The one-sentence difference
Supervised visitation means a neutral professional is present during the visit itself. Monitored exchange means a neutral professional is only present for the hand-off of the child between parents — and is not present during the visit.
Supervised visitation — what it is
A trained supervisor is present for the entire visit between the child and the parent. The supervisor observes, takes contemporaneous notes, ensures the conditions of the court order are followed, and produces a written report after the session.
Used when the court has concerns about the visit itself — for example, safety, the parent's behavior with the child, substance abuse, or the need to document what is happening between parent and child.
Monitored exchange — what it is
A trained third party is present only when the child is being transferred from one parent to the other. The monitor watches the handoff, documents it, and leaves. The actual visit takes place without the monitor present.
Used when the court has concerns about the contact between the parents — for example, conflict, restraining orders, or a documented inability to interact peacefully — but not concerns about the visit itself.
Side-by-side comparison
- Who is present? Supervised: supervisor + parent + child. Monitored exchange: monitor + both parents (briefly) + child.
- How long is the professional present? Supervised: the entire visit (typically 2–3 hours). Monitored exchange: usually 10–30 minutes total — the handoff at the start and at the end.
- What does the professional document? Supervised: the visit, behavior, interactions, and any incidents. Monitored exchange: the handoff itself — who was present, demeanor, time, any incidents at transfer.
- What is the typical cost? Supervised: hourly rate for the full session ($50/hour at TruVisit Phoenix). Monitored exchange: significantly less because the time is much shorter (typically billed per exchange, much less than a full session).
- What problem does it solve? Supervised: safety or accountability during the visit. Monitored exchange: parent-to-parent conflict at the exchange.
Which one does your court order require?
Read the order carefully. It will typically say something like:
- "Father's parenting time shall be supervised by a professional supervisor" — this is supervised visitation.
- "Exchanges shall occur at a neutral location with a third-party monitor present" — this is monitored exchange.
- "Mother's parenting time shall be exercised with professional supervision and monitored exchange" — this requires both.
If the order is ambiguous, ask your attorney — or call TruVisit Phoenix at (480) 470-6470 and we'll help you figure out which service is being required.
Common scenarios — which to use
Scenario A — A non-custodial parent has been ordered to demonstrate sobriety. The court wants documentation that the parent is sober during their parenting time. Supervised visitation.
Scenario B — Two parents are recently divorced and have an active order of protection between them, but the court has not restricted either parent's contact with the child. The issue is the handoff itself. Monitored exchange.
Scenario C — A parent is reuniting with a child after several years of no contact. The court wants the early visits to be observed and reported. Supervised visitation.
Scenario D — A high-conflict case where both parents have engaged in documented harassment of each other. The court wants neither parent-to-parent contact at exchanges nor unmonitored visits with the at-issue parent. Both — supervised visitation and monitored exchange.
How TruVisit Phoenix handles both
We're a single provider for both services. The same TruVisit-certified staff, the same documentation standards, the same flat-rate pricing. Sessions and exchanges happen at family-appropriate community locations throughout Maricopa County — Phoenix, Scottsdale, Mesa, Chandler, Gilbert, and beyond. To get started, call (480) 470-6470 or submit an inquiry on our home page.