The Texas Family Lawyer Podcast

Hunt Law Firm, PLLC

The Texas Family Lawyer Podcast tells you everything you need to know to be successful in your Texas #divorce, child custody, or family law matter. Join Alex Hunt, Managing Attorney of Hunt Law Firm, a leading law firm serving the Greater Houston area with its principal office in Katy, TX. You'll hear from attorneys and experts about the way the law really works, war stories from the trenches of Texas divorce courts, and tips from some of the most respected voices in the field. This podcast is intended for informational purposes only, is not intended to be legal advice, and does not create an attorney-client relationship.

  1. 12/02/2025

    What Happens to the KIDS in a Texas Family Law Case?

    Ever wish the rules around Texas custody were written in plain English? Hunt Law Firm attorneys, Alex Hunt and Elena Smith, taking you behind the legal labels to explain how courts handle decision-making (conservatorship), time with each parent (possession schedules), and the money piece (child support)—and where thoughtful agreements can make life smoother for everyone. With clear examples, we unpack the “bed, heads, meds, ed” framework that divides key parental rights: who sets the child’s primary residence, how psychological and psychiatric care is decided, who makes non-emergency medical calls, and how educational choices and school enrollment work in real life. We also get candid about joint vs. exclusive rights, why “independent” decision-making can backfire for medical issues, and how tiebreakers like pediatricians or principals actually play out. From Standard Possession Orders to their expanded versions, we map the time split most Texas families see, the logic behind Thursday overnights and weekend rotations, and why summers and holidays rebalance the calendar. You’ll hear practical tips on using visual calendars to reduce friction, plus when to consider a custom schedule for offshore shifts or irregular work. We address the 50/50 question head-on—when it can work, when courts resist it, and how to build credibility if that’s your goal. On child support, we demystify net monthly resources, the Attorney General’s calculator, and common deviations for kids with special needs. We clarify medical and dental support obligations, why vision typically isn’t required by statute, and the legal limits on ordering college or extracurricular costs (and how parents can still agree to share them). If you want fewer surprises and more confidence navigating Texas family law, this guide gives you the map and the mile markers. Subscribe for more clear, practical family law insights, and share this episode with a friend who needs a straightforward path through custody and support.  Got questions you want us to tackle next? Leave a review and let us know! FOLLOW ▶ Web: https://www.familylawyerkaty.com Facebook: @huntlawtexas Instagram: @huntlawtexas X/Twitter: @huntlawtexas YouTube: @huntlawtexas This podcast is intended for informational purposes only and is not intended to be legal advice. The information in this podcast is not intended to and does not create an attorney-client relationship.

    33 min
  2. 11/04/2025

    Family Lawyer Q&A #1: We Answer Your Questions!

    Ever wondered where the legal line sits between “documenting” and “spying”? Hunt Law Firm attorneys, Alex Hunt and David C. Adams, tackle seven hot‑button family law questions YOU asked and give clear, usable answers you can act on today. From one‑party consent recordings to the criminal risks of AirTags and tracking apps, we explain when evidence helps your case—and when it can blow it up. We walk through travel rules for co‑parents, including why most decrees treat out‑of‑state trips differently from international travel and relocation, plus the small communication habits that lower conflict and build credibility. You’ll learn what an amicus attorney really does, how their role differs from a custody evaluator, and why naming the right person can shift mediation and the ultimate outcome. Money and mobility get real, too. If your ex keeps the car but your name stays on the loan, we share decree language that protects your credit with refinance deadlines and sale procedures. We unpack geographic restrictions—what “county and contiguous counties” actually means, why “lift language” matters if someone moves, and how boundaries impact real‑world involvement with your kids. We also break down drug testing: how courts view marijuana versus hard drugs, the consequences of refusals, and tools like Soberlink that can get you back to normal possession schedules. To round it out, we demystify subpoenas: subpoena duces tecum, business records affidavits, depositions, timelines, and how to respond without landing in contempt. It’s a fast, practical tour of the pitfalls we see every week—and the strategies that keep you safe, credible, and focused on your children. If this helped, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs it, and leave a quick review so more Texas families can find clear answers.  Got a question we should cover next? Send it our way! FOLLOW ▶ Web: https://www.familylawyerkaty.com Facebook: @huntlawtexas Instagram: @huntlawtexas X/Twitter: @huntlawtexas YouTube: @huntlawtexas This podcast is intended for informational purposes only and is not intended to be legal advice. The information in this podcast is not intended to and does not create an attorney-client relationship.

    35 min
  3. 10/09/2025

    Texas Standard Possession Orders and more, Demystified!

    Custody time shouldn’t feel like a puzzle with missing pieces. Hunt Law Firm attorneys, Alex Hunt and Margaret Tucker, pull the Texas Standard Possession Order apart and rebuild it in plain language—when the expanded, school-to-school version applies, how first/third/fifth weekends actually work, and why the summer election window (and those April deadlines) matters more than you think. From odd/even holiday rotations to birthday time guarantees, we map the details so you can plan without second-guessing. We also get practical about distance. If you’re 50–100 miles apart, you can choose expanded or basic SPO; past 100 miles, the presumption shifts and summertime expands to 42 days. Work schedules complicate the picture—offshore rotations, firefighter shifts, and on-call duties rarely fit cleanly into Thursdays and weekends—so we share custom options that courts accept when you show the default is unworkable and your plan preserves consistent contact. Thinking about 50–50? We compare week-on/week-off with 2-2-3 splits, explaining what families love—and why many judges hesitate. Stability, a “home base,” and frequent contact drive court decisions, especially for kids under three. We walk through Texas Family Code 153.254 factors, common under-three approaches like frequent short visits and limited overnights, and how to step up time as a child grows and routines settle. If you’re negotiating or heading to mediation, start with what a court is likely to do, then tailor for school, travel, and your child’s needs. Agreements add flexibility, while the SPO provides a reliable safety net if cooperation falters.  Subscribe for more Texas family law guidance, share this episode with someone who needs clarity, and leave a review to help other parents find practical, kid-first custody advice. FOLLOW ▶ Web: https://www.familylawyerkaty.com Facebook: @huntlawtexas Instagram: @huntlawtexas X/Twitter: @huntlawtexas YouTube: @huntlawtexas This podcast is intended for informational purposes only and is not intended to be legal advice. The information in this podcast is not intended to and does not create an attorney-client relationship.

    32 min

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About

The Texas Family Lawyer Podcast tells you everything you need to know to be successful in your Texas #divorce, child custody, or family law matter. Join Alex Hunt, Managing Attorney of Hunt Law Firm, a leading law firm serving the Greater Houston area with its principal office in Katy, TX. You'll hear from attorneys and experts about the way the law really works, war stories from the trenches of Texas divorce courts, and tips from some of the most respected voices in the field. This podcast is intended for informational purposes only, is not intended to be legal advice, and does not create an attorney-client relationship.