Can a child actually be named as a protected person on an FVIO?
Yes, and it happens routinely. Victorian law expressly allows children to be named as protected persons on a family violence intervention order, and the Magistrates’ Court of Victoria confirms that children must be included on an order where they have been affected by family violence. A child does not have to be the person who was threatened or hurt to qualify, which is the single most misunderstood part of this area.
Being exposed to family violence is enough
Under the Family Violence Protection Act 2008 (Vic), the meaning of family violence includes behaviour that causes a child to hear, witness, or otherwise be exposed to its effects. In practical terms, Victoria Legal Aid explains that a child is treated as suffering family violence if they hear or see it, comfort or help a family member who has been hurt, see property in the home damaged by it, or are present when police arrive at an incident. That is a deliberately wide net, and it reflects the reality that children absorb harm from violence in a household even when the conduct is never aimed at them.
This width is deliberate. Victoria’s family violence system, reshaped after the Royal Commission into Family Violence, treats children as victims in their own right rather than as bystanders to an adult dispute. For a parent, that means you do not have to prove your child was threatened to have them protected, only that they were exposed. For a respondent, it means conduct you thought was contained to an argument with a partner can still bring your children within the reach of an order, because the law looks at the child’s experience of the household, not only at who the words or actions were aimed at. That single principle explains why children appear on so many orders that, on their face, look like they are only about two adults.
Included on a parent’s order, or an order of their own
There are two routes, and the difference matters. A child can be listed as a protected person on a parent’s FVIO, or a separate order can be made for the child alone, as Victoria Legal Aid sets out. Naming a child on a parent’s order is common where the same respondent poses a risk to both. A standalone order tends to be used where the child’s situation is distinct, for example where the parent is not seeking protection but the child clearly needs it.
In many cases children are first named at the interim stage, before the full facts have been tested, because the court’s priority is safety while the matter is decided. That listing is not necessarily permanent. As the evidence is heard, the court can keep a child on the final order, remove them, or change the conditions that apply to them. This is another reason to get advice early. The interim position is not the last word, and how the case is prepared and presented at the contested hearing can change which children stay named and on what terms.
How does a child come to be included on an order?
A child can be included through an application by someone acting for them, or by the court itself. In most matters a parent or police make the request, but the court is not limited to what the parties put in front of it.
Who can apply for a child?
Section 45 of the Act sets out who may apply, and the options are broader than most people assume. A parent or guardian can apply for a child, police can apply and are expected to consider children when they respond to family violence, and, as the Australian Law Reform Commission notes, a child aged over 14 can apply themselves provided the court grants leave. Victoria Legal Aid confirms that young people aged 14 to 17 can apply through the Children’s Court, and that a parent applying for their own protection can ask for their children to be included at the same time.
The leave requirement for a child under 18 is not a formality. The court wants to be satisfied that an application in a child’s name is genuinely in that child’s interests and is not being driven by an adult using the child as a proxy in a wider conflict. Where a very young child is involved, an adult almost always applies on their behalf. Police carry their own duty here too. When they respond to a family violence incident, officers are expected to identify and consider the children affected by what happened, which is why children so often end up named on police-initiated applications without a family member having to ask for it.
Can the court add children even if no one asks?
It can, and this surprises respondents more than anything else. Under section 77 of the Family Violence Protection Act 2008 (Vic), a court may include a child as a protected person on application or on its own initiative where the child’s need for protection is substantially the same as the affected family member, or make a separate order for the child. So even where an application names only an adult, a magistrate who sees a child at risk in the same household can bring that child within the order. Police can also flag children for inclusion when they apply for an order, which is why children frequently appear on police-initiated FVIOs from the very first mention.
How a magistrate decides this comes down to risk. If the evidence points to the same respondent, the same household, and the same pattern of behaviour that put the adult at risk, the case for protecting the children in that home is usually strong. The court can take this step at the interim stage and revisit it at the final hearing once more is known. For respondents, the practical lesson is blunt. You cannot assume the order is only about the adult named in the application, and you should never wait to see whether children are added before getting advice, because by then the interim conditions may already be shaping your contact with them.
What conditions can an FVIO impose to protect a child?
Once a child is named, the order can shape whether and how the respondent has any contact with that child. The conditions are not fixed, and the court tailors them to the risk. An order can stop a respondent from living with, being near, or communicating with a named child, and it can carve out narrow exceptions, such as arrangements handled in writing, through lawyers, or under an existing parenting order.
Conditions protecting a child can reach well beyond a simple no-contact rule. An order might stop the respondent going to or near a child’s school or childcare, asking another person to pass on contact, or monitoring the child online, while still allowing tightly defined exceptions so lawful parenting arrangements can continue. Those exceptions are usually narrow and specific, for example contact limited to written messages about the children, or contact arranged through a lawyer or an agreed third party. Anything outside the written exceptions is a breach, even if it feels reasonable in the moment, and a breach is prosecuted as a separate criminal offence rather than dealt with inside the intervention order process.
How an FVIO interacts with Family Court parenting orders
This is where two legal systems meet, and the intersection catches families off guard. A magistrate making an FVIO can change or suspend an existing parenting order, as Victoria Legal Aid confirms, so a family violence order can override a Family Court arrangement about time with a child, at least temporarily. That does not erase the parenting order permanently, but it means a respondent cannot rely on a Family Court order to justify contact that an FVIO now prohibits. Where parenting and family violence issues overlap, they need to be handled together, not in isolation.
The order of priority is what trips families up. When an FVIO condition and a parenting order conflict, the family violence order generally governs what can happen right now, and the parenting order does not provide a defence to a breach. A parent who wants to restore or adjust time with a child has to deal with it properly, either by asking the Magistrates’ Court to frame the FVIO conditions so a specific parenting arrangement can operate, or by returning to the federal family law system to vary the parenting order itself. Trying to sort it out privately with the other parent is the fastest way to end up facing a criminal charge over your own children.
Where the case is heard: Magistrates’ Court or Children’s Court
Jurisdiction depends on who the parties are. Most adult FVIO matters that name children are dealt with in the Magistrates’ Court, but where a child is the applicant or respondent, the matter usually belongs in the Children’s Court of Victoria. Knowing which court applies matters, because the process, the support available, and the way children are dealt with differ between the two.
What does being named as a protected person mean for a respondent?
Being named on an application is not a criminal charge or a finding that you have harmed a child. An FVIO is a civil protective order. The serious consequence comes later: once an order is in force, breaching a condition that protects a child is a standalone criminal offence, prosecuted separately from the order itself. That is why respondents who see their children listed should treat the matter carefully rather than assume it will resolve quietly.
The downstream effects are worth understanding. A final FVIO can affect a firearms licence, can be relevant to working with children checks and some kinds of employment, and can be raised in later family law proceedings about the same children. None of that flows automatically from being named in an application. It flows from a final order being made, and above all from any breach of it. Treating the matter seriously from the first mention is how respondents protect both their relationship with their children and their own record.
What happens when a protected child turns 18?
This is an unsettled area that the Victorian Law Reform Commission has examined directly, because an order made to protect a child does not automatically translate into the same protection once that child becomes an adult. If protection is still needed past 18, the position may need to be reviewed rather than assumed, so anyone relying on an order that names an older teenager should get advice about how it will operate as the child ages.
So what should you do if children are named in your intervention order matter?
Do not treat a child being listed as a formality, and do not assume it is either automatic or permanent. Whether you are seeking to protect a child or responding to an order that restricts contact with your own children, speak with a criminal defence lawyer early, so the conditions, the contact arrangements, and any overlap with a parenting order are all dealt with properly from the outset.
