How does termination of parental rights work in South Carolina?
South CarolinaIn South Carolina, termination of parental rights (TPR) is a necessary step in stepparent adoption — the biological parent's rights must be terminated for the stepparent's adoption to be granted.
How it happens:
South Carolina allows termination to be handled within the adoption proceeding itself. This means you file one petition, and the court addresses both termination and adoption together — simpler and faster.
Grounds for termination in South Carolina:
- Voluntary consent — the biological parent agrees to terminate their rights
- Abandonment — no meaningful contact for 6+ months (S.C. Code § 63-9-310)
- Other statutory grounds — neglect, abuse, failure to support (less common in stepparent cases)
Important: Termination is permanent. Once granted, the biological parent has no legal relationship with the child. This is replaced by the stepparent's full parental rights.
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