Abogados de Adoption
1378 abogados de Adoption encontrados. Filtre por estado y ciudad.

Featherstone & Partners

Law Offices of Darin Jensen

Law Offices of Darren Patterson

Weiss Legal

Marmon Injury Lawyers

Cunningham & Partners

DeFazio Law Office

Owens Trial Lawyers

Wilson Legal

Canale Trial Lawyers

Law Offices of David Beaudry

David C. Adams, Attorney at Law

Callahan Trial Lawyers

Johnson Injury Lawyers

Crell Law Group

Crell Injury Lawyers
Adoption Lawyers in the United States
Adoption changes lives permanently. It creates a legal parent-child relationship where one didn't exist before, and the process involves court proceedings, background checks, and a mountain of paperwork. An adoption lawyer handles the legal side so families can focus on what matters most.
What Adoption Law Covers
Adoption law governs how a person legally becomes the parent of a child who is not their biological offspring. This includes domestic infant adoptions, international adoptions, stepparent adoptions, relative or kinship adoptions, and foster care adoptions. Each type follows different procedures and timelines.
Adoption attorneys also handle termination of parental rights, consent requirements, home study coordination, and post-placement legal filings. In contested cases, they represent clients in hearings where a birth parent challenges or revokes consent. Roughly 135,000 children are adopted in the United States each year, and each one requires a finalized court order.
When to Hire an Adoption Lawyer
- You are pursuing a private domestic adoption and need to ensure all consents and legal documents are properly executed
- You want to adopt a stepchild and must petition the court to terminate the other biological parent's rights
- You are adopting internationally and need help with immigration paperwork, Hague Convention compliance, and state finalization requirements
- A birth parent has contested the adoption or is threatening to revoke consent
- You are a foster parent seeking to adopt a child currently in state custody
How the Adoption Process Works
Most adoptions follow a general sequence: application, home study, matching or placement, a waiting period, and court finalization. The home study involves interviews, background checks, and home inspections conducted by a licensed agency or social worker.
After placement, most states require a supervision period ranging from 30 days to six months before a judge will finalize the adoption. Your attorney files the petition, prepares all required documentation, and represents you at the finalization hearing. The entire process typically takes six months to two years depending on the type of adoption.
How Adoption Costs and Financial Outcomes Are Determined
- Adoption subsidies — families adopting from foster care may qualify for monthly financial assistance, Medicaid coverage for the child, and one-time reimbursement of nonrecurring adoption expenses up to $2,000 per federal guidelines
- Federal adoption tax credit — adoptive parents can claim a tax credit exceeding $15,000 per child for qualifying adoption expenses, which offsets costs significantly
- Birth parent expenses — in many states, adoptive families may legally pay for a birth mother's medical bills, counseling, and temporary living expenses within limits set by state law
- Agency and placement fees — private domestic adoptions average $30,000 to $60,000 total, while foster care adoptions often cost little to nothing out of pocket
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a birth parent take back a child after signing consent?
Revocation windows vary by state. Some states allow birth parents to revoke consent within 24 to 72 hours, while others make consent irrevocable the moment it is signed. Once a court finalizes the adoption, reversal is extremely rare and requires proof of fraud or duress.
Do both biological parents need to consent to an adoption?
Generally, yes. Both biological parents must either consent or have their parental rights terminated by a court. If a father is unknown or cannot be located, the court may allow the adoption to proceed after proper legal notice has been given and a waiting period has passed.

