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The 2-2-3 schedule
Module 06 · Schedules & rotations · Article 02 · v1 · 4–7, 8–12
Saturday morning, 10:30. You're at the kitchen table with your Co-Parent over a video call. You have a calendar in front of you. You're trying to work out a schedule that gives both of you real time with the kids and doesn't drive your six-year-old into the ground with transitions. The lawyer suggested 2-2-3. Neither of you fully understands what that means in practice. You agreed to look at it before next week.
This article is what 2-2-3 actually looks like in practice. Not as a formula. As lived weeks. What it gives the child. What it asks of the parents. When it works. When it stops working.
What the pattern is
The 2-2-3 is a two-week rotation. The same shape repeats every fortnight, with the parents alternating which "side" they hold.
Week one: 2 days at Parent A. 2 days at Parent B. 3 days at Parent A. Week two: 2 days at Parent B. 2 days at Parent A. 3 days at Parent B.
The result is a 50/50 split over a fortnight. Each child sees each parent every two or three days at the longest. Each parent gets a stretch of three consecutive days every other week, which is enough for a real weekend without losing the frequent-contact pattern.
A typical layout, with Mama starting the cycle:
| | Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat | Sun | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | Week 1 | Mama | Mama | Papa | Papa | Mama | Mama | Mama | | Week 2 | Papa | Papa | Mama | Mama | Papa | Papa | Papa |
Then Week 3 looks like Week 1 again, and so on.
The numbers are the days, not the nights. Most families track this by nights because that's how schools, doctors, and apps work, but the experience is built from the days.
Why it's the most common school-age schedule
Several things line up well in the 2-2-3 for children aged roughly 4 to 9.
The child sees each parent every two or three days. This matters at this age. Children under 10 generally do best when the longest stretch between seeing a parent is no more than three nights. The 2-2-3 hits that ceiling reliably. The child knows: whichever parent they're not with right now, they'll see in a couple of days.
The week has a predictable shape. Within each week, the rotation is the same: 2-2-3. The child can hold this in their head once they're old enough to follow the pattern. By the time they're 7 or 8, most children can name which house they're at, where they were yesterday, and where they'll be tomorrow.
Each parent gets a real weekend. The 3-day stretch lands on a Friday-Saturday-Sunday in most layouts, which means each parent, every other week, gets a proper weekend with the children. Not a half-day. Not a Saturday afternoon. A full Friday-evening-through-Sunday-night arc, which is enough time to do something that isn't just logistics.
Transitions can route through school. Mid-week transitions, the Tuesday-Wednesday and Thursday-Friday handovers, can land at school. Parent A drops off in the morning. Parent B picks up in the afternoon. The child doesn't have to do a face-to-face goodbye to one parent and a face-to-face hello to the other in the space of an hour. The transition becomes invisible to them.
It scales reasonably well with siblings. A 4-year-old and an 8-year-old can share the same 2-2-3 schedule without difficulty. The 4-year-old benefits from the frequent contact. The 8-year-old can handle the rotation. Sibling Solidarity, the principle that the youngest child's developmental needs set the floor for the schedule, holds without making the older child stretch.
What the days actually feel like
The 2-2-3 isn't experienced as a chart. It's experienced as a rhythm of days.
The 2-day stretches. These are dense. The parent who has the child for two nights has Monday evening, Tuesday evening, and that's it. Most of the daylight hours of those two days are school. The contact is mainly evening routine, dinner, homework, bath, story, bed, and a morning of breakfast and school run. There's not a lot of slack. If something goes wrong on a 2-day stretch (a sick day, a hard evening, a missed activity), there isn't much time to course-correct before the child moves.
The 3-day stretches. These breathe differently. Friday evening through Sunday night includes a full Saturday and Sunday. There's time for something. A trip to the park. A lazy morning. A movie on the sofa. A grandparent visit. This is the stretch where the relationship with the child gets to live a bit, beyond the logistics of school nights.
The transitions. There are roughly five handovers per fortnight (more or less, depending on how the weekend transitions land). Each one is a small moment of disruption. For most kids the school-based ones (Tue afternoon, Thu afternoon) are nearly invisible. The Friday or Sunday transition, which is usually face-to-face, is the harder one. (See Module 01 article 08, The night before a transition, for the texture of how this lands at bedtime.)
What this asks of the parents
The 2-2-3 is a high-coordination schedule. Both parents have to be available, in similar ways, every week. Both have to be in the same town. Both have to be school-run capable on multiple days. Both have to be able to do a Tuesday-to-Wednesday handover at the school gate or the after-school club.
This is a lot of practical infrastructure to keep running. Several things break the 2-2-3, and it's worth being honest about them at the start.
Shift work that doesn't match. A parent who works Tuesday-Thursday nights cannot reliably hold a Tuesday-Wednesday school-night sleep. The schedule won't work.
Different towns. If you and the Co-Parent live more than a 20-minute drive from the school, the 2-2-3 becomes punishing for the child. School runs from house A on Monday and Tuesday, house B on Wednesday and Thursday, house A on Friday, twice across town in a single fortnight, is exhausting.
Activities that span days. If your child has Sunday football and the football kit lives at one house, the rotation becomes a logistics tangle. Most families solve this by duplicating the kit. Some by an explicit handover rule for that item. (See Module 03 article 10, The PE kit, the swim kit, the wet kit.)
A child who hates transitions. Some children, by temperament, find every handover hard. They need longer settles. The 2-2-3, with its five-transitions-per-fortnight pattern, may not be the right schedule for them, even if the pure age maths suggests it should be. Watch the child more than the chart.
When the 2-2-3 starts to age out
Most families using a 2-2-3 keep it for several years. It tends to age out around 9 or 10, give or take a year depending on the child.
The signs:
Homework starts slipping. Around age 9, school homework starts being multi-day projects, not one-evening tasks. A child on a 2-2-3 may have a Tuesday assignment that's due Friday, started at one house, continued at another, with the books at one home and the laptop at the other. The pattern doesn't support sustained project work.
Friend group requires more settling. By 10, social life has weekly rhythms. Sleepovers, group chats, Friday-night plans. Moving every two days makes it harder to hold a place in the rotating Friday-night plans of a school friendship group.
Activities go from one to many. Most 5-year-olds have one activity a week. Most 10-year-olds have three or four. The coordination across two houses, with kits, fees, and lift-sharing, gets significantly harder when there are multiple weekly slots to keep moving.
The child starts to ask for longer stretches. This is the clearest signal. The 9-year-old who says, can I stay at Mama's for the whole week sometimes. The 10-year-old who, after a Tuesday handover, says, I never feel like I'm fully here. When the child starts naming the experience, the schedule has reached the end of its life.
The transition to a longer-stretch schedule, usually 3-4-4-3 or week-on/week-off with a midweek dinner, is one of the predictable milestones of school-age co-parenting. (See Article 04, When to switch schedules.)
Two common variations
A few families adapt the 2-2-3 in ways that work better for their specific situation.
The fixed-weekend variation. Instead of alternating weekends, each parent has the same days every week. Parent A always has Mondays and Tuesdays. Parent B always has Wednesdays and Thursdays. The weekend rotates. This gives more predictability to school nights, at the cost of breaking the equal-stretch principle. Works well for parents with very different work schedules.
The 2-2-3-2-2-3 variation. Some families read 2-2-3 as a weekly pattern, not a fortnightly one. They have a 2-day, then 2-day, then 3-day stretch every week, with the same parent holding the 3-day every Friday-Sunday. This isn't 50/50 (it's 5/9 to one parent, 4/9 to the other). It's a different schedule. If a family is calling something 2-2-3 and it's not flipping each week, it's probably this variation. Worth being clear about which one is meant.
A note on what 2-2-3 doesn't do
The 2-2-3 is a frequent-contact schedule, and that's the point. It's not designed to give either parent long stretches. It's not designed to minimise transitions. It's not designed to give one parent the school week and the other the weekends.
If frequent contact is what your child needs, the 2-2-3 is one of the strongest schedules available. If your situation needs something else (long-distance, very different work patterns, a child who needs longer settles), the 2-2-3 isn't the right schedule, and the right answer is to use a different pattern, not to bend the 2-2-3 until it stops being itself.
Closing
The 2-2-3 is a workhorse schedule. Not glamorous. Not perfect. It gives a child of school age two homes they see in a steady rhythm, two parents they can count on every few days, and a predictable pattern they can hold in their head. It costs the parents a lot of coordination, which is the price for what it gives the child.
When it works, it tends to work for years. When it stops working, the signs are clear, and the next schedule is usually a longer-stretch one that gives the older child the settle time they're starting to need.
Saturday morning, 10:30. The calendar is in front of you. The video call is still open. You and your Co-Parent map out which days you'd each hold, where the school-based handovers would land, who covers Sunday football. The pattern starts to take shape. It feels manageable. You'll try it for three months, then review. That's how it begins.