Do I Need a North Carolina Adoption Attorney?

The adoption process can be a complex web of legal work including securing and filling out forms, drafting agreements, making proper filings, reviewing documents and representing you as a prospective adoptive parent in a court. However, the happy event of adding a new member to your welcoming family is well worth the effort. A caring, experienced North Carolina adoption attorney can offer legal...

Who Can Adopt in North Carolina?

Any adult, 18 years or older, can become an adoptive parent of a child or another adult in North Carolina. The adopting parent can be single, married, divorced or widowed. State law does not regulate the economic status or the parenting experience of the prospective adoptive parent(s). The primary requirement is that the adopting parent(s) be personally committed to the positive welfare and...

Types of Adoption Placements

Adoptions generally fall under two categories: direct placements and agency placements. When the biological parent(s) finds the adoptive parent(s) on their own without help from an adoption agency or other licensed intermediary, the adoption is called a direct placement. When the biological parent(s) find the adoptive parents, or the adoptive parent(s) find the child, through an agency or other...

The Difference between Open and Closed Adoptions

An open adoption is when both the biological parents and the adoptive parents agree that the adopted child can find his or her birth parents in the future. A closed adoption is when the birth parents do not wish to have the child find them. For medical purposes in a closed adoption, it is wise to provide some means of access to the biological parents’ health records in case a genetic disorder...

Adoption in North Carolina

Adoption is the legal process of establishing a parent/child relationship in which one person takes the child of another person as his or her own and assumes complete legal custody and responsibility for that child. The biological parent(s) give up their parental rights and responsibilities severing all legal ties to the child. The adopted child has the same legal rights as a biological child of...