"The three most common questions we hear from grandparent caregivers are: Do I need guardianship? Should I get custody? Should I adopt? The answer depends entirely on your situation — and getting it right matters enormously for your benefits, your rights, and your grandchild's future."
When you become a grandchild's caregiver, one of the biggest decisions you'll face is what legal arrangement to pursue. Each option — guardianship, custody, and adoption — gives you different rights, involves different costs, takes different amounts of time, and affects your access to benefits in very different ways.
Most grandparents start with no formal legal arrangement and a Power of Attorney or Caregiver Affidavit. That works for the short term. But as time goes on, a more permanent arrangement is usually in everyone's best interest. This guide explains each option clearly so you can make an informed decision.
This guide provides general information only — not legal advice. Every state has different laws, and every family situation is unique. Always consult a licensed attorney in your state before making any legal decisions. Many offer free consultations for kinship caregivers, and free legal aid may be available to you.
Option 1: Legal Guardianship
For most grandparent caregivers, legal guardianship is the best starting point. It gives you broad authority to make decisions for your grandchild while preserving the parents' legal rights — which matters both emotionally and legally in many situations.
Legal guardianship gives you the court-recognized authority to make all major decisions for your grandchild — medical, educational, and personal — without terminating the parents' legal rights. The parents retain the right to visit and, in some cases, to eventually regain custody if circumstances change.
Guardianship is established through the court system but is generally faster and less expensive than adoption. It can often be obtained in 60–120 days and, with free legal aid, at little or no cost to you.
Option 2: Physical or Legal Custody
Custody arrangements are typically established as part of a family court proceeding and focus specifically on where the child lives and who makes decisions — without the full framework of a guardianship proceeding.
Physical custody means the child lives with you. Legal custody means you have the right to make decisions about the child's education, healthcare, and welfare. You can have one or both.
Grandparent custody arrangements are typically used when there is an existing court case — a divorce, abuse proceeding, or child welfare case — and the judge awards custody to the grandparent as part of that proceeding. It is less commonly pursued independently.
Option 3: Adoption
Adoption is the most permanent option and creates a full legal parent-child relationship between you and your grandchild. It is the right choice in some situations — but it is irreversible and has significant implications for benefits and family relationships.
When you adopt your grandchild, you legally become their parent. The biological parents' rights are permanently terminated — they no longer have legal standing to visit or petition for custody. Your grandchild may take your last name, and they inherit from your estate as a child.
Adoption is typically pursued when the parents are deceased, have had their rights terminated by the court, or have willingly consented to the adoption. It provides the greatest legal security for the child but is a significant, permanent step.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Factor | Guardianship | Custody | Adoption |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parental rights | Preserved | Preserved but limited | Terminated permanently |
| Reversibility | Yes — can be modified | Yes — can be modified | No — permanent |
| Decision-making authority | Full authority | Full (legal custody) | Full authority |
| Kinship stipend eligibility | Yes — most states | Varies by state | May change benefits |
| Typical cost | $0–$2,000 | $1,500–$5,000+ | $2,500–$8,000+ |
| Timeline | 60–120 days | Varies | 6–18 months |
| Free legal aid available | Widely available | Some availability | Limited availability |
| Child's last name | Unchanged | Unchanged | Can be changed |
| Inheritance rights | Not automatic | Not automatic | Full inheritance rights |
Which Option Is Right for You?
Use This Guide to Find Your Path
For most grandparent caregivers, legal guardianship is the right first step. It is faster, cheaper, and more reversible than adoption, and it unlocks most of the benefits available to kinship families. Start there, and revisit the question of adoption later once the situation stabilizes and you've had time to consult with an attorney.
Before making any legal decision, speak with a kinship care attorney. Call 1-800-677-1116 (Eldercare Locator) to be connected with free legal aid in your area, or visit lawhelp.org to find your state's legal aid organization.