Child Law Solicitors in Stoke-on-Trent

If social services have become involved with your family, or you are worried they might do, early, clear advice is essential. Our child law solicitors in Stoke-on-Trent provide practical guidance and strong representation across all stages of public law children matters, from PLO meetings through to care and adoption proceedings.

We act for children, parents and others with parental responsibility, as well as family members and carers seeking to secure a child’s long-term arrangements.

Located in Hanley and serving clients throughout Stoke-on-Trent and Staffordshire, we provide tailored support to meet individual needs. Our services include assistance for individuals with learning difficulties and those for whom English is not their first language. We will agree a strategy and keep you informed at every step.

How we can help you

  • Care and supervision proceedings – Representation for children, parents, or anyone with parental responsibility throughout care proceedings, including interim hearings, fact-finding and final hearings. We also act for intervenors who are joined to proceedings to address specific issues.
  • PLO (pre-proceedings) support – Advice and representation at PLO meetings and throughout the pre-proceedings process. We review the local authority’s concerns, help you engage with assessments and support plans, and work to avoid court where possible.
  • Discharge of care orders – Strategic advice and applications to discharge care orders where the legal test and evidence support a return to parental care, or a change in the care plan. We prepare evidence and liaise with professionals while representing you at each stage.
  • Contact with a child in care – Advice and applications about contact with a child in care, including seeking increased, supervised or unsupervised contact, resolving disputes with the local authority, and representation at court if agreement cannot be reached.
  • Adoption (challenging placement/adoption orders) – Specialist representation for parents seeking to challenge placement or adoption orders. We advise on prospects, evidence and timescales, and ensure the court fully considers alternatives within the child’s best interests framework.
  • Special Guardianship Orders (SGO) – Clear advice for prospective special guardians, including current carers and family members (e.g., grandparents). We explain assessments and the range of orders available, while also discussing support packages and challenging negative assessments where appropriate. Our team can advise on legal aid eligibility and funding routes.

Why choose Smith Partnership?

You will receive clear advice, meticulous preparation and focused representation from a team experienced in complex public law children cases. Our Claire Morrey, Senior Associate, holds the Children’s Law Accreditation, and specialises in representing children and guardians in legal matters.

Our Stoke solicitors at Smith Partnership work closely with interpreters and support services where needed, while setting out costs and legal aid options from the start. Our priority is to secure safe, workable arrangements for children while protecting your rights throughout the process.

Contact our team today

To find out how our expert team of solicitors can help you, contact us today on 0178 232 4454, send us an email via info@smithpartnership.co.uk or complete our contact form.

FAQs

A care order places the child in the local authority’s care until they reach 18 (or until revoked) and gives the local authority parental responsibility to make key decisions, while consulting parents. It is made only if legal thresholds of significant harm are met and the order is proportionate.

It requires the local authority to ‘advise, assist and befriend the child’, offering support and oversight. It does not grant parental responsibility or allow removal of the child without consent, or a court order.

Only in limited circumstances. Adoption usually needs consent from all with parental responsibility, or a court order dispensing with consent because the child’s welfare requires it. Challenging a placement order or adoption requires permission and evidence of a significant change in circumstances.

You can ask the court for post-adoption contact, but you will first need the court’s permission. Such orders are uncommon and depend on the child’s welfare and risk of disruption.

Grandparents don’t automatically have parental responsibility, but they can apply for a Child Arrangements Order or Special Guardianship Order, or put themselves forward as carers in public law (care) proceedings. 

Yes, but courts often prefer Special Guardianship Orders, as they avoid the full legal changes adoption brings within the family.