Montana Guide
Supervised visitation in Montana.
A focused guide for Montana families — your District Court, providers across Billings, Missoula, and Great Falls, and what to expect next.
If you're navigating supervised visitation in Montana, this guide walks through the parts that are specific to your state — the court that will hear your case, where to look for providers, what they typically cost in Montana, and resources you can use today.
About Montana's family court system
In Montana, supervised visitation matters are handled by the District Court.
What's distinctive about Montana: Montana is the fourth-largest state by area but among the least densely populated. Many family law cases involve significant travel for one party, making hybrid in-person and virtual supervision common.
As with every state, Montana judges decide custody and visitation based on the best interests of the child. The specifics of how that standard is applied vary by county and judge, but the underlying framework is consistent.
Why Montana courts order supervised visitation
Montana judges, like judges in every state, order supervised visitation when they want to protect a child's safety while preserving the relationship with the visiting parent. The most common reasons:
- Allegations or history of abuse, neglect, or violence.
- Substance abuse concerns or a parent in early recovery.
- Long separation or estrangement that needs gradual rebuilding.
- Mental health concerns that affect parenting time.
- High conflict between parents that makes exchanges unsafe.
- Risk of parental kidnapping or order violations.
Your order spells out the reason in your case, the type of supervision required, who pays, and how often visits occur. Read it carefully — most of your specific questions are answered there.
Finding a provider in Montana
Professional providers and supervised visitation centers in Montana tend to cluster in the major metros — including Billings, Missoula, Great Falls, and Bozeman. Families outside these areas often combine community-based supervision with virtual visits. Montana's geography makes virtual supervision particularly useful for families spread across the state.
Montana families typically find providers through:
- The Supervised Visitation Institute (SVI) national directory — search by your Montana zip code. Our find a provider page links to it.
- Your Montana attorney — family law attorneys in Billings and surrounding areas know which providers are reliable.
- Your local District Court — many courts maintain a list of approved providers, or have a self-help center that can refer you.
- Montana legal aid — most counties have legal aid programs that help income-qualifying families with family law matters.
- Local domestic violence agencies in Montana — many offer supervised visitation services free or at low cost, especially in Billings and Missoula.
For a complete step-by-step process, read our guide to finding a qualified provider.
What it costs in Montana
Billings, Missoula, and Bozeman have the most in-person options.
General cost ranges Montana families can expect:
- Professional supervisor: $50–$150 per hour
- Visitation center: $30–$100 per visit (sliding scale common)
- Therapeutic supervisor: $100–$250+ per hour
- Supervised exchange: $15–$50 per exchange
- Virtual supervision: $30–$80 per session
For the full breakdown of cost factors and ways to lower the monthly spend, see our complete cost guide.
Getting a court order in Montana
To ask the District Court for a supervised visitation order, you typically file a motion or petition in an existing case. If you don't have an open case, you generally start by filing a petition to establish custody and parenting time.
The exact forms and procedures vary by Montana county. Your court's self-help center is the right place to start — they can help with forms and procedural questions, though they can't give legal advice. For advice about your specific case, a Montana family law attorney is the right call. The Montana State Bar Association's lawyer referral service can connect you with someone, often with a low-cost initial consultation.
For a complete walk-through, read our guide to getting a court order.
Montana resources at a glance
- Montana State Bar Association — search "Montana state bar lawyer referral" to find their current site and referral service.
- Montana court self-help — your county court website typically has a "self-help" or "family law" section with forms and procedural guidance.
- Montana legal aid — search "Montana legal aid" for income-qualifying assistance with family law matters.
- National Domestic Violence Hotline — 1-800-799-7233, 24/7. Can connect you with Montana DV advocates who handle supervised visitation referrals.
- 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline — call or text 988 for free, confidential mental health support.
Next steps for Montana families
- Read the overview to understand the framework.
- Learn the types of supervision so you know what your order requires.
- Find a qualified provider in Billings or your part of Montana.
- Prepare for your first visit with practical tips.
- Read the FAQ for answers to common questions.
A note for Montana parents. The specifics of family court procedure differ across states, but what tends to help parents do well is consistent everywhere: show up to every visit, follow the order, focus on your child, and ask for help when you need it. The path back to standard parenting time runs through those four things.