The Family Procedure (Amendment) Rules 2025
Citation, extent and commencement1.
(1)
These Rules may be cited as the Family Procedure (Amendment) Rules 2025.
(2)
These Rules extend to England and Wales.
(3)
These Rules come into force as follows—
(a)
this rule and rules 2 and 3 come into force on 5th January 2026;
(b)
rule 5 comes into force on 2nd March 2026; and
(c)
rule 4 comes into force on 1st June 2026.
Amendment of the Family Procedure Rules 20102.
Amendment of rule 16.43.
In rule 16.4 (appointment of a children’s guardian in proceedings not being specified proceedings or proceedings to which Part 14 applies), in paragraph (1) omit “8.42 or”.
Amendment of rule 29.14.
In rule 29.1 (personal details), in paragraph (1)—
(a)
after “reveal” insert “to anyone other than the court”
; and
(b)
in sub-paragraph (a) for “the party’s” substitute “their own, or another party’s”
.
Amendment of rule 30.35.
In rule 30.3 (permission)—
(a)
in paragraph (1B)(a) for “or costs judge” substitute “, costs judge, a lay justice or a bench of lay justices”
;
(b)
in paragraph (3) for “An” substitute “Subject to paragraph (3A), an”
; and
(c)
“(3A)
Where an application for permission to appeal is against a decision—
(a)
made by a lay justice or a bench of lay justices; or
(b)
of a type specified for the purposes of this rule in Practice Direction 30A,
the application for permission to appeal must be made to the appeal court in an appeal notice.”.
I allow these Rules.
Signed by authority of the Lord Chancellor
These Rules amend the Family Procedure Rules 2010 (S.I. 2010/2955) (“the FPR”).
Rule 3 makes a minor amendment to rule 16.4 FPR to remove a cross-reference to rule 8.42 FPR, as that rule was omitted by the Family Procedure (Amendment) Rules 2023 (S.I. 2023/61).
Rule 4 amends rule 29.1 FPR. That rule previously enabled a party to indicate to the court that their own contact details should be kept confidential. The amendments clarify that those details should be kept confidential to the court, and enable a party to give such an indication in respect of their own, or another party’s, contact details.
Rule 5(a) amends rule 30.3(1B) FPR to provide that where a person wishes to appeal against a decision of the family court made by a lay justice, a bench of lay justices, or a decision of a type specified in Practice Direction 30A, they must first seek permission to appeal. Rule 5(b) inserts a new paragraph (3A) to rule 30.3 FPR to provide that such an application for permission to appeal must be made to the appeal court (so not to the court which made the decision in relation to which permission to appeal is sought).
A full impact assessment has not been produced for this instrument as no, or no significant, impact on the private, voluntary or public sector is foreseen.