Temporary Relief: How to Get Court Orders While a Case Is Pending



Temporary relief is the emergency or interim help a court can grant while a case is still being decided, so a person does not have to wait months or years for a final judgment to get the protection they need now. In a divorce or custody case, temporary relief means temporary orders for custody, support, the home, or safety that govern the family until the final decree; in civil litigation, it means a temporary restraining order or preliminary injunction that stops harmful conduct before trial. Either way, temporary relief is fast, deadline-driven, and decided on a preliminary record, and what a court orders early often shapes the rest of the case.

Temporary relief is also state-specific and forum-specific: the standards, deadlines, notice rules, and bond requirements depend on whether the matter is in family court or civil court and on the jurisdiction's law and rules. If you need a court to act now, before your case is finished, to set temporary custody or support, or to stop someone from doing something that will cause harm, the request should be prepared and brought quickly.

Contents


1. What Temporary Relief Is and When It Applies


Temporary relief is interim court relief, temporary orders or injunctions, that protects rights, safety, finances, custody arrangements, or the status quo while a case is pending, granted before final judgment because waiting until the end of the case would cause harm a later ruling could not fix.

Temporary relief is a broad procedural concept, but the legal test depends on the setting, and this page uses the term to cover two common categories: family-court temporary orders and civil injunctive relief. In family law, temporary relief decides custody, parenting time, child or spousal support, use of the home, and protection while the divorce or custody case proceeds. In civil litigation, it takes the form of a temporary restraining order or a preliminary injunction that prevents a party from acting in a way that would cause irreparable harm before the court can rule. In both settings, temporary relief is granted on an expedited basis and on a preliminary showing, not a full trial, which makes it both powerful and limited.

Understanding that temporary relief is interim and preliminary frames how it works. Courts can act before final judgment when the moving party shows that waiting would create harm the final order cannot fix, whether through family law litigation or a civil motion.

Type of Temporary ReliefWhere It AppearsWhat the Court Looks For
Temporary custody orderDivorce or custody caseChild's best interests, stability, safety, parenting history
Temporary child or spousal supportDivorce or family caseIncome, need, ability to pay, guidelines or statutory factors
Protective orderFamily, abuse, harassment, or safety caseImmediate safety risk, threats, abuse, harassment
Temporary restraining orderCivil litigationEmergency harm, irreparable injury, notice issues, short-term preservation
Preliminary injunctionCivil litigationLikely success, irreparable harm, balance of equities, public interest
Asset restraint / status quo orderDivorce or civil caseRisk of dissipation, transfer, concealment, or irreversible change


How Temporary Relief Differs from a Final Orde


Temporary relief differs from a final order in timing, durability, and the showing required: it is granted early, on a preliminary record, and lasts only until the court issues a final ruling or changes it, whereas a final order resolves the matter after full proceedings.

A final judgment comes at the end of a case, after full discovery, evidence, and often a trial, and it conclusively resolves the parties' rights. Temporary relief comes at the beginning or middle of a case, is based on a limited record and an expedited hearing, and is meant to hold things in place or prevent harm until the final decision. Because it is provisional, it can be modified as circumstances change or as the case develops, and it does not necessarily predict the final outcome, though it often influences it. The trade-off is speed for finality: temporary relief is available quickly precisely because it is not the last word.

The provisional nature is the defining feature. Family court litigation and civil motions for temporary relief produce orders that govern the present while the case moves toward a final resolution.



What Standards a Court Uses to Grant Temporary Relief


Courts grant temporary relief based on standards that weigh urgency and likely merit, but family-law temporary relief and civil injunctions should not be analyzed under the same test, because each context applies its own legal standard.

Temporary custody and support usually turn on the children's best interests, immediate financial need, ability to pay, safety, and stability, with the court focused on what arrangement serves the family in the interim. Civil injunctions focus on a different test: the likelihood of success on the merits, the risk of irreparable harm without the order, the balance of equities or hardships between the parties, and the public interest, the factors articulated by the Supreme Court in Winter v. Natural Resources Defense Council for preliminary injunctions. Across both contexts, the requesting party must show that the situation cannot safely wait for final resolution. Because these standards are demanding and applied quickly, the quality of the initial showing heavily influences whether temporary relief is granted.

Meeting the applicable standard is the heart of the request. A temporary-relief motion succeeds when it gives the judge a concrete order to enter and the evidence needed to justify acting quickly, a discipline that applies to both family law and divorce orders and civil injunctions.



2. How Temporary Relief Works in Family Law Cases


In family law, temporary relief comes through temporary orders that govern custody, support, the home, and protection while a divorce or custody case is pending, giving families a workable arrangement and protecting children and dependent spouses until the final decree.

Divorce and custody cases can take many months, and families cannot put their lives on hold while they wait, so courts issue temporary orders to manage the interim period. These commonly address who the children live with and the parenting-time schedule, temporary child support and sometimes temporary spousal support, and protection from abuse or harassment where needed. In divorce cases, temporary relief may also include exclusive use of the home, payment of household bills, temporary attorney's fees, and restraints on selling, transferring, or dissipating marital assets. Temporary orders are typically requested early through a motion and an expedited hearing, and they remain in effect until the court enters a final order or modifies them, sometimes setting patterns that influence the final outcome.

These orders stabilize the family during the case. Child custody and child support are the issues most often addressed by temporary orders, because children's living arrangements and financial support cannot wait for the divorce to conclude.



How to Get Temporary Custody and Support Orders


Temporary custody and support orders are obtained by filing a motion early in the divorce or custody case and presenting evidence at an expedited hearing about the children's needs, the parties' incomes, and the arrangement that serves the children's best interests in the interim.

The process usually begins with a motion for temporary orders filed at or near the start of the case, asking the court to set custody, parenting time, and support for the pending period. At the hearing, which comes far sooner than trial, each side presents evidence and argument, the children's circumstances, each parent's situation, and income information for support, and the court enters orders to govern until final resolution. Because these hearings are expedited and based on a limited record, preparation matters: financial documentation, a proposed schedule, and a clear account of the children's needs strengthen the request. The temporary custody arrangement in particular can carry weight later, making the early hearing important.

The early hearing sets the terms for the whole case. Custody dispute and support questions are decided on a temporary basis quickly, so a well-prepared motion shapes the interim arrangement.



When Emergency and Protective Orders Are Available


Emergency and protective temporary relief is available when there is an immediate threat to safety or a risk that a party will act before a normal hearing can be held, allowing a court to issue urgent protection, sometimes the same day, ahead of a fuller hearing.

A protective order can prohibit contact or abuse, and an emergency custody or financial order can prevent immediate harm. Emergency custody relief usually requires more than ordinary parenting conflict: courts look for immediate risks such as abuse, neglect, threats to the child's safety, removal from the jurisdiction, or another urgent harm that cannot wait for a regular hearing. Because emergency orders are sometimes issued initially without the other side present, they raise due-process concerns, so they are kept short and limited and are followed promptly by a hearing where both sides appear and the order can be continued, modified, or dissolved. The requesting party must show the immediacy of the threat.

Emergency relief addresses dangers that cannot wait. Family and domestic abuse situations are a common basis for emergency protective orders, because safety threats require immediate court intervention.



3. How Temporary Relief Works in Civil Litigation


In civil litigation, temporary relief comes through provisional remedies, primarily the temporary restraining order and the preliminary injunction, that stop a party from causing irreparable harm before the court can decide the case on the merits.

Civil temporary relief often appears in trade secret disputes, noncompete or restrictive-covenant cases, business ownership disputes, construction disputes, real estate access disputes, intellectual property infringement, and cases involving threatened asset transfers, situations where conduct must be stopped before money damages alone could fix the harm. A temporary restraining order provides immediate, very short-term relief to preserve the situation, often granted on an emergency basis. A preliminary injunction, issued after a hearing where both sides appear, holds for the duration of the case. Both require the requesting party to meet the injunction standards, and both are extraordinary remedies that courts grant cautiously.

Provisional remedies prevent harm that a final judgment could not undo. Injunctions are the primary civil tools for stopping conduct before final judgment when waiting for damages or a final ruling would not prevent the harm.



How Temporary Restraining Orders and Preliminary Injunctions Work


A temporary restraining order is short-term emergency relief that preserves the status quo for a brief period, while a preliminary injunction is longer relief that lasts through the litigation, and both require showing likely success and irreparable harm without the order.

In federal civil cases, Rule 65 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure controls temporary restraining orders and preliminary injunctions. A TRO issued without notice must satisfy strict requirements, including explaining the irreparable injury and why notice was not required, and it generally expires within 14 days unless extended for good cause or by the parties' consent. A preliminary injunction follows a hearing where both parties present evidence, and if granted it remains in force for the rest of the case. To obtain either, the requesting party generally must show a likelihood of success on the merits, irreparable harm without the order, that the balance of equities favors it, and that the public interest is not disserved. A bond or other security may also be required, especially in civil injunction cases, to cover damages if the restrained party is later found to have been wrongfully enjoined.

These remedies are powerful but tightly controlled. A construction injunction is a clear example: a TRO or preliminary injunction can halt unlawful construction before it causes irreversible harm.



Why the Early Showing Determines the Outcome


The early showing determines the outcome of a temporary relief request because the court decides on a compressed timeline and a limited record, so the strength of the initial evidence and argument, rather than a full trial, drives whether the order is granted.

Unlike a trial, a temporary relief hearing happens fast and on incomplete information, which means the requesting party must make its best case immediately, with the evidence, declarations, and legal argument it can assemble quickly. A well-supported request that clearly establishes urgency, likely merit, and irreparable harm has a strong chance; a thin or late request often fails, even when the underlying position is sound. Because the order, once entered, governs the interim period and can shape settlement and the case's trajectory, the stakes of this early stage are high. The party that prepares the stronger initial showing usually prevails on temporary relief.

The first hearing carries outsized weight, and the party that arrives with the most persuasive, well-documented showing usually prevails, whether in family law litigation or a civil injunction fight.



4. Frequently Asked Questions about Temporary Relief


These questions come from people in the middle of a divorce or custody case who need interim arrangements, from parties facing an urgent threat that cannot wait for trial, and from anyone trying to understand how to get a court to act before a case is finally decided



What Is Temporary Relief?


Temporary relief is an interim court order entered while a case is pending. It protects custody, support, safety, finances, property, or the status quo before the court reaches a final judgment. It appears in two main settings. In family law, it takes the form of temporary orders governing custody, parenting time, child or spousal support, use of the home, and protection during a divorce or custody case. In civil litigation, it takes the form of a temporary restraining order or preliminary injunction that stops harmful conduct before trial. In both, temporary relief is decided quickly, on a preliminary record rather than a full trial, and lasts only until the court issues a final ruling or modifies it.



How Do I Get Temporary Orders in a Divorce?


You file a motion for temporary orders, usually early in the divorce or custody case, asking the court to set custody, parenting time, support, and any needed protection for the period while the case is pending. In divorce cases, temporary relief can also cover exclusive use of the home, payment of household bills, temporary attorney's fees, and restraints on transferring or dissipating marital assets. The court holds an expedited hearing, much sooner than trial, where each side presents evidence about the children's needs, the parties' incomes, and the appropriate interim arrangement, then enters temporary orders that govern until a final decree or modification. Because the hearing is fast and based on limited information, preparation, financial documents, a proposed parenting schedule, and a clear picture of the children's needs, strengthens your request.



What Is the Difference between a Tro and a Preliminary Injunction?


Both are forms of temporary relief in civil cases, but they differ in speed and duration. A temporary restraining order, or TRO, is short-term emergency relief, issued very quickly, sometimes the same day and occasionally without prior notice to the other side, and in federal court under Rule 65 a TRO issued without notice generally expires within 14 days unless extended. A preliminary injunction comes after a hearing where both parties appear and present evidence, and if granted it remains in effect for the rest of the litigation. To obtain either, you generally must show a likelihood of success on the merits, irreparable harm without the order, that the balance of equities favors you, and that the public interest is not disserved. A bond may also be required.



How Fast Can a Court Grant Temporary Relief?


Often very fast, which is the point of temporary relief. In genuine emergencies, involving safety, a threat to a child, or imminent irreparable harm, a court can issue an emergency protective order or a temporary restraining order quickly, sometimes the same day, and occasionally without the other side present initially, followed by a prompt hearing where both parties appear. Because that initial order is issued without full participation by the other side, it is kept short and limited to satisfy due process. Non-emergency temporary orders, like routine temporary custody and support, are still expedited but typically involve a scheduled hearing within weeks rather than the months a full case takes. The speed depends on the urgency you can demonstrate.



Does Temporary Relief Decide the Final Outcome of My Case?


No, temporary relief is provisional and does not conclusively decide the case, but it can influence the final result. Because it is based on a limited record and an expedited hearing, a temporary order is not the court's last word and can be modified as the case develops or circumstances change. That said, temporary arrangements, especially a temporary custody schedule that the family lives under for months, can establish patterns and a status quo that affect the final decision. Similarly, a preliminary injunction signals the court's early view of the merits and can drive settlement. So while temporary relief is not final, its practical influence on the eventual outcome can be substantial, which is why the early stage matters so much.



Can Temporary Orders Be Changed before the Case Ends?


Yes, temporary orders can generally be modified while the case is pending because they are provisional by nature. Modification may be appropriate if circumstances materially change, new evidence emerges, the temporary order proves unworkable, a party violates the order, or the child's needs or safety concerns change during the case. The party seeking the change asks the court to modify the order, and the court considers whether modification is warranted under the applicable standard, again focusing, in family cases, on the children's best interests and current circumstances. This flexibility distinguishes temporary relief from a final judgment, though a party seeking modification still needs to make a sufficient showing, so changes are not automatic and depend on the facts and the jurisdiction.


15 Jun, 2026


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