Child Relocation Lawyer in Hickory and Taylorsville NC

Your Co-Parent Wants to Move Two States Away. Your Time With Your Kids Is on the Line.

Your co-parent just said they’re moving. Out of state, out of the region, away from the school your kids have known for years. You have weeks, maybe days, before a judge rules on something that can’t be undone.

Ed Hedrick Law Firm handles child relocation cases in Catawba County, Alexander County, and across western NC. We’re local. We know the courtrooms. We file fast and we push back hard.

Serving Hickory, Taylorsville, Newton, Conover, Catawba, Maiden, Hiddenite, and Stony Point.
child playing

Child relocation cases are not like standard custody disputes. The stakes are permanent. If the court approves a move, your child's school, their doctor, their weekend routine, their relationship with you: all of it shifts. And in many cases, the parent who moves gets a structural advantage in future custody hearings.

Ed Hedrick Law Firm is based in Taylorsville. We handle relocation cases before Catawba County and Alexander County courts. If you need someone in the building who knows the judges and knows the docket, we're available. Call (828) 635-4168 .

The Problem You're Facing

Your custody agreement was written for a different reality. Now your co-parent wants to take your child three states away, and the window to respond is shorter than you think.

North Carolina requires the relocating parent to give notice. But "notice" doesn't mean "permission." It means the clock starts. You have to act inside that window if you want to file an objection and get a hearing scheduled before the move happens.

Wait too long, and the judge may treat the move as a settled fact. Courts are reluctant to uproot a child a second time. That dynamic hurts you if you let the timeline slip.

There's also the reverse problem. You're the one who needs to move. A job, a family member who needs care, a chance that doesn't come twice. Your co-parent is refusing to agree. You can't just go. The court has to weigh in, and if you leave without approval, you risk being found in contempt of the existing order.

Either way, the legal pressure is real and the clock is running.

    What The Law Offices of Edward L. Hedrick, V Does for You

    We file. We object. We argue the standard that NC courts actually apply when relocation is contested.

    North Carolina weighs three things in a relocation dispute: the reason for the move, the impact on the child’s relationship with the non-relocating parent, and what arrangement genuinely serves the child’s best interest. That analysis is fact-specific. It turns on evidence, testimony, and how clearly your attorney can present your position to the judge.

    Ed Hedrick has handled family law cases in Catawba County and Alexander County for years. He knows the courthouses. He knows the docket pace. He knows what matters to local judges when they’re deciding whether a child can cross a state line.

    If you’re the parent trying to stop the move, we build your objection around the child’s existing relationships, school stability, and the concrete disruption the relocation will cause. If you’re the parent who needs to move, we document the legitimate reason and propose a revised custody schedule that keeps the other parent involved.

    We don’t hand your case to a paralegal. Ed handles it.

    What You Get When You Hire Us

    How a Child Relocation Case Works With Us

    Why People in Catawba and Alexander County Trust Ed Hedrick

    Ed Hedrick is an NC State Bar member with a physical office at 22 West Main Avenue in Taylorsville. He’s not a franchise. He’s not a volume shop. When you call, you get Ed.

    He has handled family law cases across Catawba County and Alexander County for years. He knows how the local docket moves. He knows the difference between a judge who wants to see a proposed parenting plan in hand at the first hearing and one who prefers to hear testimony first.

    That knowledge matters. A lawyer from Charlotte or Raleigh reading the same NC statutes doesn’t have it. They learn it on your case, on your dime, in front of your judge.

    Clients hire Ed because he’s direct. He doesn’t tell you what you want to hear. He tells you what the court is likely to do and what your options are. That’s what you need when the timeline is short and the outcome is permanent.

    We don’t blink.

    Here's What Happens With Other Firms

    You call a big-city firm in Charlotte or Raleigh. They assign your case to an associate. The associate may have never appeared before a Catawba County judge. They’ll research NC relocation law and present your case competently. But competence built from scratch costs time and money.

    Meanwhile, your deadline is running. The other side’s attorney may have an established relationship with the local court calendar. You’re catching up.

    Online legal services are worse. A relocation dispute requires a contested hearing. There’s no app for that.

    Here's What Happens With Us

    Ed takes your call. He reviews your custody order the same day. He knows whether the Alexander County courthouse has capacity for an emergency hearing or whether Newton is the faster venue.

    You don’t waste a week getting transferred between associates. You don’t start from zero on local court procedure. You spend that week building your case instead.

    Strategic, not transactional. That’s the difference.

    Here’s What Happens With Us
    OptionLimitationEd Hedrick Advantage
    Big-city firm (Charlotte, Raleigh)No local court relationships; associate-driven files; higher overhead passed to clientEd handles your case; knows the local docket; physically located in Taylorsville
    Online legal serviceNo contested hearing capability; document-only; no courtroom representationFull representation from filing through final hearing
    Out-of-county attorney unfamiliar with local courtsLearning curve on local procedure; limited availability for emergency hearingsYears of appearances in Catawba County and Alexander County courts
    No attorney (self-represented)Court rules on the other party’s record without a counter-argument; no evidence strategyStructured objection or petition; proper evidence presentation; full courtroom advocacy

    What a Child Relocation Case Costs

    Relocation cases vary in cost depending on how contested they are. A case that settles by agreement costs less than one that goes to a full evidentiary hearing.
    Factors that affect your fee:
    We’re transparent about fees from the first conversation. We tell you what to expect before you sign anything.
    Call (828) 635-4168 or email office@edhedrickattorney.com to get a direct estimate based on your specific situation.

    Service Area Serving Catawba County, Alexander County, and Western NC

    We represent clients from across the region at the Catawba County courthouse in Newton and the Alexander County courthouse in Taylorsville.
    Cities we serve:
    Hickory
    Catawba County
    Taylorsville
    Alexander County
    Newton
    Catawba County
    Conover
    Catawba County
    Catawba
    Catawba County
    Maiden
    Catawba County
    Hiddenite
    Alexander County
    Stony Point
    Alexander County
    If you’re in western NC and you’re dealing with a child relocation dispute, call us. We’ll tell you fast whether your case falls within our service area.
    Faqs

    Frequently Asked Questions
    About Child Relocation in NC

    Can my co-parent move out of state with my child without my permission?

    No. Under North Carolina law, a parent who wants to relocate a child out of state must either get written consent from the other parent or get court approval. If they move without consent and without a court order, that can be treated as interference with custody.

    How much notice does my co-parent have to give before moving?

    The existing custody order may specify a notice period. If it doesn't, NC statutes still require the relocating parent to give reasonable notice. "Reasonable" isn't a fixed number of days. The practical answer: if you've received notice and want to object, contact an attorney immediately. Waiting even a few weeks can change your options.

    What does a NC judge look at when deciding a relocation case?

    The court weighs the reason for the move, what a new custody arrangement would look like in practice, and whether the relocation serves the child's best interest. Evidence of the child's current school stability, community ties, and relationship with both parents all factor in.

    I need to move for a legitimate reason. Can I take my kids?

    You can request court approval. Document the reason for your move clearly: job offer, family care obligation, housing. Come to court with a proposed revised parenting schedule that preserves the other parent's access. Courts are more receptive when the relocating parent shows they've thought through the impact on the co-parent's relationship with the child.

    What if the court approves the move? Is my custody arrangement over?

    No. A relocation approval leads to a modified custody order. The new order governs things like long-distance parenting time, holiday schedules, travel costs, and communication. We help you negotiate or litigate those terms so the new arrangement is workable.

    What if my co-parent already moved without telling me?

    That's a violation of the existing order if it restricts relocation or requires notice. Contact us at (828) 635-4168 right away. A court can order the return of the child in some circumstances, and it can affect the other parent's custody standing going forward.

    Do I need a lawyer for a relocation case, or can I handle it myself?

    You can appear pro se. But relocation cases turn on specific NC case law, evidence presentation, and how well you frame the best-interest argument. The other parent will almost certainly have an attorney. Going in without one puts you at a structural disadvantage from the start.

    Law Office Chair

    Ready to Protect Your Position? Call Today.

    Child relocation cases move fast. The window to file an objection is short. If your co-parent has given notice or you need the court’s approval to move, the time to act is now.

    Ed Hedrick Law Firm is ready to take your call today.

    Call: (828) 635-4168
    Email: office@edhedrickattorney.com
    Address: 22 West Main Avenue, Taylorsville, NC

    Final Closing

    You built a relationship with your kids in this county, in these schools, with these routines. That relationship is worth fighting for in court.

    Ed Hedrick Law Firm handles child relocation cases in Hickory, Taylorsville, Newton, Conover, Catawba, Maiden, Hiddenite, and Stony Point. We know the judges. We know the courthouse. We file before the deadline closes.

    Call (828) 635-4168. We don’t blink.