Adoption is the legal process of establishing a legal parent-child relationship when the adopting parent is not the child's biological or birth parent. That means that once the adoption is final, the adoptive parents have all the legal rights and responsibilities of a parent-child relationship. That new parent-child relationship is permanent and is exactly the same as that of a birth family. An adoptive parent can be a stepparent or domestic partner of one of the birth parents, a relative of the child who has been caring for the child, or someone not related to the child by blood.
Stepparent/domestic partner adoption:
An independent, agency, or international adoption:
Independent adoption is when no adoption agency or the Department of Social Services is part of the adoption case.
Agency adoption is when the California Department of Social Services or a licensed adoption agency is part of the adoption case.
International adoption is when the child to be adopted was born in another country.
In all these three types, the court ends the parental rights of the child’s two birth parents, and the adoptive parents become the children’s legal parents.
Read the instructions on How to Adopt a Child in California (Form ADOPT-050).
Fill out the following:
If your court’s family law facilitator or self-help center helps people with stepparent or domestic partner adoptions, ask them to review your paperwork. They can make sure you filled it out properly before you move ahead with your case.
Make 2 copies of Form ADOPT-200 (video instructions
) and all attachments and any local forms you may have had to fill out.
Turn in your forms to the court clerk. He or she will explain to you how the adoption process works in your county. You will have to pay a filing fee. If you cannot afford the filing fee, you can ask for a fee waiver.
Let your child’s other birth parent know about the adoption. You do this by serving the other parent with the Adoption Request (Form ADOPT-200 | video instructions
), which has the court date on it. Learn about serving papers. Remember, someone else, NOT you, must serve the papers on the other parent.
If the child is 12 or older, he or she must agree (consent) to the adoption before the judge will order the adoption final. Children under 12 do not have to agree.
The other birth parent has to agree (consent) to the adoption.
If she or he does not agree to the adoption, you may still be able to adopt if:
Cases where there is no consent from the other birth parent can be complicated. Talk to a lawyer. Click for help finding a lawyer.
The investigator then writes a report and files it with the court (and sends you a copy). Ask your court clerk to find out who handles the investigation in your county. Usually, the investigation is done by a court investigator, a licensed social worker, or a licensed family therapist.
Once the court gets the investigator’s report, the court clerk will set up a court date for your adoption hearing.
Go to court. Take all the forms you have filled out. The child must go to the hearing.
The agency you are using for the adoption will most likely take care of these steps and guide you through the process. But read through the steps below to get a general idea of the process.
Read the instructions on How to Adopt a Child in California (Form ADOPT-050).
Fill out the Adoption Request (Form ADOPT-200), Adoption Agreement (Form ADOPT-210), Adoption Order (Form ADOPT-215), and Adoption Expenses (Form ADOPT-230). Some courts also have special, local forms. To see if you will need any special, local forms, contact your court clerk or check your court’s website. The forms may be posted on that site.
If are adopting a Native American child, also fill out the Adoption of Indian Child (Form ADOPT-220) and Parent of Indian Child Agrees to End Parental Rights (Form ADOPT-225).
If your court’s family law facilitator or self-help center helps people with independent adoptions, ask them to review your paperwork. They can make sure you filled it out properly before you move ahead with your case.
Make 2 copies of Form ADOPT-200 and all attachments and any local forms you may have had to fill out.
Turn in your forms to the court clerk. He or she will explain to you how the adoption process works in your county. You will have to pay a filing fee. If you cannot afford the filing fee, you can ask for a fee waiver.
Have an interview and investigation with an investigator who then writes a report and files it with the court (and sends you a copy). Ask your court clerk to find out who handles the investigation in your county. Usually, the investigation is done by a court investigator, a licensed social worker, or a licensed family therapist.
Once the court gets the investigator’s report, the court clerk will set up a court date for your adoption hearing.
Go to court. Take all the forms you have filled out. The child must go to the hearing.
So an important step in your adoption case is to:
You have to take these steps even if you do not know who the other parent is or your name is the only name on your child’s birth certificate. If you do not know who or where the other parent is, you still have to at least try everything possible to find the other parent. Talk to a lawyer or the court clerk to find out what the judge will want you to do to find the other parent. Click for some tips of what you can try to find the other parent. If you do everything the judge asks and still cannot find the other parent, the judge usually will end the rights of the other parent.
If your child’s other birth parent is deceased, let the court know in your adoption request and at your court hearing. If possible, provide some type of proof, like a certified copy of a death certificate.
If your child’s other birth parent does not admit that he or she is your child’s biological parent, your case may get complicated so talk to a lawyer.
If you are not sure who your child’s other birth parent is (like if there could be 2 fathers, or if 1 man is the biological father but another man raised your child for years), talk to a lawyer.Click for help finding a lawyer.
Note: If your child was conceived through artificial insemination with an anonymous donor, and you were the only person involved in the entire process and the only person to sign the sperm bank and hospital records, and you were not married or in a registered domestic partnership, then you probably do not need to get anyone else’s consent. But talk to a lawyer to make sure. The judge may ask for a letter from the doctor or sperm bank confirming you did the artificial insemination on your own.
Here are some things you can try: Finding your child’s other birth parent
Send a letter, certified with return receipt requested, addressed to the other birth parent at his or her last known address.
If you know for sure that the other parent left that last known address, send a letter to that address and write on the envelope: “Do not forward. Address correction requested.” If the other parent left a forwarding address, the post office will return the letter to you with the new address.
Call friends you had in common or family members of the other parent to see if they have any information.
Call the telephone directory in any city where you think the other parent could be living.
Do an Internet search for the other parent.
Contact the Department of Child Support Services in your city or county to see if they have any information on the other parent, especially if you ever filed for child support before.
Contact the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) to see if they will give you any information. It is very possible that the DMV will not give you information, so just make a note of when you called and what they told you.
Contact the county recorder's office in any county the other parent has lived in to see if you can find any information.
Check the voter registration records in the county where the other parent lives or has lived.
Pay a private investigator or an Internet search service.
Make sure you keep track of the dates, times, and results of all of your efforts to find the other parent. You will have to give the court all these details in writing to get the court’s permission to let you move ahead with your case even if you cannot find the other parent.
If, after trying everything, you still cannot find the other birth parent, you will have to explain to the judge everything you tried to find the other parent, with the dates you tried and the results. If the judge agrees that you have tried everything possible, the judge may let you go ahead with the adoption without letting the other birth parent know.