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2026 · Family

Allows courts to skip home study for some adoptions after six months.

HB 1692 / SB 1751


Bill description

Allow courts to waive home study and waiting when a child lived with parents six months and adoption helps the child.

AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 36 and Title 37, relative to adoption.

Bill sponsors

House co-sponsors · 11

Kelly Keisling R, Torrey Harris D, Gino Bulso R, Paul Sherrell R, Justin Pearson D, Ed Butler R, Dennis Powers R, Elaine Davis R, Rush Bricken R, Rick Eldridge R, Scott Cepicky R

Senate co-sponsors · 2

Paul Rose R, Page Walley R

TLRC statement

This bill amends Tennessee’s adoption statutes to allow courts, under limited circumstances, to waive the usual home‐study requirement and six‐month waiting period when a child has already been living with the prospective adoptive parents for at least six months and the court finds the adoption to be in the child’s best interest. Currently, a full home study and waiting period can be waived only for related persons (for example, grandparents or siblings). The new language extends that waiver to foster or prospective parents who have provided a stable home environment for half a year, regardless of biological relationship.

By shortening or eliminating duplicative review processes when a placement has already proven to be safe and nurturing, the bill aims to reduce delays in securing permanent legal parentage and the attendant rights—inheritance, medical decision-making, educational choice—that flow from adoption. The measure preserves judicial oversight by still requiring a final court report and an express finding that adoption serves the child’s best interest before any waivers are granted.

From a conservative standpoint, the proposal asserts state sovereignty over family law, streamlines government intervention in private life, and reinforces the social good of stable, permanent families. It recognizes that overly burdensome procedural rules can leave children in legal limbo and treat capable caregivers—foster or stepparents—like strangers. By trusting courts to make individualized, best-interest determinations rather than imposing a one-size-fits-all delay, Tennessee can better protect vulnerable children and empower responsible adults to assume full parental responsibility.

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HB 1692 / SB 1751

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