Glossary

Modification

a request to change an existing court order

What modification means

In family law, modification generally refers to a request to change an existing court order. Exact meaning can vary by state, court, and order language.

Why modification matters

  • Modification can affect deadlines, evidence, custody, support, property, safety, or enforcement.
  • Ask where the term appears: a statute, court order, proposed agreement, form, or lawyer email.
  • Do not assume the same term works the same way in divorce, custody, support, and protection-order cases.

Question to ask about modification

If modification appears in your papers, ask what it requires, what deadline it creates, and what evidence would support or challenge it.

Where modification may appear

Look for modification in petitions, motions, temporary orders, parenting plans, support worksheets, financial disclosures, settlement drafts, hearing notices, agency letters, and lawyer emails. The same word may have a narrow meaning inside a signed order and a looser meaning in a negotiation note.

How to use this definition

  • Copy the exact sentence where the term appears instead of paraphrasing it.
  • Write the date, court, case number, and document title next to the term.
  • Ask whether the term changes a deadline, payment, exchange, filing duty, or evidence requirement.
  • Verify state forms and court instructions before acting on a general definition.

Practical file note for modification

A useful consultation question is not simply what modification means. A better question is how it affects the next step in this case: filing, service, temporary relief, child contact, support, property records, settlement language, or enforcement. Keep the original document available so a qualified professional can review the wording in context.

Common mistake

Many readers search a term after seeing it in a stressful document and then treat the first definition as an answer. In family law, the safer approach is to connect the term to the exact order, state, county, deadline, and requested relief before deciding what it means for the next step.