A.W. Law LLC — Advocates & Solicitors
Abdul Wahab, Managing Director at A.W. Law LLC

Handled by

Wahab

Managing Director

CHILD CUSTODY LAWYER SINGAPORE

Child Custody Lawyer in Singapore

A Singapore child custody lawyer in Chinatown. Legal terms explained simply, fees in writing, free 10-min Child Custody Discovery Session. Open weekdays until 10pm on WhatsApp.

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 4.8 on Google · 177+ reviews Law Society of Singapore English · Bahasa · 中文 · தமிழ் · Tiếng Việt

Or · weekdays, 9am – 10pm · Updated 24 April 2026

Timeline
Bundled with divorce: 4–6 months · Contested custody trial: 9–18 months
First meeting
Free · 10 minutes
Fees
Flat fee or capped hourly, always in writing first
Heard at
Family Justice Courts of Singapore
Governing law
Guardianship of Infants Act + Women's Charter
Suitable for
Parents separating, divorcing, or after a divorce
Not for
Muslim couples in a Syariah divorce (handled by the Syariah Court)
Languages we handle
English · Bahasa · 中文 · தமிழ் · Tiếng Việt
Translation staff on hand for each.

If you’re worried about the kids, you’re already on the right page

If you’re searching for a child custody lawyer late at night, you’re probably already worried about your kids. That’s usually how people find this page.

I’m Wahab. I run A.W. Law LLC in Chinatown. Over the years I’ve sat across my desk from parents in every situation: some who want more time with the kids, some who are worried they’re about to lose them, and some who just want a fair arrangement both sides can live with.

This page is for you if you’re separating or divorcing in Singapore and need to work out who the kids live with, how the other parent stays involved, and who decides the big things. I’ll explain the process in plain words. The first 10 minutes are free, and nothing commits you.

What a custody case in Singapore actually decides

A custody case decides three things. The court uses specific words for each, and it helps to know them.

  1. Custody. The big decisions about the child: schooling, religion, major medical choices. Think long-term planning.
  2. Care and control. Where the child lives day to day, and who handles the school run, doctor visits, and bedtime. This is what most people actually mean when they say “custody.”
  3. Access. The time the other parent spends with the child: weekends, after school, holidays, video calls.

In Singapore, the default outcome in most cases is joint custody (both parents share the big decisions), with care and control to one parent (usually the one who has been the primary carer), and reasonable access to the other. Sole custody is unusual and only granted where the other parent shouldn’t have input at all.

These cases are handled by the Family Justice Courts. The main laws are the Guardianship of Infants Act and the Women’s Charter. The court has one overriding principle in every decision: what’s best for the child.

If custody is part of a divorce, we handle it together with the divorce paperwork. You can also apply for custody on its own, without a divorce. If both of you are Muslim and the marriage is being dissolved, custody is decided by the Syariah Court as part of the Syariah divorce instead.

Who usually gets care and control in a Singapore custody case

Every case is decided on what’s best for the child. In practice, the Family Justice Courts look at a number of factors. Our blog post on how child custody arrangements actually work in Singapore goes deeper into the typical outcomes.

  • Who has been the primary carer. Who takes the kids to school, to the doctor, to religious classes. The day-to-day record matters more than job titles or income.
  • The child’s wishes. Given more weight as the child gets older. By about 14, the court usually asks.
  • Stability. Same school, same neighbourhood, same routine is generally better than a disruption.
  • Each parent’s ability to meet the child’s needs. Physical, emotional, and educational.
  • Sibling bonds. Brothers and sisters are usually kept together.
  • Safety. If there’s violence, neglect, or substance abuse, this overrides everything. A Personal Protection Order may need to come first.

Most cases settle at mediation before going to trial. If your situation is safe and both parents can still talk, a settled arrangement is almost always better for the kids than a contested hearing. The Family Justice Courts actively encourage this.

What to expect in a Singapore custody case, honestly

I’d rather tell you the truth now than have you surprised later.

How long it takes.

If custody is included in a divorce you both agree on, it wraps up with the divorce in 4 to 6 months. If you’re fighting over custody, add another 6 to 12 months on top. A fully contested custody trial at the Family Justice Courts usually takes 9 to 18 months, sometimes longer in relocation or cross-border cases.

How much it costs.

Uncontested custody bundled with a simple divorce is included in the divorce fee (S$1,800 to S$3,500 all-in). A contested custody fight with affidavits, expert reports, and a full trial runs S$8,000 and up, depending on complexity. We give you a written price cap before we start, so there are no surprise bills. The 10-min Child Custody Discovery Session is always free. If you qualify on income, the Legal Aid Bureau can help with some of the cost.

What’s the hard part.

The money and documents side feels invasive. You’ll need to show payslips, bank statements, and sometimes a time log of who does school pickup and bedtime. That’s part of the process, and we don’t share more than the court needs.

The bigger thing is emotional. Custody cases are hard on kids even when the parents handle them well. If you and your spouse can’t talk to each other, court-ordered counselling will be required anyway, especially for children under 14 through the Mandatory Counselling Programme. Many of our clients come out of that process saying it was the hardest part but the most useful. We’re lawyers, not counsellors. We know good ones in Singapore who can help if you want an introduction.

How we handle custody at A.W. Law

A few things we do differently:

  • One lawyer, from start to end. No passing you around between associates. Whoever takes your first meeting handles your case all the way through to the final order.
  • Letters you can actually read. Every affidavit, submission, and order will be explained to you in simple terms before you sign.
  • We reply at night. WhatsApp us until 10pm on weekdays. Custody issues don’t wait until office hours.
  • Speak your language. English, Malay, or Tamil. Whichever you’re comfortable in.
  • No pushing. If I think mediation or counselling is a better answer than a trial, I’ll say so, even if it means less work for us. Kids come out of settled cases better than trial cases, in almost every situation I’ve seen.

We’re at 133 New Bridge Road, #20-03 Chinatown Point. Two minutes’ walk from Chinatown MRT, Exit E. Walk in most afternoons between 2pm and 5pm on weekdays.

What happens next

If you’re planning a separation, or already in the middle of one, the next step is simple. Book a free 10-min Child Custody Discovery Session using the form on this page, or message us on WhatsApp using the button anywhere on the screen.

Nothing commits you. Most sessions end with a short list of things for you to gather (a rough parenting timetable, children’s birth certificates, any existing orders) before any paperwork starts. You’ll leave knowing the likely timeline, the rough cost, and what the next few months will actually look like for you and your kids.

How we handle it

Your child custody, step by step.

  1. Step 01

    Book free 10-min Child Custody Discovery Session

    A short call or walk-in. You tell us the situation in plain words. We tell you straight away whether this belongs in a divorce, a standalone custody application, or something else entirely. No charge, no pushing.

  2. Step 02

    Plan and price, in writing

    Before we do any paid work, we send you a short letter. It says what we plan to do, how long it'll take, and what it'll cost (or a capped fee). You decide.

  3. Step 03

    Application, counselling, mediation

    We file or respond to the custody application. If there are children under 14, the Mandatory Counselling Programme is required. We negotiate with your spouse's lawyer, and most cases settle at mediation without a full trial.

  4. Step 04

    Orders and follow-through

    The court issues orders on custody, care and control, and access. We explain what each line means in simple terms, help you vary or enforce the order if things change, and handle the ancillary bits (travel consent, school forms, CPF issues).

What to bring

For your first meeting.

Don't worry if you can't get everything — come anyway, and we'll tell you what's missing.

  • Your children's birth certificates
  • NRIC or passport
  • Any existing court orders (interim or final)
  • A rough parenting timetable (who currently does school pickup, doctor visits, weekends)
  • Letters or messages from your spouse or their lawyer
  • Notes on any safety concerns (if they apply)

Your bench

Who handles your child custody

2 lawyers at A.W. Law LLC take child custody matters. The lead takes your first meeting.

Lead on this matter
Abdul Wahab — Managing Director at A.W. Law LLC

Your lawyer on this matter

Wahab

Managing Director

Wahab has handled custody matters for over 200 families, as part of civil and Syariah divorces and in standalone applications at the Family Justice Courts. He takes every first meeting himself. He speaks English, Malay, and Tamil.
Languages
English · Malay · Tamil
Practice focus
Family Law (Civil & Syariah) · Civil Litigation · Bankruptcy & Insolvency
Qualifications
LL.B. (Hons), University of Leeds (2013) · Advocate & Solicitor, Singapore Bar (2015)
Read full biography
Muhammad Hasif — Associate Director at A.W. Law LLC

Also on this matter

Hasif

Associate Director

Hasif acts regularly in contested care and control and access disputes at the Family Justice Courts, with reported outcomes including TTY v TTZ [2024] SGFC 57 and WZH v WZI [2024] SGFC 56. He's known for detailed affidavit work on the day-to-day parenting record the court relies on. He speaks English, Malay, and Bahasa Indonesia.
Speaks
English · Malay · Bahasa Indonesia
Focus
Family Law (Civil & Syariah) · Civil Litigation

Common questions

Child Custody — frequently asked.

How is child custody decided in Singapore?

Every custody decision in Singapore is made on one principle: the welfare of the child. The Family Justice Courts look at who has been the primary carer, the child's own wishes (weighted more as they get older), the stability of each home, each parent's ability to meet the child's needs, sibling bonds, and safety. Most Singapore divorces end with joint custody, which means both parents share the big decisions about schooling, religion, and major medical choices. Care and control (where the child lives day to day) usually goes to the parent who has been the primary carer.

What is the difference between custody, care and control, and access in Singapore?

These are three legal words that people often mix up. Custody is about the big decisions: schooling, religion, major medical choices. Care and control is where the child lives day to day. Access is the time the other parent spends with the child. In most cases: joint custody, care and control to one parent, and reasonable access to the other.

Can I get sole custody in Singapore?

Sole custody is unusual in Singapore. The Family Justice Courts' starting point is that both parents should stay involved in the big decisions about the child's life. To get sole custody, you'd have to show that the other parent shouldn't have that input, usually because of serious issues like violence, substance abuse, or long absence. Our sole custody guide explains the grounds and process in detail.

At what age can a child choose who to live with in Singapore?

There's no fixed legal age. The child's wishes are considered and given more weight as they get older. By about age 14, the court usually asks. But it's never purely the child's choice. The court still decides what's best for the child overall. Sometimes a court-appointed counsellor speaks to the child privately so they aren't put on the spot between the two parents.

What if my ex won't follow the custody order?

If your ex ignores an access arrangement, blocks your time with the child, or takes the child outside Singapore without permission, we can apply to enforce the order. We can also apply to vary the order if the old arrangement no longer works. Bring the current order and a short record of what's happened, and we'll explain your options at the first meeting.

Can I move overseas with my child after divorce?

Only with the other parent's consent, or a court order. A relocation application asks the Family Justice Courts to approve the move. The court looks at whether the move is genuine (a real job, close family, not just to avoid the other parent), the impact on the child's relationship with the other parent, and whether there's a workable access plan after the move. Relocation applications are one of the harder parts of custody work, and we've handled several.

How much does a custody case cost in Singapore?

If custody is part of an agreed divorce, it's included in the divorce fee (S$1,800 to S$3,500 for a simple divorce). If you're in a contested custody trial with affidavits, witnesses, and a hearing, costs rise. Often S$8,000 and up, depending on complexity. We always give you a written price cap before we start. The 10-min Discovery Session is free.

Does my child have to go to court?

Usually no. The Family Justice Courts protect children from the adversarial parts of the process. If the judge needs to hear the child's view, they'll usually see the child privately in chambers (a smaller, less formal room), or have a trained counsellor speak to the child. The child almost never sits in the hearing room while the parents argue.

Related matters we handle

Still have questions?

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From our blog

Further reading on child custody

All blog posts →

What clients say

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