession schedules.”
Long-Distance Possession — When Parents Live Over 100 Miles Apart
When parents live more than 100 miles apart, Texas law provides a different schedule under Texas Family Code § 153.313. The key differences from the standard schedule:
- Weekends: The noncustodial parent may elect one weekend per month instead of the 1st/3rd/5th pattern, or keep the standard every-other-weekend schedule.
- Spring break: The noncustodial parent receives spring break every year — not just even years.
- Summer: Extended summer possession — typically 42 days rather than 30, depending on the order language.
- Thursday visits: Not applicable at long distances.
Can an Uncontested Divorce Include the ESPO?
This is the question most parents don’t think to ask — and the answer directly affects how much your divorce costs.
Yes. Completely. An uncontested divorce where both parents agree on custody terms can include any possession schedule they choose — including the full Expanded Standard Possession Order, a modified schedule, or a custom agreed arrangement. Because both parents are agreeing to the terms, no court fight is required. The agreed schedule goes directly into the Final Decree of Divorce.
With 2500Divorce.com, a flat-fee uncontested divorce with children costs $3,500 — and that includes the full possession schedule, conservatorship provisions, child support calculation, and medical support provisions. Compare that to a contested custody case where parents fight over the possession schedule, which typically costs $15,000–$25,000+ and takes 12–18 months.
If both you and your spouse agree that the Expanded Standard Possession Order is appropriate for your family, the attorneys at Fritz and Phillips, PC will draft the decree to include the correct ESPO language from Texas Family Code § 153.317. No extra charge. No contested hearing.
What the $3,500 flat fee covers for divorce with children
The 2500Divorce.com flat fee of $3,500 for divorce with children covers: licensed Texas attorney representation · Original Petition for Divorce · Waiver of Service · Final Decree of Divorce with full possession schedule (SPO or ESPO) · Standard Possession Order or Expanded Standard Possession Order language · Conservatorship provisions (joint managing conservatorship) · Child support calculation under Texas guidelines · Medical support and dental provisions · Parent education course coordination.
Court filing fees (typically $350–$401 depending on county) are billed separately at cost. Most cases are finalized in 61 days. Schedule a free consultation →
What “Conservatorship” Means — Texas Doesn’t Say “Custody”
Texas family law deliberately avoids the word “custody.” Instead, the Texas Family Code uses conservatorship — which refers to a parent’s legal rights and duties toward the child — and possession and access — which refers to physical parenting time.
Most Texas divorces with children result in Joint Managing Conservatorship (JMC), meaning both parents share legal decision-making authority. This is the default under Texas Family Code § 153.131 and what 2500Divorce.com prepares as standard in an agreed divorce. JMC does not mean equal parenting time — it means equal legal rights. The possession schedule governs the actual time-sharing.
Sole Managing Conservatorship (SMC) gives one parent primary legal authority and is reserved for situations where joint management would significantly impair the child’s physical health or emotional development. It is not the outcome of typical uncontested divorces.
Can the ESPO Be Modified After Divorce?
Yes, but the bar for modification is a material and substantial change in circumstances. Texas courts do not modify possession orders simply because one parent wants more time. Common grounds for modification include:
- Relocation of either parent beyond the geographic restriction in the decree
- Significant change in a parent’s work schedule
- Child’s changing needs as they age — particularly when a child reaches 12 and can express preferences to the court
- Safety concerns or domestic violence
- Failure to comply with the existing order (documented violations can support modification)
Parents who currently have a traditional Standard Possession Order and want the expanded schedule must file a modification petition. The ESPO presumption now gives them strong statutory support — but the court still evaluates whether modification serves the child’s best interest.
Get it right in the original decree — it’s harder to fix later
Texas courts are reluctant to modify possession orders absent significant changed circumstances. The possession schedule you agree to in your Final Decree of Divorce is likely to govern your children’s lives until they turn 18. A licensed Texas attorney at Fritz and Phillips, PC reviews every possession schedule as part of the $3,500 flat fee — making sure the ESPO language is correctly drafted, geographic restrictions are in place if needed, and the holiday rotation is accurately set out for both even and odd years.
Frequently Asked Questions — Expanded Standard Possession Order Texas
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