How to Tell Your Kids About Divorce: An Age-by-Age Guide


Key Points:


  • Decades of research offer real reassurance: it isn't divorce itself that harms children most—it's ongoing conflict between parents. Reviews of the research find children in high-conflict intact homes often fare worse than children of divorce.



  • Children of different ages understand divorce very differently. The American Academy of Pediatrics advises tailoring the conversation to each child's developmental level.


  • What children need most isn't a perfect speech—it's concrete answers about their own lives: where they'll live, who will pick them up, and reassurance that both parents will always love them.


  • How you handle the months after the conversation matters more than the conversation itself. Stability, routine, and shielding kids from adult conflict do the heavy lifting.


In my years as a psychologist working with families in transition, I've heard some version of the same question from nearly every parent who sits across from me: "How do we tell the kids?" Behind that question is usually a deeper fear—that this one conversation will define their children's childhood. So let me start with the truth the research supports and my clinical experience confirms: one conversation will not break your children. What shapes how children weather divorce is the pattern of the months and years around it. That should take some pressure off. Now let's get the conversation right anyway, because a good beginning genuinely helps.


Before You Say Anything: What the Research Wants You to Know


Parents often carry enormous guilt into this conversation, so it's worth grounding ourselves in what decades of child-development research actually show. Children of divorce, as a group, do face elevated risks—but the effects are far smaller and less universal than most parents fear, and the strongest predictor of poor outcomes isn't the divorce itself but exposure to ongoing conflict between parents. In fact, researchers reviewing this literature found that children in high-conflict homes where the parents stayed married scored worse on adjustment measures than children whose parents divorced.


Read that again if you need to. If your marriage has been a battlefield, ending it well may protect your children more than preserving it would have. Your job now isn't to be a perfect divorced parent—it's to keep your children out of the crossfire.


When and How to Have the Conversation


The American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry's guidance is clear and practical:


Tell them together, if you safely can. A united conversation shows children that Mom and Dad can still function as their parents, even as spouses part ways. It also prevents dueling versions of the story. (If there's a history of volatility or abuse, this rule bends—your children's sense of safety comes first.)


Don't keep it a secret or wait until the last minute. Children need time to process before a parent moves out. A rough guide from clinical practice: a couple of weeks before a major change for school-age kids, a bit less for very young children who have a shorter horizon of anticipation.


Pick a quiet moment with nowhere to be. A weekend morning at home beats a school night. Have all your children present for the first telling, then follow up with each child individually.


Keep it simple, and answer what's asked. Children don't need the marital autopsy. "We've decided we can't live together anymore, and we're going to divorce. We both love you, and that will never change" covers more than you'd think. Then let their questions lead.


Say the essential things out loud—more than once:


  • This is not your fault. Children—especially young ones—are natural self-blamers. Say it explicitly, even if it seems obvious.


  • You will always be loved by both of us. Not implied. Said.


  • It's okay to be sad. We're sad too. Naming feelings gives children permission to have them.


  • Here's what will happen to you. Where each parent will live, where the kids will live, what stays the same. Concrete beats comprehensive.


What to Say at Every Age


Children at different developmental stages understand divorce differently, and the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends tailoring the conversation accordingly. Here's how that looks in practice:


Toddlers and preschoolers (roughly 2–5). Young children think concretely and personally. Keep explanations short, focused on routine, and repeated often: "Daddy is going to live in a different house. You'll see him on these days. Mommy and Daddy both love you." Expect the same questions again and again—repetition is how young children process. Watch for regression (sleep trouble, clinginess, potty setbacks); it's a normal, usually temporary stress response.


School-age children (roughly 6–11). These children understand more but often carry hidden self-blame and rich fantasies of reunion. Be alert for the unasked question underneath the asked one: "Who will take me to soccer?" often means "Am I still safe?" Answer the logistics and the feeling. This is also the age most likely to believe that being good enough might bring parents back together—gently and repeatedly retire that hope rather than letting it linger.


Teenagers (12+). Teens grasp the adult reality and may respond with anger, withdrawal, or an abrupt turn toward friends over family—all developmentally normal. Resist two temptations: treating your teen as a confidant for adult grievances, and mistaking their composure for being fine. Give them honest (not intimate) answers, respect their need for space, and keep expectations and routines steady. Teens still need parenting, even when they act like they've outgrown it.


What Not to Do


After the conversation, the ongoing rules matter most—and they're the same rules the AACAP emphasizes:


  1. Never make your child a messenger, spy, or judge. "Tell your father..." and "What's your mom saying about me?" put children in an impossible loyalty bind.
  2. Don't criticize the other parent in front of the children. Your child is half of each of you. An attack on the other parent lands, in a child's psychology, as an attack on half of themselves.
  3. Don't lean on your child for comfort. It's natural to be overwhelmed, and children often volunteer to fill the emotional gap. Don't let them. Find your support in adults—friends, family, a therapist, or a coach—so your child can stay a child.
  4. Don't pressure children to choose sides. Long custody battles and loyalty pressure are among the most damaging experiences the research identifies. Children do best when both parents remain lovingly involved.


Signs Your Child May Need Extra Support


Most children show some reaction to the news—sadness, anger, clinginess, testing behavior. That's adjustment, not damage, and it typically eases over weeks and months with stability and reassurance. But watch for signals that a child is stuck rather than adjusting: aggression or withdrawal that persists or escalates, a sustained drop in schoolwork, changes in sleep or appetite that don't resolve, a return of long-outgrown behaviors that lingers, or statements of hopelessness or self-blame that reassurance doesn't touch. If you see these, talk with your pediatrician, who can refer you to a child therapist or child and adolescent psychiatrist. Seeking help early isn't a sign the divorce is harming your child—it's one of the ways you prevent it from doing so.


Take Care of the Messenger, Too


Here's something I tell every parent preparing for this conversation: your children will take their emotional cues from you. Parents who have processed their own grief enough to stay calm, answer questions honestly, and hold steady routines give their children the single greatest gift available in a divorce—a secure base. That's not something you have to manufacture alone. A certified divorce coach can help you plan this conversation, script the hard answers, and build the co-parenting habits that protect your kids in the months ahead, while a therapist can help you carry the emotional weight so your children don't have to.


Telling your kids about your divorce will be one of the harder conversations of your life. But held with honesty, love, and a plan, it can also be the first proof your children receive that their family isn't ending—it's changing shape, with both parents still firmly on their side.


This article is for general informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional mental health care. If you're concerned about your child, consult your pediatrician or a licensed mental health professional.


Frequently Asked Questions


What is the best age to tell kids about divorce? There's no "best age"—children of every age need to be told, in language matched to their development. What matters is telling them before major changes happen, together if possible, with simple honesty and repeated reassurance that they are loved and not at fault.


Should we tell the kids together or separately? Together, if you can do so calmly—it shows children their parents can still cooperate as parents. Tell all siblings at once first, then check in with each child individually, since different ages process the news differently.


How much detail should we share about why we're divorcing? Very little. Children need to know what happens to them—living arrangements, schedules, what stays the same—not the adult reasons behind the divorce. Never share details that cast the other parent as the villain.


Will divorce damage my children? Research is genuinely reassuring here: most children of divorce adjust well over time. The biggest risk factor isn't divorce itself but ongoing parental conflict—so protecting your kids means keeping them out of adult disputes, maintaining routines, and keeping both parents lovingly involved.


Related reading: 7 Ways to Prepare for Your Parenting Time or Custody Evaluation | 12 Secrets to Co-Parenting Successfully

About the Author

Alicia Pellegrin PhD
Alicia Pellegrin PhD Forensic Psychologist

Dr. Pellegrin is a licensed Clinical Psychologist in Louisiana and Arizona. She earned a Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology from Louisiana State University and has over 20 years experience in forensic evaluations and addressing psycho-legal questions. In her practice she has conducted over 600 court ordered custody evaluations, as well as other family law related issues, sexual abuse, independent medical evaluations, and criminal forensic psychological evaluations.

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