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How to Talk to Your Kids about Divorce

Although divorce is hard on every family member, kids often carry the heaviest load and need to most time to come to grips with what is happening. While there is likely nothing you can do to make things seem totally okay or normal during a divorce, there are strategies you can use when explaining the situation to your children to make the divorce process feel less daunting and traumatic.

Every family is different, as is every child, so there is no "right way" to talk to your children about your divorce. That said, we offer these suggestions for when you approach the subject.

Keep it simple and factual

Whether your child is a toddler or a high schooler, keep your communication simple and straightforward. The kids don't need to be dragged through the mudslide of details that led your relationship to this point. Give them the information they need to know that's relevant to them; don't regale the entire backstory of how your marriage deteriorated over time. Doing so could make them feel as if they played a role in their parents' split when, in reality, this is between you and your spouse.

Do not appear to place blame on the other parent or criticize them. Even if it's not your intention, this can make the child feel they must choose sides. Remember, your kids are "one-half" your ex. If you make them feel like something is wrong with their other parent, they can internalize it and believe something is wrong with them.

Unify your approach

If possible and practical (which often, it may not be), discuss your divorce with your spouse physically in the room. This presents a unified front and shows the kids that, although things are changing, you are both still their parents. The two of you can still make and follow through on parental decisions. It's important to act and present yourselves like the responsible, capable adults that you were before the split. This reaffirms to your children that their reality hasn't turned upside down. Remind them you love and adore them, and you don't expect them to compartmentalize their lives. Yes, they might now have two homes, but they still have just one life. Encourage them to celebrate BOTH parents without fear that the other might suffer hurt feelings or resentment.

Related: Create Your Own Co-Parenting Plan

Encourage your kids to share their feelings.

While you are the one bringing new and consequential information to the table, you shouldn't be doing all of the talking. Your children may have questions as well as initial reactions. Listen to them. Reassure them that it's okay to feel the way they do. Support them, and let them know you will get through this together.

Check in with the kids periodically to see how they're doing and if they have any questions. For young children, we often suggest that you include them in setting up their new room or home, making it exciting as opposed to upsetting. (That said, they still might be sad, and sad is OK. It's just one step in a journey that will make them more resilient and more bonded to you.)

Avoid letting your emotions drive the conversation.

Your children will look to you for cues about how to react to the situation. If they see you getting emotional, it may worsen things for them or even frighten them. Avoid exacerbating what is already a hard situation. Do your best to remain calm and reassuring when explaining the divorce.

Although a lot will be changing, you are both still their parents. You both still love them, and that will never change. Make sure they know that.

Do not involve the kids any more than necessary in the divorce. This can be a scary time for children. It can feel like the world they knew is gone for good. Reassure them that this is not the case ... that in the end, things will be alright.

FAQs

When should I tell my kids about the divorce?
Tell them once the decision is final and you have a general plan for what will happen next. Kids feel safer when you can offer clarity about immediate changes.

Should both parents talk to the kids together?
If it’s safe and possible, yes. A unified message reassures kids that both parents are still there for them and reduces confusion or divided loyalty.

What should I actually say?
Keep it simple: acknowledge the change, emphasize that it's not their fault, and explain what will stay the same. Kids need grounding, not adult details.

How much detail should I share?
Share only age-appropriate information. Avoid blaming, oversharing, or discussing legal or financial issues. Kids need reassurance—not reasons to take sides.

How do I support their feelings after the conversation?
Validate their reactions, invite questions, and check in regularly. Kids often process divorce in waves, not all at once.

What if the other parent won’t cooperate?
Do your part: stay calm, avoid criticism, and give consistent reassurance. Kids benefit from at least one steady, emotionally predictable parent.

Step-by-Step: How to Talk to Your Kids About Divorce

Plan what you’ll say
Agree on simple language that avoids blame and focuses on safety, love, and stability.

Choose the right time
Pick a quiet moment when kids aren’t rushing to school, bed, or activities so they can absorb the news.

Deliver a unified message
If possible, talk to them together so they hear one clear explanation and know both parents will remain involved.

Offer concrete details
Explain near-term changes like where they’ll sleep, school routines, holidays, or schedules so they feel anchored.

Reassure without overexplaining
Be clear that the divorce is not their fault and avoid adult details about conflict or finances.

Let them react
Give them space to ask questions or show emotion. Validate feelings without correcting or minimizing them.

Follow up consistently
Check in the next day and regularly afterward. Kids process divorce over time, not in a single conversation.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Contributing Writer & Family Law Attorney
Elise is a Seattle family law attorney & Fair Play Facilitator disrupting parent exhaustion. She works alongside passionate EBFLG friends to transform families through divorce, estate planning and pre-nuptials.