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HomeFamily CodeDiv. 13Pt. 2Ch. 7§ 9200 Adoption Records Confidentiality

§ 9200 Adoption Records Confidentiality

Family Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 9200 Adoption Records Confidentiality

Key Takeaways

  • •Adoption papers are private and can't be seen by just anyone—only the people involved, their lawyers, and the court can look at them.
  • •A judge can let someone else see the papers, but only in very special cases and for a really good reason.
  • •If someone asks for copies of the papers, the names of the birth parents must be removed to keep their identity secret.
  • •Adoptive parents or the child can get a certificate with the new family’s names, but it won’t include the birth parents’ names unless it’s a stepparent adoption.

Example

A teacher wants to see a student’s adoption papers because they’re curious about the child’s background.

The teacher can’t just ask to see the papers—they’re private. Even if they try, the judge would only allow it in a very rare case, and the birth parents’ names would be blacked out to keep them secret.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 9200 Adoption Records Confidentiality

(a) The petition, relinquishment or consent, agreement, order, report to the court from any investigating agency, and any power of attorney and deposition filed in the office of the clerk of the court pursuant to this part is not open to inspection by any person other than the parties to the proceeding and their attorneys and the department, except upon the written authority of the judge of the superior court. A judge of the superior court may not authorize anyone to inspect the petition, relinquishment or consent, agreement, order, report to the court from any investigating agency, or power of attorney or deposition or any portion of any of these documents, except in exceptional circumstances and for good cause approaching the necessitous. The petitioner may be required to pay the expenses for preparing the copies of the documents to be inspected. (b) Upon written request of any party to the proceeding and upon the order of any judge of the superior court, the clerk of the court shall not provide any documents referred to in this section for inspection or copying to any other person, unless the name of the child’s birth parents or any information tending to identify the child’s birth parents is deleted from the documents or copies thereof. (c) Upon the request of the adoptive parents or the child, a clerk of the court may issue a certificate of adoption that states the date and place of adoption, the child’s birth date, the names of the adoptive parents, and the name the child has taken. Unless the child has been adopted by a stepparent, the certificate shall not state the name of the child’s birth parents. (Amended by Stats. 2002, Ch. 784, Sec. 114. Effective January 1, 2003.)

Last verified: January 21, 2026

Key Terms

petitionrelinquishment or consentcertificate of adoptionbirth parentsadoptive parents

Related Statutes

  • § 8614 Adoption Certificate Issuance Rules
  • § 9204 Mutual Consent Adoption Contact
  • § 2080 Name Restoration In Divorce
  • § 2081 Name Restoration Rights
  • § 2082 Name Change Common Law

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Family Code. Section 9200.
View Official Source