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Co-parenting? Here’s how to create healthier digital boundaries across two homes
Co-parenting can mean that kids face different house rules and expectations around phones, screen time and social media. Here’s what parents need to consider.
At a glance
- Co-parenting—when divorced or separated parents share parenting responsibilities—can create friction when boundaries around tech and social media are different with each parent.
- Without clear boundaries, children may feel caught between parents, hide devices or apps or use one household’s rules to bypass the rules when in the other house.
- Keeping rules consistent within your home can help children feel secure, even when co-parents don’t fully agree.
“Mom lets me use my phone at night. Why can’t I here?” If you’re co-parenting, you’ve likely heard some version of this, and it rarely leads to a simple answer.
One household allows late-night scrolling. The other says phones get turned off at 9. One parent says yes to social media. The other isn’t ready.
In these situations, the child is caught in the middle and parents are left wondering: Am I being too strict, or not strict enough? As a parenting coach who works with families navigating divorce and shared custody, I know that getting two households aligned on anything is hard — especially when it comes to technology.
I can tell you this: Perfection isn’t the goal in co-parenting, but alignment and emotional safety are. Trying to control every rule across two households often leads to more conflict, not better outcomes. What matters most is that children experience consistency, clarity and support in at least one stable environment.
Here’s what that can look like in practice.
Why screen time consistency and digital boundaries matter across two homes
Different rules about devices and social media don’t just create behavioral issues; they can create emotional confusion.
When faced with conflicting expectations, kids may:
- Feel caught in the middle
- Become unsure which rules matter
- Hide apps or devices
- Feel pressured to align with one parent
Co-parenting tips for managing screen time and devices
When your screen time rules don’t match: You don’t need identical schedules, but large differences in screen time can create confusion and tension.
Try aligning with your co-parent on:
- What time devices turn off at night
- Device-free times and spaces, like meals
- If weekend rules are different than weekdays
Keep the focus on your expectations, rather than debating the other parent’s choices.
What to say if your child pushes back: “Different homes can have different rules. In this house, this is what helps your brain and body rest.”
When you don’t agree on social media: This is one of the most common conflicts. If you can’t agree on when your child is ready, start with:
- Which platforms are off-limits
- What rules apply once access is given
- What happens if those rules are broken
When you don’t agree on device rules: A child may “own” a phone, but each home still sets the rules for how devices are used. When expectations clash, it can lead to increased anxiety, mood changes and sleep disruption.
A simple guideline that can help: The device belongs to you, but the rules belong to the home you’re in.
When devices blur boundaries between co-parents: Sometimes, parent behavior with tech can be confusing or intrusive for kids. For example, some co-parents run into situations like:
- The other parent texting through the child’s phone
- Location tracking without clear agreement
- Children being asked to pass messages
Try this helpful co-parenting boundary: Any communication with a child’s device should support their safety, not be used to manage or monitor the other parent.
When texts between co-parents aren’t collaborative: Not every co-parenting relationship is highly collaborative, and that’s real. In parallel parenting situations—where parents keep things separate and limit interaction—communication may be limited, but baseline agreements around digital safety still matter.
Focus on:
- Short, logistics-based communication
- Shared tools like calendars or school portals
- Avoiding emotional conversations over text
A simple rule: If the message doesn’t support your child’s well-being, it doesn’t need to be sent.
How to create a digital co-parenting plan
A digital co-parenting plan is one of the most powerful tools co-parents can create. It doesn’t need to be rigid, but it should be clear. I am a fan of the Family Tech Agreement because everything you need is already laid out, and no one household is responsible for coming up with the rules.
Technology will continue to evolve. Apps will change. Platforms will come and go. And your children will continue to grow and take their place in this world. But what children will remember is how safe, supported and understood they felt as they moved between two homes.
We’ve got you: You’re there for them with Verizon Family Plus. Verizon’s there for you—including our 3-year price lock*.
*Learn more about our 3-year price lock guarantee.
Screenshot this for later
After your next co-parent pick-up, try this:
- Put screens on chargers for the first hour after transitioning between homes.
- Do a quick emotional check-in before devices come out.
- Keep your screen rules consistent, even if the transition day schedule is off.
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FAQ
You don’t need to agree on everything, but you do need shared ground on safety. Start with consistency where it matters most: Align on basics like limiting screens before bedtime and encouraging offline activities.
Focus on preparation, not control. Teens will test limits, but consistency helps reduce secrecy and risky behavior. What works best: shared conversations about responsibility, clear expectations and giving them space to make decisions—with guidance, not surveillance.
Most fall into two approaches: cooperative co-parenting (stay in close contact and try to align on rules together) and parallel parenting (keep things separate and limit interaction). Either way can work, but even if everything else differs, it helps to agree on the basics that keep your child safe online. Start with things like what time devices are turned off at night, no screens in bed, clear rules about what apps are okay, and the consequences if the rules are broken.
Beatrice (Bea) Moise, M.S., BCCS., is a Board-Certified Cognitive Specialist, parenting coach, national speaker, and author of Our Neurodivergent Journey. Her UNIQUE parenting channel on YouTube is dedicated to educating individuals on neurodiversity.
The author has been compensated by Verizon for this article.