Filing your Utah stepparent adoption doesn’t have to be difficult.
Prior to filing your Petition for adoption, you must have been a bona fide resident of Utah for six months prior to the filing of the petition, which residency must be stated in the complaint and proved at the final hearing (Drivers License, etc.). If both parties currently reside in the state, then there is no time period required.
If you have minor children living with your spouse in another state for over six months, then you should consider filing in that state as that court has jurisdiction over the children. Your spouse can waive that jurisdiction in writing.
You should file the adoption in the county your spouse lives in, or in the county that you both lived in when you separated, or in your county if your spouse lives out of state. You or your spouse must have a Utah address in the county of filing. Utah civilian residents living overseas may file in Utah if they have maintained their residency in Utah.
The grounds which typically justify the termination of parental rights in a stepparent adoption involve abandonment, failure to support the child, imprisonment, certain abuse, and other grounds. The grounds for the termination of parental rights are different for each state, but all states accept the grounds of abandonment and lack of support, and some states include other grounds.
In Utah, the absent parent has given implied consent to adoption or relinquishment pursuant to Section 26-10A-9 as outlined below:
Most states do not have any provisions for the visitation rights of the parent losing parental rights, or the grandparents associated with that parent. There are some states that will recognize agreements for visitation by the parents losing their parental rights, but this is typically up to the discretion of the adopting parents.
Our documents are for the entire State of Utah.
You must file the adoption documents in the Family Court in the county in which you are filing. Some court addresses for larger counties are as follows:
Salt Lake County District Court – Salt Lake City: 450 S. State St., P.O. Box 1860, Salt Lake City, UT 84114-1860 Phone: 801-238-7300 Fax: 801-238-7407
Davis County District Court – Bountiful: 805 So. Main Bountiful, Utah 84010 Phone: 801-397-7008 Fax: 801-397-7010
Davis County District Court – Farmington: 800 West State St., P.O. Box 769, Farmington UT 84025 Phone: 801-447-3800 Fax: 801-447-3881
Davis County District Court – Layton: 425 N. Wasatch Drive, Layton UT 84041 Phone: 801-444-4300 Fax: 801-546-8224
Utah Count District Court – Provo: 125 North 100 West, Provo UT 84601 Phone: 801-429-1000 Fax: 801-429-1033
Weber County District Court – Ogden: 2525 Grant Avenue, Ogden UT 84401 Phone: 801-395-1091, 801-395-1071 Fax: 801-395-1182
Box Elder County: 43 North Main, P.O. Box 873, Brigham City, UT 84302-0873 Phone: 435-734-4600 Fax: 435-734-4610
Iron County District Court – Cedar City: 40 North 100 E., Cedar City, UT 84720 Phone: 435-867-3250 Fax: 435-867-3212
Washington County District Court – St. George: 220 N. 200 E., St. George, UT 84770 Civil Phone: 435-986-5701 Fax: 435-986-5723
The court filing fees for an adoption in Utah are $0.00 (No Fee). The publication fee is approximately $65.
There may also be a home study fee that is paid later in the adoption process. Check with your local court for the fee, if any, that may be associated with the home study.
You may call the Clerk of the Court in your county to determine the exact fees in your county.
In many stepparent adoptions, the absent parent may be willing to sign a consent form which consents to the termination of their parental rights and consents to the adoption. If the absent parent is willing to sign a consent, this will make the process a little easier because the court will know from the beginning that all parties agree to the stepparent adoption. Many of our adoption customers don’t know the whereabouts of the other parent, or the other parent has such a disinterest that he/she just won’t sign any documents. In this situation, you will file the adoption documents and then serve the absent parent by the following manner:
1. Whereabouts of the other parent are UNKNOWN:
If you are unable to locate the absent parent after a diligent search, then you can serve the parent by publication. This means that a notice is published in a local legal publication. Typically publication is once a week for 4 weeks. The publication fee for the newspaper averages around $85, but varies depending on where you live. Upon the filing of the Affidavit the clerk, shall direct that service of notice be made by publication in a newspaper of general circulation in the county in which the complaint is filed. We provide all the required documents for service by publication.
2.The parent just won’t sign, but grounds exist for the adoption: If you know the whereabouts of the other parent, but that parent won’t sign due to disinterest, you can have that parent served by the Sheriff’s department or a private process server. This can be done even if the other parent is incarcerated in jail or a federal prison.
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