How to talk to your kids about divorce
There's no way to make this conversation painless. You're about to tell your kids that their family is changing, and no amount of preparation will prevent them from being hurt. But you can prevent additional harm — the kind that comes from confusion, blame, silence, or being put in the middle. That's the actual goal. Most kids don't get crushed by the divorce itself. They get crushed by: - Being told at the wrong age in the wrong way - Hearing one parent trash the other - Being used as messengers or spies - Watching the parents fight indefinitely - Having their relationship with one parent undermined The kids who come through divorce relatively okay are the ones whose parents, despite their pain, kept the conflict away from them and stayed involved as parents. That's it. It's not about the family structure. It's about the conflict level. Here's how to actually have the conversation and what to do in the weeks after.
Plan the conversation — both parents, together if possible
Don't have this conversation impulsively. Don't have it in the middle of an argument. Don't have it as one parent without the other knowing.
Plan together:
- Both parents present (unless one is unsafe)
- A calm moment, not a rushed morning
- Both parents committed to the same basic message
- A script written down if it helps (yes, literally)
- Time afterward for questions and reactions
The message should include:
- 'Mom and Dad have decided to live separately'
- 'This is not your fault'
- 'You are not going to lose either of us'
- 'We both love you and that will never change'
- 'You'll still see both of us'
- 'You can ask us anything'
Don't share the reasons. Don't blame. Don't criticize the other parent. Don't bring up specific grievances. The conversation is for the kids, not for working out your issues.
Age-appropriate honesty, no more
Different ages need different levels of detail. The rule: answer what's asked, no more. Don't dump adult details on a 6-year-old. Don't over-simplify for a 14-year-old.
For kids under 7:
- 'Mom and Dad are going to live in different houses'
- 'You'll have two homes, and you'll be at both'
- 'Neither of us is going anywhere'
- Simple, concrete, repeated as needed
For kids 7-12:
- A bit more detail, but still no blame
- 'Mom and Dad have been having problems for a while and we tried to fix them, but we couldn't'
- Acknowledge their feelings: 'This is a big change. We get it.'
- Don't force them to choose sides or take sides
For teens:
- More honest conversation is appropriate
- They can handle more of the reality
- Still no trash-talking the other parent
- Acknowledge that this is hard and they're allowed to feel however they feel
- Give them a say in custody logistics where reasonable
Validate feelings, then create stability
Kids will have reactions. Some will cry. Some will be silent. Some will ask 'why' 50 times. Some will pretend it didn't happen. Some will get angry at one parent. Some will regress (bedwetting, baby talk, sleep issues).
All of these are normal. Validate without trying to fix:
- 'I know this is really hard.'
- 'It's okay to be sad / angry / confused.'
- 'You can feel however you feel. We love you no matter what.'
- 'We're going to figure this out together.'
Then create stability:
- Keep daily routines as consistent as possible (bedtime, meals, school)
- Maintain both parents' involvement in school, activities, and daily life
- Don't change schools, neighborhoods, or major life patterns immediately
- Let them keep their rooms, friends, and activities intact
The message they need to hear through your actions: 'My parents' world is changing but MY world stays mostly the same.'
Never trash the other parent — period
This is the single most important rule of post-divorce parenting, and the most violated.
When you say 'your dad is a selfish jerk' to your 8-year-old, you don't make her hate her dad. You make her hate you for making her hate her dad. You put her in the impossible position of choosing sides, and she's going to choose both — by suppressing her own feelings to manage yours.
The research is unambiguous: kids whose parents trash each other after divorce have worse outcomes — more anxiety, more depression, worse school performance, more behavioral issues. The conflict is what hurts them, not the divorce itself.
What to say when you're furious at your ex:
- 'I don't agree with how Dad handled that, but I know he loves you'
- 'Mom and I are figuring out how to do this differently, and it's hard for both of us'
- 'I get that you're upset about this'
- Just nothing — silence is better than criticism
If you can't manage this for your kids' sake, get a therapist. You're hurting them when you do this, even if it feels justified in the moment.
Don't put kids in the middle — ever
Putting kids in the middle means:
- Asking them to carry messages between you and your ex
- Asking them about your ex's new partner, new life, etc.
- Asking them to report on what happened at the other house
- Using them as confidants for adult feelings
- Making them feel responsible for your emotions
Kids are not messengers. Kids are not therapists. Kids are not your allies against your ex.
Set up direct communication with your ex (email, app, brief calls). Don't use the kids to relay information or gather intel.
If your kid tells you something about the other household — like 'Dad's new girlfriend is there a lot' — react calmly. Don't interrogate. Don't visibly react. Just acknowledge: 'Thanks for telling me. How do you feel about it?'
The kid's job is to be a kid. That's it.
Get support — for them and for you
Divorce is one of the most stressful life events in the research literature. You need support. So do your kids.
For you:
- Individual therapy. Non-negotiable.
- A divorce support group (in-person or online)
- Friends who will listen without judging
- A lawyer you trust, ideally one who favors cooperative approaches
For your kids:
- A therapist who specializes in children and family change
- School counselor or psychologist as a touchpoint
- Books appropriate for their age (look for 'two homes' books for younger kids)
- Ongoing connection to friends and routines
If you can manage it, family therapy with both parents (especially in the first year) gives kids a safe space to voice things they might not say to either parent individually.
This isn't weakness. It's the most important thing you can do for your kids' adjustment.
Citations & External Resources
This guide was researched using authoritative sources. For further reading, explore the references below:
Frequently Asked Questions
How to talk to your kids about divorce?
Telling your kids about divorce is one of the hardest conversations you'll have. Here's how to do it without making it worse. For more practical tips, check out our guide on How to choose the right school for your child.
What is the best way to talk to your kids about divorce?
The best way to talk to your kids about divorce is to follow a systematic step-by-step approach. There's no way to make this conversation painless. You're about to tell your kids that their family is changing, and no amount of preparation will prevent them from being hurt. But you can prevent... You might also find our guide on How to choose the right school for your child helpful.
How long does it take to talk to your kids about divorce?
Most people can talk to your kids about divorce within 7 minutes of consistent practice. The exact timeline depends on your starting point and how diligently you follow the steps in this guide. For more help, read our related guide: How to choose the right school for your child.