What is the difference between a biological father and a legal father for adoption in Michigan?
MichiganThis distinction is critical for stepparent adoption in Michigan:
Legal Father:
- The man listed on the birth certificate OR who has established paternity through a court order
- Has full parental rights and obligations
- His consent or abandonment finding is required for adoption
- If the mother was married at birth, her husband is automatically the legal father
Biological Father:
- The man who is genetically related to the child
- May or may not be the same person as the legal father
- If he is NOT on the birth certificate and has NOT established paternity, he has limited legal standing
- The court is primarily concerned with the legal father, not biology
Key principle from Michigan law: The father listed on the birth certificate IS the father. Whether he is the biological father is generally not the court's primary concern in a stepparent adoption.
What this means for your adoption:
- Identify who the legal father is (birth certificate or court order)
- Address his rights (consent or abandonment under MCL § 710.51)
- The biological father's rights, if he is a different person, depend on whether he ever established paternity
In rare cases, if the court becomes aware that there is a biological father who has been actively involved, the judge may consider his rights. But this is genuinely rare.
Our $349 document package handles all of these scenarios correctly for Michigan Family Division of Circuit Court.
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