Tia Mowry and Cory Hardrict have added specific rules for home visits and parenting time to their custody agreement, three years after finalizing their divorce.
Under the updated terms, neither former spouse may enter the other’s home without an invitation, according to court documents obtained by People. A scheduled custody exchange is an exception to that restriction.
Mowry also agreed that Hardrict may spend time with their son, Cree, 15, and daughter, Cairo, 8, during her custodial periods.
Those visits must generally include both children unless other circumstances prevent one of them from being present.
The New Rules Define Visits and Custody Exchanges
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Hardrict agreed to return the children to Mowry by 9 p.m. when he is responsible for dropping them off, Us Weekly reported.
Hardrict’s ability to see Cree and Cairo during Mowry’s parenting time also does not appear to transfer custody or give either parent sole decision-making authority. The former spouses have shared joint legal and physical custody since their divorce was finalized.
Their Original Agreement Set Rules for Future Partners
Mowry filed for divorce in October 2022 after 14 years of marriage. She and Hardrict reached a settlement the following April that preserved their plan to share legal and physical custody, according to People.
Their original custody terms also prohibited either parent from introducing Cree and Cairo to a new romantic partner until that relationship had been exclusive for at least six months. The latest reports do not say that provision was removed or revised.
Both actors have previously discussed keeping their children outside public conflict. “We are a family, no matter what people say,” Hardrict said during a 2025 appearance on Sherri. “I make sure that I always think about them first.” Mowry has similarly said that Hardrict remains part of the family despite the end of their marriage.
