Each adoption is unique and begins with the purchase of an adoption packet.
Confirmation of consent
There is an hourly cost for this service with a maximum fee of $500.
An adoption social worker checks the documentation and ensures that everyone involved is doing so on their own terms. The Adoption Confirmation of Consent Checklist (388KB) lists what will be looked into.
Learn about the Confirmation of Consent to Adopt (298KB) process with relinquishing birth parents, per Local Rule 93.04(g).
Fee reduction or waiver requests
For Confirmation of Consent fee reduction or waivers, please complete the Adoption Confirmation of Consent Fee Waiver - Reduction Request form (402KB) and provide proof of income to our office.
File review
Those involved in the case, or their attorneys, must notify our Adoption Services for adoption termination or finalization hearing. Send a copy of the Notice of Hearing or Note for Motion Docket at least 14 days before the hearing. You must also include a $15 payment with an in-state check or money order made out to Office of Financial Management. No additional documentation is required. Please deliver working copies as per usual.
Our Adoption Services check the adoption file and complete a checklist for the court. Parties or attorneys will be notified if there are any issues or missing documents in advance of the hearing. There may be additional needed documents to add or bring to the hearing. If Adoption Services has not been notified and a checklist has not been filled out, it will be up to the judicial officer to decide whether the hearing goes forward.
Open adoptions
Instructions for open adoptions pursuant to Dependency Termination Proceedings:
- How to enforce the terms of an open adoption agreement
- How to respond to a petition to enforce the terms of an open adoption agreement
- How to get a copy of your open adoption agreement when the open adoption agreement came from a prior dependency case.
- Learn more about how to ask for, respond, or get a copy of documents for an open adoption on our Family Law instructions webpage.
Post-placement reporters
During the course of your adoption, you may need a Post-Placement Reporter appointed to your case. Any social worker can provide Post-Placement Report services, as long as they follow the Washington law (RCW 26.33.200) pertaining to Adoptions and Post-Placement Reports.
We do not specifically recommend, endorse, or advertise any particular social worker on the Resource List for Post-Placement Reporters (171KB).
Adoption laws and local rules
- Washington State Legislature RCWs governing adoptions
- The Interstate Compact on Placement of Children.
- King County Superior Court Local Rules specific to adoptions:
- U.S. State Department webpage on Hague Convention adoption processes.
- Learn more about adoption order presentation methods on the Ex Parte Presentation Method Master List