Public Act 104-0448
 
HB2568 Re-EnrolledLRB104 10837 JRC 20918 b

    AN ACT concerning civil law.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 1. References to Act. This Act may be referred to
as the Equality for Every Family Act.
 
    Section 5. The Illinois Parentage Act of 2015 is amended
by changing Sections 102, 103, 105, 107, 201, 204, 205, 301,
302, 303, 305, 401, 402, 403, 404, 405, 407, 408, 501, 502,
601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 608, 609, 610, 612, 614, 615,
617, 621, 622, 702, 703, 704, 705, 707, 708, 709, 710, and 903
and by adding Section 704.5 as follows:
 
    (750 ILCS 46/102)
    Sec. 102. Public policy. Illinois recognizes the right of
every child to the physical, mental, emotional, and financial
support of a parent or his or her parents. The parent-child
relationship, including support obligations, extends equally
to every child and to the child's his or her parent or to each
of the child's his or her 2 parents, regardless of the legal
relationship of the parents, and regardless of whether a
parent is a minor. A child shall have the same rights and
protections under law to parentage without regard to the
marital status, age, gender, gender identity or sexual
orientation of their parents or the circumstances of the
child's birth, including whether the child was born as a
result of assisted reproduction or surrogacy.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/103)
    Sec. 103. Definitions. In this Act:
    (a) "Acknowledged parent father" means a person man who
has established a parent-child father-child relationship under
Article 3.
    (b) "Adjudicated parent father" means a person man who has
been adjudicated by a court of competent jurisdiction, or as
authorized under Article X of the Illinois Public Aid Code, to
be the parent father of a child.
    (c) "Alleged genetic parent father" means a person man who
alleges himself to be, or is alleged to be, a genetic parent
the biological father or a possible biological father of a
child, but whose parentage paternity has not been adjudicated
established. The term does not include:
        (1) a presumed parent or acknowledged parent father;
    or
        (2) a person man whose parental rights have been
    terminated or declared not to exist; or
        (3) a donor.
    (d) "Assisted reproduction" means a method of achieving a
pregnancy through means other than by sexual intercourse,
including, but not limited to, all of the following: (1)
artificial insemination or intrauterine, intracervical, or
vaginal insemination; (2) donation of gametes; (3) donation of
embryos; (4) in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer; (5)
intracytoplasmic sperm injection; or (6) assisted reproductive
technology an artificial insemination or an embryo transfer
and includes gamete and embryo donation. "Assisted
reproduction" does not include any pregnancy achieved through
sexual intercourse.
    (e) "Child" means an individual of any age whose parentage
may be established under this Act.
    (f) "Combined parentage paternity index" means the
likelihood of parentage paternity calculated by computing the
ratio between:
        (1) the likelihood that the tested person man is the
    parent father, based on the genetic markers of the tested
    person, woman or person who gave birth man, mother, and
    child, conditioned on the hypothesis that the tested
    person man is the parent father of the child; and
        (2) the likelihood that the tested person man is not
    the parent father, based on the genetic markers of the
    tested person, woman or person who gave birth man, mother,
    and child, conditioned on the hypothesis that the tested
    person man is not the parent father of the child and that
    the parent of the child father is of the same ethnic or
    racial group as the tested person man.
    (g) "Commence" means to file the initial pleading seeking
an adjudication of parentage in the circuit court of this
State.
    (h) "Determination of parentage" means the establishment
of the parent-child relationship by the signing of a voluntary
acknowledgment under Article 3 of this Act or adjudication by
the court or as authorized under Article X of the Illinois
Public Aid Code.
    (i) "Donor" means a person who provides gametes intended
for use in assisted reproduction, whether or not for
compensation. "Donor" does not include a person who is a
parent under Article 7 or an intended parent under the
Gestational Surrogacy Act an individual who participates in an
assisted reproductive technology arrangement by providing
gametes and relinquishes all rights and responsibilities to
the gametes so that another individual or individuals may
become the legal parent or parents of any resulting child.
"Donor" does not include a spouse in any assisted reproductive
technology arrangement in which his or her spouse will parent
any resulting child.
    (j) "Ethnic or racial group" means, for purposes of
genetic testing, a recognized group that an individual
identifies as all or part of the individual's ancestry or that
is so identified by other information.
    (k) "Gamete" means either a sperm or an egg.
    (l) "Genetic testing" means an analysis of genetic markers
to exclude or identify a person man as the parent father or a
woman as the mother of a child as provided in Article 4 of this
Act.
    (l-5) "Gestational surrogacy" means the process by which a
woman or person attempts to carry and give birth to a child
created through in vitro fertilization in which the
gestational surrogate has made no genetic contribution to any
resulting child.
    (m) "Gestational surrogate" means a woman or person who is
not an intended parent and agrees to engage in a gestational
surrogacy arrangement pursuant to the terms of a valid
gestational surrogacy arrangement under the Gestational
Surrogacy Act.
    (m-5) "Intended parent" means a person person who consents
to enters into an assisted reproduction reproductive
technology arrangement, including a gestational surrogacy
agreement, such that the person is a arrangement, under which
he or she will be the legal parent parent of the resulting
child. "Intended parent" includes, in the case of a married
couple, both spouses for all purposes under this Act.
    (n) "Parent" means an individual who has established a
parent-child relationship under Section 201 of this Act.
    (o) "Parent-child relationship" means the legal
relationship between a child and a parent of the child.
    (p) "Presumed parent" means an individual who, by
operation of law under Section 204 of this Act, is recognized
as the parent of a child unless until that status is rebutted
or confirmed in a judicial or administrative proceeding.
    (q) "Probability of parentage paternity" means the
measure, for the ethnic or racial group to which the alleged
genetic parent father belongs, of the probability that the
person man in question is the parent father of the child,
compared with a random, unrelated person and man of the same
ethnic or racial group, expressed as a percentage
incorporating the combined parentage paternity index and a
prior probability.
    (r) "Record" means information that is inscribed on a
tangible medium or that is stored in an electronic or other
medium and is retrievable in perceivable form.
    (s) "Signatory" means an individual who authenticates a
record and is bound by its terms.
    (t) "State" means a state of the United States, the
District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin
Islands, or any territory or insular possession subject to the
jurisdiction of the United States.
    (u) "Substantially similar legal relationship" means a
relationship recognized in this State under Section 60 of the
Illinois Religious Freedom Protection and Civil Union Act.
    (v) "Support-enforcement agency" means a public official
or agency authorized to seek:
        (1) enforcement of support orders or laws relating to
    the duty of support;
        (2) establishment or modification of child support;
        (3) determination of parentage; or
        (4) location of child-support obligors and their
    income and assets.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16; 99-763, eff. 1-1-17; 99-769,
eff. 1-1-17; 100-201, eff. 8-18-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/105)
    Sec. 105. Authority to establish parentage. The circuit
courts are authorized to establish parentage under this Act.
The Department of Healthcare and Family Services may make an
administrative determination of parentage or non-parentage
determinations of paternity and nonpaternity in accordance
with Section 10-17.7 of the Illinois Public Aid Code. Such
administrative determinations shall have the full force and
effect of court judgments entered under this Act.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/107)
    Sec. 107. Applicability. Insofar as practicable, the
provisions of this Act applicable to the parent father and
child relationship shall apply equally without regard to
gender to the mother and child relationship including, but not
limited to, the obligation to support.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/201)
    Sec. 201. Establishment of parent-child relationship.
    (a) The parent-child relationship is established between a
person woman and a child by:
        (1) the woman or person having given birth to the
    child, except as otherwise provided in the Gestational
    Surrogacy Act;
        (2) a presumption of the person's parentage of the
    child under Section 204 of this Act unless the presumption
    is overcome in a judicial proceeding or a valid denial of
    parentage is made under Section 303 of this Act an
    adjudication of the woman's parentage;
        (3) an effective voluntary acknowledgment of parentage
    by the person under Article 3 of this Act, unless the
    acknowledgment has been rescinded or successfully
    challenged adoption of the child by the woman;
        (4) an adjudication of the person's parentage; a valid
    gestational surrogacy arrangement that complies with the
    Gestational Surrogacy Act or other law; or
        (5) the person's adoption of the child; an unrebutted
    presumption of the woman's parentage of the child under
    Section 204 of this Act
        (6) the person's consent to assisted reproduction
    under Article 7 of this Act; or
        (7) the person's parentage of the child is established
    under the provisions of the Gestational Surrogacy Act.
    (b) (Blank). The parent-child relationship is established
between a man and a child by:
        (1) an unrebutted presumption of the man's parentage
    of the child under Section 204 of this Act;
        (2) an effective voluntary acknowledgment of paternity
    by the man under Article 3 of this Act, unless the
    acknowledgment has been rescinded or successfully
    challenged;
        (3) an adjudication of the man's parentage;
        (4) adoption of the child by the man; or
        (5) a valid gestational surrogacy arrangement that
    complies with the Gestational Surrogacy Act or other law.
    (c) (Blank). Insofar as practicable, the provisions of
this Act applicable to parent-child relationships shall apply
equally to men and women as parents, including, but not
limited to, the obligation to support.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16; 99-769, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/204)
    Sec. 204. Presumption of parentage.
    (a) A person is presumed to be the parent of a child if:
        (1) the person and the woman or person who gave birth
    to mother of the child have entered into a marriage, civil
    union, or substantially similar legal relationship, and
    the child is born, to the woman or person who gave birth to
    the child, mother during the marriage, civil union, or
    substantially similar legal relationship, except as
    provided in the Gestational Surrogacy Act or other law;
        (2) the person and the woman or person who gave birth
    to mother of the child were in a marriage, civil union, or
    substantially similar legal relationship and the child is
    born, to the woman or person who gave birth to the child,
    mother within 300 days after the marriage, civil union, or
    substantially similar legal relationship is terminated by
    death, declaration of invalidity of marriage, judgment for
    dissolution of marriage, civil union, or substantially
    similar legal relationship, or after a judgment for legal
    separation, except as provided in the Gestational
    Surrogacy Act or other law;
        (3) before the birth of the child, the person and the
    woman or person who gave birth to mother of the child
    entered into a marriage, civil union, or substantially
    similar legal relationship in apparent compliance with
    law, even if the attempted marriage, civil union, or
    substantially similar legal relationship is or could be
    declared invalid, and the child is born during the invalid
    marriage, civil union, or substantially similar legal
    relationship or within 300 days after its termination by
    death, declaration of invalidity of marriage, judgment for
    dissolution of marriage, civil union, or substantially
    similar legal relationship, or after a judgment for legal
    separation, except as provided in the Gestational
    Surrogacy Act or other law; or
        (4) after the child's birth, the person and the woman
    or person who gave birth to the child child's mother have
    entered into a marriage, civil union, or substantially
    similar legal relationship, even if the marriage, civil
    union, or substantially similar legal relationship is or
    could be declared invalid, and the person is named, with
    the person's written consent, as the child's parent on the
    child's birth certificate.
    (b) If 2 or more conflicting presumptions arise under this
Section, the presumption which on the facts is founded on the
weightier considerations of policy and logic, especially the
policy of promoting the child's best interests, controls. In
weighing the presumptions, the court shall consider the
factors enumerated in paragraph (3) of subsection (a) of
Section 610.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16; 99-769, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/205)
    Sec. 205. Proceedings to declare the non-existence of the
parent-child relationship.
    (a) An action to declare the non-existence of the
parent-child relationship may be brought by the child, the
woman or person who gave birth to the child mother, or a person
presumed to be a parent under Section 204 of this Act. Actions
brought by the child, the woman or person who gave birth to the
child mother, or a presumed parent shall be brought by
verified complaint, which shall be designated a petition.
After a presumption under Section 204 of this Act has been
rebutted, parentage of the child by another person man or
woman may be established in the same action, if such person he
or she has been made a party.
    (b) An action to declare the non-existence of the
parent-child relationship brought under subsection (a) of this
Section shall be barred if brought later than 2 years after the
petitioner knew or should have known of the relevant facts.
The 2-year period for bringing an action to declare the
non-existence of the parent-child relationship shall not
extend beyond the date on which the child reaches the age of 18
years. Failure to bring an action within 2 years shall not bar
any party from asserting a defense in any action to declare the
existence of the parent-child relationship.
    (c) An action to declare the non-existence of the
parent-child relationship may be brought subsequent to an
adjudication of parentage in any judgment by the person man
adjudicated to be the parent pursuant to a presumption in
paragraphs (a)(1) through (a)(4) of Section 204 if, as a
result of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) testing, it is
discovered that the person man adjudicated to be the parent is
not the parent father of the child. Actions brought by the
adjudicated parent father shall be brought by verified
petition. If, as a result of the deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
testing that is admissible under Section 614 of this Act, the
petitioner is determined not to be the parent father of the
child, the adjudication of parentage paternity and any orders
regarding the allocation of parental responsibilities,
parenting time, and future payments of support may be vacated.
This provision shall not apply to actions involving parentage
of children born through assisted reproduction.
    (d) An action to declare the non-existence of the
parent-child relationship brought under subsection (c) of this
Section shall be barred if brought more than 2 years after the
petitioner obtains actual knowledge of relevant facts. The
2-year period shall not apply to periods of time where the
woman or person who gave birth to the child mother or the child
refuses to submit to deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) testing. The
2-year period for bringing an action to declare the
non-existence of the parent-child relationship shall not
extend beyond the date on which the child reaches the age of 18
years.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16; 99-769, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/301)
    Sec. 301. Voluntary acknowledgment. A parent-child
relationship may be established voluntarily by the signing and
witnessing of a voluntary acknowledgment in accordance with
Section 12 of the Vital Records Act and Section 10-17.7 of the
Illinois Public Aid Code. A woman or person who gave birth to a
child and an alleged genetic parent of the child, a presumed
parent under Section 204, or an intended parent under Article
7, may sign an acknowledgment of parentage to establish the
parentage of the child. The voluntary acknowledgment shall
contain the social security numbers or tax identification
numbers of the persons signing the voluntary acknowledgment;
however, failure to include the social security numbers of the
persons signing a voluntary acknowledgment does not invalidate
the voluntary acknowledgment.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16; 99-769, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/302)
    Sec. 302. Execution of voluntary acknowledgment.
    (a) A voluntary acknowledgment described in Section 301 of
this Act must:
        (1) be in a record;
        (2) be signed, or otherwise authenticated, under
    penalty of perjury by the woman or person who gave birth to
    the child mother and by the person man seeking to
    establish his parentage;
        (3) state that the child whose parentage is being
    acknowledged:
            (A) does not have a presumed parent, or has a
        presumed parent whose full name is stated; and
            (B) does not have another acknowledged or
        adjudicated parent;
        (4) be witnessed; and
        (5) state that the signatories understand that the
    voluntary acknowledgment is the equivalent of a judicial
    adjudication of parentage of the child and that: (i) a
    challenge by a signatory to the voluntary acknowledgment
    may be permitted only upon a showing of fraud, duress, or
    material mistake of fact; and (ii) a challenge to the
    voluntary acknowledgment is barred after 2 years unless
    that period is tolled pursuant to the law.
    (b) An acknowledgment is void if it:
        (1) states that another person is a presumed parent,
    unless a denial signed or otherwise authenticated by the
    presumed parent is filed with the Department of Healthcare
    and Family Services, as provided by law;
        (2) states that another person is an acknowledged or
    adjudicated parent; or
        (3) falsely denies the existence of a presumed,
    acknowledged, or adjudicated parent of the child.
    (c) A presumed parent father may sign or otherwise
authenticate a voluntary acknowledgment.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16; 99-769, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/303)
    Sec. 303. Denial of parentage. A presumed parent may sign
a denial of parentage. The denial is valid only if:
        (a) a voluntary acknowledgment described in Section
    301 of this Act signed, or otherwise authenticated, by a
    person man is filed pursuant to Section 305 of this Act;
        (b) the denial is in a record, and is signed, or
    otherwise authenticated, under penalty of perjury; and
        (c) the presumed parent has not previously:
            (1) acknowledged his parentage, unless the
        previous voluntary acknowledgment has been rescinded
        under Section 307 of this Act or successfully
        challenged under Section 308 of this Act; or
            (2) been adjudicated to be the parent of the
        child.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16; 99-769, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/305)
    Sec. 305. Effect of voluntary acknowledgment or denial of
parentage.
    (a) Except as otherwise provided in Sections 307 and 308
of this Act, a valid voluntary acknowledgment filed with the
Department of Healthcare and Family Services, as provided by
law, is equivalent to an adjudication of the parentage of a
child and confers upon the acknowledged parent father all of
the rights and duties of a parent.
    (b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act,
parentage established in accordance with Section 301 of this
Act has the full force and effect of a judgment entered under
this Act and serves as a basis for seeking a child support
order without any further proceedings to establish parentage.
    (c) Except as otherwise provided in Sections 307 and 308
of this Act, a valid denial by a presumed parent filed with the
Department of Healthcare and Family Services, as provided by
law, in conjunction with a voluntary acknowledgment, is
equivalent to an adjudication of the nonparentage of the
presumed parent and discharges the presumed parent from all
rights and duties of a parent.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16; 99-769, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/401)
    Sec. 401. Proceeding authorized.
    (a) As soon as practicable, a court, or an administrative
hearing officer in an Expedited Child Support System may,
subject to subsection (c), order or direct a woman or person
who gave birth to the child, the child, and an alleged,
acknowledged parent, adjudicated parent, or the presumed
parent to submit to deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) testing to
determine inherited characteristics.
    (b) A court, or an administrative hearing officer in an
Expedited Child Support System, upon the request of any party,
or the child, shall, subject to subsection (c), order or
direct a woman or person who gave birth to the child, the
child, and a presumed, acknowledged, alleged, or adjudicated
parent to submit to deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) testing to
determine inherited characteristics unless the court
determines that (1) the conduct of the parent, acknowledged
parent, adjudicated parent, or the presumed parent estops that
party from denying parentage; (2) it would be inequitable to
disprove the parent-child relationship between the child and
the presumed, acknowledged, or adjudicated parent, and (3)
that it is in the child's best interest to deny DNA testing
considering the factors in Section 610(a)(3). It is presumed
to be equitable and in the best interest of the child to grant
a motion by the child seeking an order for genetic testing. The
presumption may be overcome by clear and convincing evidence
that extraordinary circumstances exist making the genetic
testing contrary to the child's best interests. The court's
order denying a child's request for genetic testing must state
the basis upon which the presumption was overcome. The court's
order granting a child's request for genetic testing must
specify the ways in which testing results may be used for
purposes of protecting the child's best interests. In a
proceeding involving the application of this Section, a minor
or incapacitated child must be represented by a guardian ad
litem, child's representative, or attorney for the child.
    (c) Genetic testing may not be used to (1) challenge the
parentage of a person who is a parent under Article 7 or the
Gestational Surrogacy Act, inclusive, or (2) establish the
parentage of a person who is a donor.
As soon as practicable, a court or an administrative hearing
officer in an Expedited Child Support System may, and upon the
request of a party except as provided in Section 610 of this
Act, or of the child, shall order or direct the mother, child,
and alleged father to submit to deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
testing to determine inherited characteristics. If any party
refuses to submit to genetic testing, the court may resolve
the question of paternity against that party or enforce its
order if the rights of others and the interests of justice so
require.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/402)
    Sec. 402. Requirements for genetic testing.
    (a) The genetic testing shall be conducted by an expert
qualified as an examiner of blood or tissue types and
appointed by the court. The expert shall determine the genetic
testing procedures. However, any interested party, for good
cause shown, in advance of the scheduled genetic testing, may
request a hearing to object to the qualifications of the
expert or the genetic testing procedures. The expert appointed
by the court shall testify at the pre-test hearing at the
expense of the party requesting the hearing, except for an
indigent party as provided in Section 405 of this Act. An
expert not appointed by the court shall testify at the
pre-test hearing at the expense of the party retaining the
expert. Inquiry into an expert's qualifications at the
pre-test hearing shall not affect either party's right to have
the expert qualified at trial.
    (b) Genetic testing must be of a type reasonably relied
upon by experts in the field of genetic testing and performed
in a testing laboratory accredited by the American Association
of Blood Banks or a successor to its functions.
    (c) A specimen used in genetic testing may consist of one
or more samples, or a combination of samples, of blood, buccal
cells, bone, hair, or other body tissue or fluid.
    (d) The testing laboratory shall determine the databases
from which to select frequencies for use in calculation of the
probability of parentage paternity based on the ethnic or
racial group of an individual or individuals. If there is
disagreement as to the testing laboratory's choice, the
following rules apply:
        (1) The individual objecting may require the testing
    laboratory, within 30 days after receipt of the report of
    the genetic testing, to recalculate the probability of
    parentage paternity using an ethnic or racial group
    different from that used by the laboratory.
        (2) The individual objecting to the testing
    laboratory's initial choice shall:
            (A) if the frequencies are not available to the
        testing laboratory for the ethnic or racial group
        requested, provide the requested frequencies compiled
        in a manner recognized by accrediting bodies; or
            (B) engage another testing laboratory to perform
        the calculations.
    (e) If, after recalculation using a different ethnic or
racial group, genetic testing does not reputably identify a
person man as the parent father of a child, an individual who
has been tested may be required to submit to additional
genetic testing.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/403)
    Sec. 403. Genetic test results.
    (a) The expert shall prepare a written report of the
genetic test results. If the genetic test results show that
the alleged genetic parent father is not excluded, the report
shall contain statistics based upon the statistical formula of
combined parentage paternity index (CPI) and the probability
of parentage paternity as determined by the probability of
exclusion (Random Person Man Not Excluded = RPNE RMNE). The
expert may be called by the court as a witness to testify to
the expert's his or her findings and, if called, shall be
subject to cross-examination by the parties. If the genetic
test results show that the alleged genetic parent father is
not excluded, any party may demand that other experts,
qualified as examiners of blood or tissue types, perform
independent genetic testing under order of court, including,
but not limited to, blood types or other testing of genetic
markers. The results of the genetic testing may be offered
into evidence. The number and qualifications of the experts
shall be determined by the court.
    (b) Documentation of the chain of custody of the blood or
tissue samples, accompanied by an affidavit or certification
in accordance with Section 1-109 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, is competent evidence to establish the chain of
custody.
    (c) The report of the genetic test results prepared by the
appointed expert shall be made by affidavit or by
certification as provided in Section 1-109 of the Code of
Civil Procedure and shall be mailed to all parties. A proof of
service shall be filed with the court. The verified report
shall be admitted into evidence at trial without foundation
testimony or other proof of authenticity or accuracy, unless a
written motion challenging the admissibility of the report is
filed by either party within 28 days of receipt of the report,
in which case expert testimony shall be required. A party may
not file such a motion challenging the admissibility of the
report later than 28 days before commencement of trial. Before
trial, the court shall determine whether the motion is
sufficient to deny admission of the report by verification.
Failure to make that timely motion constitutes a waiver of the
right to object to admission by verification and shall not be
grounds for a continuance of the hearing to establish
parentage paternity.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/404)
    Sec. 404. Effect of genetic testing. Genetic testing taken
under this Article shall have the following effect:
        (a) If the court finds that the conclusion of the
    expert or experts, as disclosed by the evidence based upon
    the genetic testing, is that the alleged genetic parent
    father is not the parent of the child, the question of
    parentage paternity shall be resolved accordingly.
        (b) If the experts disagree in their findings or
    conclusions, the question shall be weighed with other
    competent evidence of parentage paternity.
        (c) If the genetic testing results indicate that the
    alleged genetic parent father is not excluded and that the
    combined parentage paternity index is at least 1,000 to 1,
    and there is at least a 99.9% probability of parentage
    paternity, the alleged genetic parent father is presumed
    to be the parent father, and this evidence shall be
    admitted.
        (d) A person man identified under subsection (c) of
    this Section as the parent father of the child may rebut
    the genetic testing results by other genetic testing
    satisfying the requirements of this Article which:
            (1) excludes the person man as a genetic parent
        father of the child; or
            (2) identifies another person man as the possible
        parent father of the child.
        (e) Except as otherwise provided in this Article, if
    more than one person man is identified by genetic testing
    as the possible parent father of the child, the court
    shall order them to submit to further genetic testing to
    identify the genetic parent father.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/405)
    Sec. 405. Cost of genetic testing. The expense of the
genetic testing shall be paid by the party who requests the
genetic testing, except that the court may apportion the costs
between the parties, upon request. When the genetic testing is
requested by the party seeking to establish parentage
paternity and that party is found to be indigent by the court,
the expense shall be paid by the public agency providing
representation; except that where a public agency is not
providing representation, the expense shall be paid by the
county in which the action is brought. When the genetic
testing is ordered by the court on its own motion or is
requested by the alleged or presumed parent father and that
parent father is found to be indigent by the court, the expense
shall be paid by the county in which the action is brought. Any
part of the expense may be taxed as costs in the action, except
that no costs may be taxed against a public agency that has not
requested the genetic testing.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/407)
    Sec. 407. Independent genetic testing. Nothing in this
Article shall prevent a party from obtaining genetic testing
of the party's his or her own blood or tissue independent of
those ordered by the court or from presenting expert testimony
interpreting those tests or any other blood tests ordered
under this Article. Reports of all the independent tests,
accompanied by affidavit or certification pursuant to Section
1-109 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and notice of any expert
witnesses to be called to testify to the results of those tests
shall be submitted to all parties at least 30 days before any
hearing set to determine the issue of parentage.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/408)
    Sec. 408. Additional persons to be tested.
    (a) Subject to subsection (b), if a genetic-testing
specimen is not available from a person man who may be the
parent father of a child, for good cause and under
circumstances the court considers to be just, the court may
order the following individuals to submit specimens for
genetic testing:
        (1) the parents of the person man;
        (2) brothers and sisters of the person man;
        (3) other children of the person and the woman or
    person who gave birth to the person man and their mothers;
    and
        (4) other relatives of the person man necessary to
    complete genetic testing.
    (b) Issuance of an order under this Section requires a
finding that a need for genetic testing outweighs the
legitimate interests of the individual sought to be tested,
and in no event shall an order be issued until the individual
is joined as a party and given notice as required under the
Code of Civil Procedure.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/501)
    Sec. 501. Temporary orders.
    (a) On a motion by a party and a showing of clear and
convincing evidence of parentage, the court shall issue a
temporary order for support of a child, including a non-minor
child with a disability, if the order is appropriate and the
individual ordered to pay support is:
        (1) a presumed parent of the child;
        (2) petitioning to have parentage adjudicated;
        (3) identified as the parent father through genetic
    testing under Article 4 of this Act;
        (4) an alleged genetic parent father who has declined
    to submit to genetic testing;
        (5) shown by clear and convincing evidence to be the
    child's parent father;
        (6) the woman or person who gave birth to mother of the
    child except under the Gestational Surrogacy Act; or
        (7) anyone else determined to be the child's parent.
    In determining the amount of a temporary child support
award, the court shall use the guidelines and standards set
forth in Sections 505, 505.2, and 513.5 of the Illinois
Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act.
    (b) A temporary order may include provisions for the
allocation of parental responsibilities and parenting time as
provided by the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage
Act. A temporary order may, in accordance with the provisions
of subsection (a) of Section 508 of the Illinois Marriage and
Dissolution of Marriage Act that relate to proceedings other
than pre-judgment dissolution proceedings, include an award
for interim attorney's fees and costs.
    (c) Temporary orders issued under this Section shall not
have prejudicial effect with respect to final child support,
the allocation of parental responsibilities, or parenting time
orders.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16; 99-769, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/502)
    Sec. 502. Injunctive relief.
    (a) In any action brought under this Act for the initial
determination of parentage, the allocation of parental
responsibilities or parenting time, or for modification of a
prior allocation order or judgment or parenting time order,
the court, upon application of a party, may enjoin a party
having physical possession or an allocation order or judgment
from temporarily relocating the child from this State pending
the adjudication of the issues of parentage, the allocation of
parental responsibilities, and parenting time. When deciding
whether to enjoin relocation of a child, or to order a party to
return the child to this State, the court shall consider
factors including, but not limited to:
        (1) the extent of previous involvement with the child
    by the party seeking to enjoin relocation or to have the
    absent party return the child to this State;
        (2) the likelihood that parentage will be established;
    and
        (3) the impact on the financial, physical, and
    emotional health of the party being enjoined from
    relocating the child or the party being ordered to return
    the child to this State.
    (b) A temporary restraining order or preliminary
injunction under this Act shall be governed by the relevant
provisions of Part 1 of Article XI of the Code of Civil
Procedure.
    (c) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of
this Section, the court may decline to enjoin a domestic
violence victim having physical possession or an allocation
order or judgment from temporarily or permanently relocating
the child from this State pending an allocation of parental
responsibilities or an adjudication of parenting time. In
determining whether a person is a domestic violence victim,
the court shall consider the following factors:
        (1) a sworn statement by the person that the person
    has good reason to believe that the person he or she is the
    victim of domestic violence or stalking;
        (2) a sworn statement that the person fears for the
    person's his or her safety or the safety of the person's
    his or her children;
        (3) evidence from police, court, or other government
    agency records or files;
        (4) documentation from a domestic violence program if
    the person is alleged to be a victim of domestic violence;
        (5) documentation from a legal, clerical, medical, or
    other professional from whom the person has sought
    assistance in dealing with the alleged domestic violence;
    and
        (6) any other evidence that supports the sworn
    statements, such as a statement from any other individual
    with knowledge of the circumstances that provides the
    basis for the claim, or physical evidence of the domestic
    violence.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16; 99-769, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/601)
    Sec. 601. Proceeding authorized. A civil proceeding may be
maintained to adjudicate the parentage of a child. The
proceeding is governed by the Code of Civil Procedure and
Illinois Supreme Court Rules. Administrative proceedings
adjudicating parentage paternity shall be governed by Section
10-17.7 of the Illinois Public Aid Code.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/602)
    Sec. 602. Standing. A complaint to adjudicate parentage
shall be verified, shall be designated a petition, and shall
name the person or persons alleged to be the parent of the
child. Subject to Article 3 and Sections 607, 608, and 609 of
this Act, a proceeding to adjudicate parentage may be
maintained by:
        (a) the child;
        (b) the woman or person who gave birth to mother of the
    child;
        (c) a pregnant woman or person;
        (d) a person man presumed or alleged alleging himself
    to be the parent of the child;
        (e) a woman presumed or alleging herself to be the
    parent of the child;
        (e) (f) the support-enforcement agency or other
    governmental agency authorized by other law;
        (f) (g) any person or public agency that has physical
    possession of or has custody of or has been allocated
    parental responsibilities for, is providing financial
    support to, or has provided financial support to the
    child;
        (g) (h) the Department of Healthcare and Family
    Services if it is providing, or has provided, financial
    support to the child or if it is assisting with child
    support collections services;
        (h) (i) an authorized adoption agency or licensed
    child welfare agency;
        (i) (j) a representative authorized by law to act for
    an individual who would otherwise be entitled to maintain
    a proceeding but who is deceased, incapacitated, or a
    minor; or
        (j) (k) an intended parent.
(Source: P.A. 103-501, eff. 1-1-24.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/603)
    Sec. 603. Subject matter and personal jurisdiction.
    (a) The circuit courts of this State shall have
jurisdiction of an action brought under this Act. In a civil
action not brought under this Act, the provisions of this Act
shall apply if parentage is at issue. The court may join any
action under this Act with any other civil action in which this
Act is applicable.
    (b) An individual may not be adjudicated to be a parent
unless the court has personal jurisdiction over the
individual.
    (c) A court of this State having jurisdiction to
adjudicate parentage may exercise personal jurisdiction over a
nonresident individual, or the guardian or conservator of the
individual, if the conditions prescribed in Section 201 of the
Uniform Interstate Family Support Act exist, including, but
not limited to: if the individual engaged in sexual
intercourse in this State and the child may have been
conceived by that act of intercourse; the individual consented
to assisted reproduction that occurred in this State that
resulted in the conception of the child; if the individual
consented to a medical procedure that occurred in this State
related to assisted reproduction that resulted in the
conception of the child; if the child was born or is
anticipated to be born in this State; an individual consented
to a mental health consultation that occurred in this State
pursuant to the Gestational Surrogacy Act, or there is any
other basis consistent with the constitutions of this State
and the United States for the exercise of personal
jurisdiction are fulfilled.
    (d) Lack of jurisdiction over one individual does not
preclude the court from making an adjudication of parentage
binding on another individual over whom the court has personal
jurisdiction.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/604)
    Sec. 604. Venue.
    (a) Venue for a proceeding to adjudicate parentage is any
county of this State in which a party resides, or if the
presumed parent or alleged genetic parent father is deceased,
in which a proceeding for probate or administration of the
presumed parent's or alleged genetic parent's father's estate
has been commenced, or could be commenced.
    (b) A proceeding for the allocation of parental
responsibilities is commenced in the county where the child
resides.
    (c) A parentage proceeding under the Gestational Surrogacy
Act or Article 7 of this Act may be commenced in any county in
this State.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16; 99-769, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/605)
    Sec. 605. Notice to presumed parent.
    (a) Except in cases governed under the Gestational
Surrogacy Act, the petitioner shall give notice of a
proceeding to adjudicate parentage to the following
individuals:
        (1) the woman or individual who gave birth to the
    child, unless a court has adjudicated that the woman or
    individual is not a parent;
        (2) an individual who is a parent of the child under
    this Act;
        (3) a presumed, acknowledged, or adjudicated parent of
    the child; and
        (4) an individual whose parentage is to be
    adjudicated.
    (b) An individual entitled to notice under subsection (a)
has a right to intervene in the proceeding.
    (c) Lack of notice required by subsection (a) does not
render a judgment void. Lack of notice does not preclude an
individual entitled to notice under subsection (a) from
bringing a proceeding under subsection (b) of Section 609.
    (d) A In any action brought under Article 3 or Article 6 of
this Act where the individual signing the petition for an
order establishing the existence of the parent-child
relationship by consent or the individual alleged to be the
parent in a petition is different from an individual who is
presumed to be the parent of the child under Article 2 of this
Act, a notice required by this Section shall be served on the
individual presumed parent in the same manner as summonses are
served in other civil proceedings or, in lieu of personal
service, service may be made as follows:
        (1) The petitioner person requesting notice shall pay
    to the clerk of the circuit court a mailing fee of $1.50
    and furnish to the clerk of the circuit court an original
    and one copy of a notice together with an affidavit
    setting forth the individual's presumed parent's last
    known address. The original notice shall be retained by
    the clerk of the circuit court.
        (2) The clerk of the circuit court shall promptly mail
    to the individual presumed parent, at the address
    appearing in the affidavit, the copy of the notice by
    certified mail, return receipt requested. The envelope and
    return receipt shall bear the return address of the clerk
    of the circuit court. The receipt for certified mail shall
    state the name and address of the addressee and the date of
    mailing and shall be attached to the original notice.
        (3) The return receipt, when returned to the clerk of
    the circuit court, shall be attached to the original
    notice and shall constitute proof of service.
        (4) The clerk of the circuit court shall note the fact
    of service in a permanent record.
    (e) (b) The notice shall read as follows:
    "IN THE MATTER OF NOTICE TO .......... INDIVIDUAL PRESUMED
PARENT.
    You have been identified as an individual with a claim to
parentage the presumed parent of ........., born on .........
The woman or person who gave birth to birth parent of the child
is .........
    An action is being brought to establish the parent-child
relationship between the named child and a parent named by the
person filing this action, .........
    You may As the presumed parent, you have certain legal
rights with respect to the named child, including the right to
notice of the filing of proceedings instituted for the
establishment of parentage of the named child and, in some
situations if named as a parent in a petition to establish
parentage, the right to submit to, along with the woman or
person who gave birth to the child birth parent and the child,
deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) tests to determine inherited
characteristics, subject to Section 401 610 of the Illinois
Parentage Act of 2015. If you wish to assert your rights with
respect to the child named in this notice, you must file with
the Clerk of this Circuit Court of ......... County, Illinois,
whose address is ........, within 30 days after the date of
receipt of this notice, a declaration of parentage stating
that you are, in fact, the parent of the named child and that
you intend to assert your legal rights with respect to the
child, or that you request to be notified of any further
proceedings with respect to the parentage of the child.
    If you do not file a declaration of parentage or a request
for notice, then you may be later barred from asserting
parentage claims whatever legal rights you have with respect
to the named child, and including the right to notice of any
future proceedings for the establishment of parentage of the
child, may be terminated without any further notice to you.
When your legal rights with respect to the named child are
terminated, you will not be entitled to notice of any future
proceedings.".
    (f) (c) The notice to a presumed parent under this Section
in any action brought by a public agency shall be prepared and
mailed by the public agency, and the mailing fee to the clerk
of the circuit court shall be waived.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/606)
    Sec. 606. Summons. The summons that is served on a
respondent shall include the return date on or by which the
respondent must appear and shall contain the following
information, in a prominent place and in conspicuous language,
in addition to the information required to be provided under
the laws of this State: "If you do not appear as instructed in
this summons, you may be required to support the child named in
this petition until the child is at least 18 years old. You may
also have to pay the pregnancy and delivery costs of the woman
or person who gave birth mother.".
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/608)
    Sec. 608. Limitation; child having presumed parent.
    (a) An action to challenge a presumption of parentage
under Section 204 of this Act must be commenced by an
individual other than the child An alleged father, as that
term is defined in Section 103 of this Act, must commence an
action to establish a parent-child relationship for a child
having a presumed parent not later than 2 years after the
petitioner knew or should have known of the relevant facts.
The time the petitioner is under legal disability or duress or
the ground for relief is fraudulently concealed shall be
excluded in computing the period of 2 years. The 2-year
limitation does not apply to an action by the child.
    (b) A proceeding seeking to declare the non-existence of
the parent-child relationship between a child and the child's
presumed parent father may be maintained at any time by a
person described in paragraphs (1) through (4) of subsection
(a) of Section 204 of this Act if the court determines that the
presumed parent father and the woman or individual who gave
birth to mother of the child neither cohabited nor engaged in
sexual intercourse with each other during the probable time of
conception.
    (c) If in a proceeding to adjudicate a presumed parent's
parentage, another individual in addition to the woman or
individual who gave birth to the child asserts a claim to
parentage of the child, the court shall adjudicate parentage
under Section 610. An adjudication under this Section shall
serve as a rebuttal or confirmation of a presumed parent as
defined in subsection (p) of Section 103.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/609)
    Sec. 609. Limitation; child having acknowledged or
adjudicated parent.
    (a) If a child has an acknowledged parent, a signatory to
the acknowledgment described in Section 301 of this Act or
related denial may commence a proceeding seeking to challenge
the acknowledgment or denial or challenge the parentage
paternity of the child only within the time allowed under
Section 309 of this Act.
    (b) If a child has an acknowledged parent or an
adjudicated parent, an individual, other than the child, who
is neither a signatory to the acknowledgment nor a party to the
adjudication and who seeks to challenge an adjudication of
parentage of the child must commence a proceeding not later
than 2 years after the effective date of the acknowledgment or
adjudication.
    (c) A proceeding under this Section is subject to the
application of the principles of estoppel established in
Section 610 of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/610)
    Sec. 610. Factors in adjudicating parentage Authority to
deny motion for genetic testing.
    (a) Consistent with Sections 205, 309, 608, 609, and 617
in cases in which there are competing claims to parentage and
in proceedings In a proceeding in which the parentage of a
child having a presumed, acknowledged, or adjudicated parent
is at issue, the court shall consider the following factors
when adjudicating the individual's parentage may deny a motion
by a parent, presumed parent, acknowledged parent, adjudicated
parent, alleged parent, or the child seeking an order for
genetic testing of the parents and child if the court
determines that:
        (1) whether the conduct of the parent, acknowledged
    parent, adjudicated parent, or the presumed parent estops
    that party from denying parentage;
        (2) whether it would be inequitable to disprove the
    parent-child relationship between the child and the
    presumed, acknowledged, or adjudicated parent; and
        (3) whether it is in the child's best interests to
    adjudicate the individual to be the child's parent to deny
    genetic testing, taking into account the following
    factors:
            (A) the length of time between the current
        proceeding to adjudicate parentage and the time that
        the presumed, acknowledged, or adjudicated parent was
        placed on notice that the presumed, acknowledged, or
        adjudicated parent he or she might not be the
        biological parent;
            (B) the length of time during which the presumed,
        acknowledged, or adjudicated parent has assumed the
        role of parent of the child;
            (C) the facts surrounding the presumed,
        acknowledged, or adjudicated parent's discovery of his
        or her possible non-parentage nonparentage;
            (D) the nature of the relationship between the
        child and the presumed, acknowledged, or adjudicated
        parent;
            (E) the age of the child;
            (F) the harm that may result to the child if the
        presumed, acknowledged, or adjudicated parentage is
        successfully disproved;
            (G) the nature of the relationship between the
        child and the presumed, acknowledged, adjudicated or
        alleged parent any alleged parent;
            (H) the extent to which the passage of time
        reduces the chances of establishing the parentage of
        another person and a child support obligation in favor
        of the child;
            (I) other factors that may affect the equities
        arising from the disruption of the parent-child
        relationship between the child and the presumed,
        acknowledged, or adjudicated parent or the chance of
        other harm to the child; and
            (J) any other factors the court determines to be
        equitable.
    (b) In a proceeding involving the application of this
Section, a minor or incapacitated child must be represented by
a guardian ad litem, child's representative, or attorney for
the child. It shall be presumed to be equitable and in the best
interests of the child to grant a motion by the child seeking
an order for genetic testing. The presumption may be overcome
by clear and convincing evidence that extraordinary
circumstances exist making the genetic testing contrary to the
child's best interests. The court's order denying a child's
request for genetic testing must state the basis upon which
the presumption was overcome. The court's order granting a
child's request for genetic testing must specify the ways in
which the testing results may be used for purposes of
protecting the child's best interests.
     (c) (Blank). If the court denies a motion seeking an order
for genetic testing, it shall issue an order adjudicating the
presumed parent to be the parent of the child.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16; 99-769, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/612)
    Sec. 612. Proceeding before birth. Except as otherwise
provided for in this Act, a A proceeding to establish
parentage may be commenced before the birth of the child, but
may not be concluded until after the birth of the child. The
following actions may be taken before the birth of the child:
        (a) service of process;
        (b) the taking of depositions to perpetuate testimony;
    and
        (c) except as prohibited by Article 4 of this Act,
    collection of specimens for genetic testing.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/614)
    Sec. 614. Admissibility of results of genetic testing;
expenses.
    (a) Subject to the limitations of Section 401, if If a
child has a presumed, acknowledged, or adjudicated parent, the
results of genetic testing are inadmissible to adjudicate
parentage unless performed:
        (1) with the consent of both the woman or person who
    gave birth to the child mother and the presumed,
    acknowledged, or adjudicated parent; or
        (2) pursuant to an order of the court under Section
    401 402 of this Act and conducted consistent with Section
    402 of this Act.
    (b) Copies of bills for genetic testing and for prenatal
and postnatal health care for the woman or person who gave
birth mother and the child, which are furnished to the adverse
party not less than 10 days before the date of a hearing are
admissible to establish:
        (1) the amount of the charges billed; and
        (2) that the charges were reasonable, necessary, and
    customary.
    (c) Certified copies of the bills for costs incurred for
pregnancy and childbirth shall be admitted into evidence at
judicial or administrative proceedings without foundation
testimony or other proof of authenticity or accuracy.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/615)
    Sec. 615. Consequences of declining genetic testing.
    (a) Subject to the limitations of Section 401, an An order
for genetic testing is enforceable through a proceeding for
adjudication of contempt.
    (b) If an individual whose parentage is being determined
declines to submit to genetic testing ordered by the court or
administrative agency, the court or administrative agency may
adjudicate parentage contrary to the position of that
individual.
    (c) Genetic testing of the woman or person who gave birth
to the mother of a child is not a condition precedent to
genetically testing the child and a person man whose parentage
paternity is being determined. If the woman or person who gave
birth to the child mother is unavailable or declines to submit
to genetic testing, the court or administrative agency may
order the genetic testing of the child and every person man
whose parentage paternity is being adjudicated.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/617)
    Sec. 617. Rules for adjudication of parentage of an
alleged genetic parent.
    (a) In a proceeding involving an alleged genetic parent
who is not a presumed parent, if the woman or individual who
gave birth to the child is the only other individual with a
claim to parentage, the The court shall apply the following
rules to adjudicate a claim of the parentage of a child:
        (a) The parentage of a child having an adjudicated
    parent may be disproved only by admissible results of
    genetic testing, or other means, excluding that person as
    the parent of the child or identifying another person as
    the parent of the child.
        (1) (b) Unless the results of the genetic testing or
    other evidence are admitted to rebut other results of
    genetic testing, a person identified as the parent of a
    child under Section 404 of this Act may be adjudicated the
    parent of the child.
        (2) (c) If the court finds that genetic testing under
    Section 404 neither identifies nor excludes a person as
    the parent of a child, the court may not dismiss the
    proceeding. In that event, the results of genetic testing
    and other evidence are admissible to adjudicate the issue
    of parentage.
        (3) (d) Unless the results of genetic testing are
    admitted to rebut other results of genetic testing, a
    person excluded as the parent of a child by genetic
    testing may be adjudicated not to be the parent of the
    child.
    (b) If in a proceeding involving an alleged genetic
parent, at least one other individual in addition to the woman
or individual who gave birth to the child has a claim to
parentage of the child under this Act, the court shall
adjudicate parentage under Section 610.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/621)
    Sec. 621. Binding effect of determination of parentage.
    (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b) of this
Section, a determination of parentage is binding on:
        (1) all signatories to an acknowledgment or denial as
    provided in Article 3 of this Act; and
        (2) all parties to an adjudication by a court acting
    under circumstances that satisfy the jurisdictional
    requirements of Section 201 of the Uniform Interstate
    Family Support Act.
    (b) A child is not bound by a determination of parentage
under this Act unless:
        (1) the determination was based on an unrescinded
    acknowledgment as provided in Article 3 of this Act and
    the acknowledgment is either consistent with the results
    of genetic testing or for a child born through assisted
    reproduction;
        (2) the adjudication of parentage was based on a
    finding consistent with the results of genetic testing and
    the consistency is declared in the determination or is
    otherwise shown;
        (3) the child was a party or was represented in the
    proceeding determining parentage by a guardian ad litem,
    child's representative or attorney for the child; and
        (4) the child was no longer a minor at the time the
    proceeding was initiated and was the moving party
    resulting in the parentage determination; and
        (5) the determination of parentage was made under
    Article 7 or the Gestational Surrogacy Act.
    (c) In a proceeding for dissolution of marriage, civil
union, or substantially similar legal relationship,
declaration of invalidity of marriage, civil union, or
substantially similar legal relationship, or legal separation,
the court is deemed to have made an adjudication of the
parentage of a child if the court acts under circumstances
that satisfy the jurisdictional requirements of Section 201 of
the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act, and the final
order:
        (1) expressly identifies a child as a "child of the
    marriage, civil union, or substantially similar legal
    relationship", "issue of the marriage, civil union, or
    substantially similar legal relationship", or uses similar
    words indicating that a party to the marriage, civil
    union, or substantially similar legal relationship is the
    parent of the child; or
        (2) provides for support of the child by the parties
    to the marriage, civil union, or substantially similar
    legal relationship, unless parentage is specifically
    disclaimed in the order.
    (d) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b) of this
Section, a determination of parentage may be a defense in a
subsequent proceeding seeking to adjudicate parentage by an
individual who was not a party to the earlier proceeding.
    (e) A party to an adjudication of parentage may challenge
the adjudication only under the laws of this State relating to
appeal, vacation of judgments, or other judicial review.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/622)
    Sec. 622. Allocation of parental responsibilities or
parenting time prohibited to persons men who conceive a child
father through sexual assault or sexual abuse.
    (a) This Section applies to a person who has been found to
be the parent father of a child under this Act and who:
        (1) has been convicted of or who has pled guilty or
    nolo contendere to a violation of Section 11-1.20
    (criminal sexual assault), Section 11-1.30 (aggravated
    criminal sexual assault), Section 11-1.40 (predatory
    criminal sexual assault of a child), Section 11-1.50
    (criminal sexual abuse), Section 11-1.60 (aggravated
    criminal sexual abuse), Section 11-11 (sexual relations
    within families), Section 12-13 (criminal sexual assault),
    Section 12-14 (aggravated criminal sexual assault),
    Section 12-14.1 (predatory criminal sexual assault of a
    child), Section 12-15 (criminal sexual abuse), or Section
    12-16 (aggravated criminal sexual abuse) of the Criminal
    Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, or a similar
    statute in another jurisdiction, for his conduct in
    paragraph (1) of this subsection in conceiving fathering
    that child; or
        (2) at a fact-finding hearing, is found by clear and
    convincing evidence to have committed an act of
    non-consensual sexual penetration for his conduct in
    fathering that child.
    (b) A person described in subsection (a) shall not be
entitled to an allocation of any parental responsibilities or
parenting time with that child without the consent of the
woman or person who gave birth to the child or the child's
mother or guardian. If the person described in subsection (a)
is also the guardian of the child, the person he does not have
the authority to consent to parenting time or the allocation
of parental responsibilities under this Section. If the woman
or person who gave birth to mother of the child is a minor, and
the person described in subsection (a) is also the parent
father or guardian of the woman or person who gave birth to the
child mother, then the person he does not have the authority to
consent to the allocation of parental responsibilities or
parenting time.
    (c) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act,
nothing in this Section shall be construed to relieve the
parent father described in subsection (a) of any support and
maintenance obligations to the child under this Act. The woman
or person who gave birth to the child or the child's mother or
guardian may decline support and maintenance obligations from
the parent father.
    (d) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the parent
father described in subsection (a) of this Section is not
entitled to any inheritance or other rights from the child
without the consent of the woman or person who gave birth to
the child or the child's mother or guardian.
    (e) Notwithstanding any provision of the Illinois Marriage
and Dissolution of Marriage Act, the parent, grandparent,
great-grandparent, or sibling of the person described in
subsection (a) of this Section does not have standing to bring
an action requesting the allocation of parental
responsibilities or parenting time with the child without the
consent of the woman or person who gave birth to the child or
the child's mother or guardian.
    (f) A petition under this Section may be filed by the woman
or person who gave birth to the child or the child's mother or
guardian either as an affirmative petition in circuit court or
as an affirmative defense in any proceeding filed by the
person described in subsection (a) of this Section regarding
the child.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16; 99-769, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/702)
    Sec. 702. Parental status of donor. A Except as provided
in this Act, a donor is not a parent of a child conceived by
means of assisted reproduction.
(Source: P.A. 99-763, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/703)
    Sec. 703. Parentage of child of assisted reproduction.
    (a) An individual who consents under this Section to
assisted reproduction with the intent to be a parent of a child
conceived by assisted reproduction is a parent of the child
Any individual who is an intended parent as defined by this Act
is the legal parent of any resulting child. If the donor and
the intended parent have been represented by independent
counsel and entered into a written legal agreement in which
the donor relinquishes all rights and responsibilities to any
resulting child, the intended parent is the parent of the
child. An agreement under this subsection shall be entered
into prior to any insemination or embryo transfer.
    (b) The consent described in subsection (a) must be either
of the following:
        (1) in a record signed before, on, or after the birth
    of the child by the woman or individual who gave birth to
    the child and by an individual who intends to be a parent
    of the child; an acknowledgment of parentage under Section
    301 is a record within the meaning of this subsection; or
        (2) in an agreement entered into before conception
    that the woman or individual who gave birth to the child
    and the individual who intends to be a parent of the child
    intended they both would be a parent of the child.
    Failure to consent as required by paragraph (1) or (2) of
subsection (b) does not preclude a court from finding consent
to parent if the individual for the first 2 years of the
child's life, including any period of temporary absence,
resided in the same household with the child and openly held
out the child as the individual's child If a person makes an
anonymous gamete donation without a designated intended parent
at the time of the gamete donation, the intended parent is the
parent of any resulting child if the anonymous donor
relinquished his or her parental rights in writing at the time
of donation. The written relinquishment shall be directed to
the entity to which the donor donated his or her gametes.
    (c) An individual who is an intended parent or the woman or
individual who gave birth to the child may bring a proceeding
for a judgment of parentage before or after the birth of the
child. If the court finds that the individual who did not give
birth consented under subsection (b) of this Section, the
court shall enter a judgment of parentage declaring the
individual to be the parent seek a court order confirming the
existence of a parent-child relationship prior to or after the
birth of a child based on compliance with subsection (a) or (b)
of this Section.
    (d) The woman or individual who will give or who gave birth
to the child or an individual who is or claims to be a parent
under this Section may commence an action before or after the
birth of a child to obtain a judgment to declare that the
intended parent or parents are the parent or parents of the
resulting child immediately on birth of the child and order
that parental rights and responsibilities vest exclusively in
the intended parent or parents immediately on birth of the
child. A judgment issued before the birth of the resulting
child takes effect on the birth of the resulting child. The
State, the Department, and the hospital where the child is or
is expected to be born are not necessary parties to an action
under this Section If the requirements of subsection (a) of
this Section are not met, or subsection (b) of this Section is
found by a court to be inapplicable, a court of competent
jurisdiction shall determine parentage based on evidence of
the parties' intent at the time of donation.
(Source: P.A. 99-763, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/704)
    Sec. 704. Withdrawal of consent of intended parent or
donor.
    (a) An intended parent or donor may withdraw consent to
assisted reproduction any time before an insemination or a
transfer that results in a pregnancy to use his or her gametes
in a writing or legal pleading with notice to the other
participants and to any clinic or health care providers
facilitating the assisted reproduction. Failure to give notice
to the clinic or health care provider does not affect a
determination of parentage under this Act.
    (b) An intended parent who withdraws consent under this
Section prior to the insemination or embryo transfer is not a
parent of any resulting child. If a donor withdraws consent to
his or her donation prior to the insemination or the
combination of gametes, the intended parent is not the parent
of any resulting child.
    If the intended parent or parents no longer wish to use any
remaining cryopreserved fertilized ovum for medical purposes,
the terms of the most recent informed consent of the intended
parent or parents executed at the fertility center or a
marital settlement agreement under a judgment of dissolution
of marriage, judgment of legal separation, or judgment of
dissolution of civil union governs the disposition of the
fertilized ovum.
(Source: P.A. 102-1117, eff. 1-13-23.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/704.5 new)
    Sec. 704.5. Disposition.
    (a) An intended parent may withdraw consent to use the
parent's gametes in a writing or legal pleading with notice to
the other participant, or clinic, if applicable, or gamete
bank, if applicable, prior to insemination or in vitro
fertilization.
    (b) If the intended parent or parents no longer agree on
the use of any cryopreserved fertilized ovum for medical
purposes, the terms of the most recent informed consent of the
intended parent or parents executed at the fertility center or
a marital settlement agreement under a judgment of dissolution
of marriage, judgment of legal separation, or judgment of
dissolution of civil union governs the disposition of the
cryopreserved fertilized ovum.
 
    (750 ILCS 46/705)
    Sec. 705. Parental status of deceased individual.
    (a) If an individual who intends to be a parent of a child
conceived by assisted reproduction dies during the period
between the transfer of a gamete or embryo and the birth of the
child, the individual's death does not preclude the
establishment of the individual's parentage of the child if
the individual otherwise would be a parent of the child under
this Act.
    (b) If an individual who consented in a record to assisted
reproduction by an individual who agreed to give birth to a
child dies before a transfer of gametes or pre-embryos, the
deceased individual is a parent of a child conceived by the
assisted reproduction only if both of the following occurred:
(i) Either the individual consented in a record that if
assisted reproduction were to occur after the death of the
individual, the individual would be a parent of the child or
the individual's intent to be a parent of a child conceived by
assisted reproduction after the individual's death is
established by clear and convincing evidence; and (ii) the
transfer of the gamete or pre-embryo transfer occurs not later
than 36 months after the individual's death If an individual
consents in a writing to be a parent of any child born of his
or her gametes posthumously, and dies before the insemination
of the individual's gametes or embryo transfer, the deceased
individual is a parent of any resulting child born within 36
months of the death of the deceased individual.
(Source: P.A. 99-763, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/707)
    Sec. 707. Burden of proof. Unless otherwise specified in
this Act, the burden of proof in an action under this Section
is by a preponderance of the evidence Parentage established
under Section 703, a withdrawal of consent under Section 704,
or a proceeding to declare the non-existence of the
parent-child relationship under Section 708 of this Act must
be proven by clear and convincing evidence.
(Source: P.A. 99-763, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/708)
    Sec. 708. Limitation on proceedings to declare the
non-existence of the parent-child relationship. An individual
who, at the time of a child's birth, is the spouse of the woman
or person who gave birth cannot bring an action to declare the
non-existence of the parent-child relationship under this
Article unless filed and served not later than 2 years from the
child's date of birth shall be barred if brought more than 2
years following the birth of the child.
(Source: P.A. 99-763, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/709)
    Sec. 709. Establishment of parentage; requirements of
Gestational Surrogacy Act.
    (a) In the event of gestational surrogacy, in addition to
the requirements of the Gestational Surrogacy Act, a
parent-child relationship is established between a person and
a child if all of the following conditions are met prior to the
birth of the child:
        (1) The gestational surrogate certifies that the
    surrogate she did not provide a gamete for the child, and
    that the surrogate she is carrying the resulting child for
    the intended parents.
        (2) The spouse, if any, of the gestational surrogate
    certifies that the spouse he or she did not provide a
    gamete for the child.
        (3) (Blank). Each intended parent, or the parent's
    legally authorized designee if an intended parent dies,
    certifies that the child being carried by the gestational
    surrogate was conceived using at least one of the intended
    parents' gametes.
        (4) A physician licensed in the location state in
    which the fertilized ovum was inseminated or transferred
    to the gestational surrogate or the licensed physician
    treating the gestational surrogate certifies that the
    fetus child being carried by the gestational surrogate was
    not conceived with the gamete of the using the gamete or
    gametes of at least one of the intended parents, and that
    neither the gestational surrogate nor the gestational
    surrogate's spouse, if any, provided gametes for the child
    being carried by the gestational surrogate and the
    intended parents meet the eligibility requirements as set
    forth in the Gestational Surrogacy Act.
        (5) The attorneys for the intended parents and the
    gestational surrogate each certify that the parties who
    entered into a gestational surrogacy agreement complied
    with intended to satisfy the requirements of the
    Gestational Surrogacy Act.
    (b) All certifications under this Section shall be in
writing and witnessed by 2 competent adults who are not the
gestational surrogate, gestational surrogate's spouse, if any,
or an intended parent. Certifications shall be on forms
prescribed by the Illinois Department of Public Health and
shall be executed prior to the birth of the child. All
certifications shall be provided, prior to the birth of the
child, to both the hospital where the gestational surrogate
anticipates the delivery will occur and to the Illinois
Department of Public Health. Certifications may be provided
electronically.
    (c) Parentage established in accordance with this Section
has the full force and effect of a judgment entered under this
Act.
    (d) The Illinois Department of Public Health shall adopt
rules to implement this Section.
(Source: P.A. 102-1117, eff. 1-13-23.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/710)
    Sec. 710. Applicability. This Article applies only to
assisted reproductive arrangements or gestational surrogacy
agreements contracts entered into after the effective date of
this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly.
(Source: P.A. 99-763, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 46/903)
    Sec. 903. Transitional provision. A proceeding to
adjudicate parentage which was commenced before the effective
date of this Act is governed by the law in effect at the time
the proceeding was commenced, except that this Act applies to
all pending actions and proceedings commenced before January
1, 2016 with respect to issues on which a judgment has not been
entered. A proceeding to adjudicate parentage that was
commenced before the effective date of this amendatory Act of
the 104th General Assembly is governed by the law in effect at
the time the proceeding was commenced.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16; 99-769, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    Section 10. The Gestational Surrogacy Act is amended by
changing Sections 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 55, 60, 70, and 75
and by adding Sections 26, 27, 36, 37, and 39 as follows:
 
    (750 ILCS 47/5)
    Sec. 5. Purpose. The purpose of this Act is to establish
consistent standards and procedural safeguards for the
protection of all parties involved in a gestational surrogacy
agreement contract in this State and to confirm the legal
status of children born as a result of these agreements
contracts. These standards and safeguards are meant to
facilitate the use of this type of reproductive contract in
accord with the public policy of this State.
(Source: P.A. 93-921, eff. 1-1-05.)
 
    (750 ILCS 47/10)
    Sec. 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
    "Compensation" means payment of any valuable consideration
for services in excess of reasonable medical and ancillary
costs.
    "Donor" means a person who provides gametes intended for
use in assisted reproduction, whether or not for compensation.
"Donor" does not include a person who is a parent under Article
7 of the Illinois Parentage Act of 2015 or an intended parent
under this Act an individual who contributes a gamete or
gametes for the purpose of in vitro fertilization or
implantation in another.
    "Gamete" means either a sperm or an egg.
    "Gestational surrogacy" means the process by which a woman
or person woman attempts to become pregnant carry and give
birth to a child conceived created through in vitro
fertilization using the gamete or gametes of at least one of
the intended parents and to which the gestational surrogate
has made no genetic contribution.
    "Gestational surrogate" means a woman or person woman who
agrees to engage in a gestational surrogacy.
    "Gestational surrogacy agreement contract" means a written
agreement regarding gestational surrogacy.
    "Health care provider" means a person who is duly licensed
to provide health care, including all medical, psychological,
or counseling professionals.
    "Intended parent" means a person person or persons who
consents to assisted reproduction, including enters into a
gestational surrogacy agreement, such that the person is a
legal contract with a gestational surrogate pursuant to which
he or she will be the legal parent of the resulting child.
"Intended In the case of a married couple, any reference to an
intended parent" includes, in the case of a married couple,
shall include both spouses husband and wife for all purposes
of this Act. This term shall include the intended mother,
intended father, or both.
    "In vitro fertilization" means all medical and laboratory
procedures that are necessary to effectuate the extracorporeal
fertilization of egg and sperm.
    "Medical evaluation" means an evaluation and consultation
of a physician meeting the requirements of Section 60.
    "Mental health evaluation" means an evaluation and
consultation of a mental health professional meeting the
requirements of Section 60.
    "Physician" means a person licensed to practice medicine
in all its branches in the state in which they practice
Illinois.
    "Pre-embryo" means a fertilized egg prior to 14 days of
development.
    "Pre-embryo transfer" means all medical and laboratory
procedures that are necessary to effectuate the transfer of a
pre-embryo into the uterine cavity.
(Source: P.A. 93-921, eff. 1-1-05.)
 
    (750 ILCS 47/15)
    Sec. 15. Rights of Parentage.
    (a) Except as provided in this Act, the woman or person
woman who gives birth to a child is a parent presumed to be the
mother of that child for purposes of State law.
    (b) In the case of a gestational surrogacy agreement that
substantially complies with satisfying the requirements set
forth in Sections 20 and 25 of this Act subsection (d) of this
Section:
        (1) the intended parent or parents mother shall be
    considered the parent or parents mother of the child for
    all purposes of State law immediately upon the birth of
    the child;
        (2) the intended father shall be the father of the
    child for purposes of State law immediately upon the birth
    of the child;
        (3) the child shall be considered the legitimate child
    of the intended parent or parents for purposes of State
    law immediately upon the birth of the child;
        (4) parental rights shall vest in the intended parent
    or parents immediately upon the birth of the child;
        (5) sole custody of the child shall rest with the
    intended parent or parents immediately upon the birth of
    the child; and
        (2) (6) neither the gestational surrogate nor the
    surrogate's spouse her husband, if any, shall be
    considered the parents of the child for purposes of State
    law immediately upon the birth of the child.
    (c) In the case of a gestational surrogacy agreement
meeting the requirements set forth in subsection (d) of this
Section, in the event of a laboratory error in which the
resulting child is not genetically related to either of the
intended parents or a donor who donated to the intended parent
or parents, the intended parents will be the parents of the
child for all purposes of State law unless otherwise
determined by a court of competent jurisdiction.
    (d) (Blank). The parties to a gestational surrogacy shall
assume the rights and obligations of subsections (b) and (c)
of this Section if:
        (1) the gestational surrogate satisfies the
    eligibility requirements set forth in subsection (a) of
    Section 20;
        (2) the intended parent or parents satisfy the
    eligibility requirements set forth in subsection (b) of
    Section 20; and
        (3) the gestational surrogacy occurs pursuant to a
    gestational surrogacy contract meeting the requirements
    set forth in Section 25.
(Source: P.A. 93-921, eff. 1-1-05.)
 
    (750 ILCS 47/20)
    Sec. 20. Eligibility.
    (a) A gestational surrogate shall be deemed to have
satisfied the eligibility requirements of this Act if, she has
met the following requirements at the time the gestational
surrogacy agreement contract is executed, the gestational
surrogate:
        (1) she is at least 21 years of age;
        (2) she has given birth to at least one child;
        (3) she has completed a medical evaluation;
        (4) she has completed a mental health evaluation;
        (5) she has had and will have ongoing legal
    representation by independent counsel, licensed in
    Illinois and chosen by the surrogate, throughout the
    course of the gestational surrogacy arrangement regarding
    the terms undergone legal consultation with independent
    legal counsel regarding the terms of the gestational
    surrogacy contract and the potential legal consequences of
    the gestational surrogacy agreement and the potential
    consequences of the gestational surrogacy; and
        (6) she has obtained a health insurance policy that
    covers major medical treatments and hospitalization and
    the health insurance policy has a term that extends
    throughout the duration of the expected pregnancy and for
    8 weeks after the birth of the child; provided, however,
    that the policy may be procured by the intended parents on
    behalf of the gestational surrogate pursuant to the
    gestational surrogacy agreement contract.
    (b) The intended parent or parents shall be deemed to have
satisfied the eligibility requirements of this Act if, he,
she, or they have met the following requirements at the time
the gestational surrogacy agreement contract is executed, the
intended parent or parents:
        (1) is at least 21 years of age he, she, or they
    contribute at least one of the gametes resulting in a
    pre-embryo that the gestational surrogate will attempt to
    carry to term;
        (2) are experiencing infertility as defined in
    subsection (c) of Section 356m of the Illinois Insurance
    Code he, she, or they have a medical need for the
    gestational surrogacy as evidenced by a qualified
    physician's affidavit attached to the gestational
    surrogacy contract and as required by the Illinois
    Parentage Act of 2015;
        (3) he, she, or they have completed a mental health
    evaluation; and
        (4) has had and will have ongoing he, she, or they have
    undergone legal representation by consultation with
    independent legal counsel, licensed in Illinois,
    throughout the course of the gestational surrogacy
    arrangement regarding the terms of the gestational
    surrogacy agreement contract and the potential legal
    consequences of the gestational surrogacy.
(Source: P.A. 99-763, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 47/25)
    Sec. 25. Requirements for a gestational surrogacy
agreement contract.
    (a) (Blank). A gestational surrogacy contract shall be
presumed enforceable for purposes of State law only if:
        (1) it meets the contractual requirements set forth in
    subsection (b) of this Section; and
        (2) it contains at a minimum each of the terms set
    forth in subsection (c) of this Section.
    (b) A gestational surrogacy agreement contract shall meet
the following requirements:
        (1) it shall be in writing;
        (2) it shall be executed prior to the commencement of
    any medical procedures (other than medical or mental
    health evaluations necessary to determine eligibility of
    the parties pursuant to Section 20 of this Act) in
    furtherance of the gestational surrogacy:
            (i) by a gestational surrogate meeting the
        eligibility requirements of subsection (a) of Section
        20 of this Act and, if married, the gestational
        surrogate's spouse husband; and
            (ii) by the intended parent or parents meeting the
        eligibility requirements of subsection (b) of Section
        20 of this Act. In the event an intended parent is
        married, both the intended parent and spouse husband
        and wife must execute the gestational surrogacy
        agreement contract;
        (3) each of the gestational surrogate and the intended
    parent or parents shall have been represented by
    independent legal counsel licensed in Illinois regarding
    the terms of the gestational surrogacy agreement and the
    potential legal consequences of the gestational surrogacy
    separate counsel in all matters concerning the gestational
    surrogacy and the gestational surrogacy contract;
        (3.5) it shall indicate each of the gestational
    surrogate and the intended parent or parents shall have
    signed a written acknowledgement that each party has he or
    she received information about the legal, financial, and
    contractual rights, expectations, penalties, and
    obligations of the surrogacy agreement;
        (4) it shall require the intended parent or parents to
    pay for independent legal representation for the
    surrogate;
        (5) if the gestational surrogacy agreement contract
    provides for the payment of compensation to the
    gestational surrogate, the compensation shall have been
    placed in escrow with an independent escrow agent that is
    independent of and is not affiliated with either the
    intended parents' attorney or the gestational surrogate's
    attorney prior to the gestational surrogate's commencement
    of any medical procedure (other than medical or mental
    health evaluations necessary to determine the gestational
    surrogate's eligibility pursuant to subsection (a) of
    Section 20 of this Act); and
        (6) (5) it shall be witnessed by 2 competent adults or
    shall be notarized consistent with Illinois law.
    (b-5) A gestational surrogacy agreement may provide for
the payment of compensation and reasonable expenses.
    (c) A gestational surrogacy agreement contract shall
provide for:
        (1) the express written agreement of the gestational
    surrogate to:
            (i) undergo pre-embryo transfer and attempt to
        become pregnant carry and give birth to the child; and
            (ii) surrender custody of the child to the
        intended parent or parents immediately upon the birth
        of the child;
        (2) if the gestational surrogate is married, the
    express agreement of the gestational surrogate's spouse
    her husband to:
            (i) undertake the obligations imposed on the
        gestational surrogate pursuant to the terms of the
        gestational surrogacy agreement contract;
            (ii) surrender custody of the child to the
        intended parent or parents immediately upon the birth
        of the child;
        (3) the right of the gestational surrogate to utilize
    the services of a physician of the gestational surrogate's
    her choosing, after consultation with the intended
    parents, to provide the gestational surrogate with her
    care during the pregnancy; and
        (4) the express written agreement of the intended
    parent or parents to:
            (i) accept custody of the child immediately upon
        the child's his or her birth; and
            (ii) assume sole responsibility for the support of
        the child immediately upon the child's his or her
        birth; .
        (5) the right of the gestational surrogate to make all
    health and welfare decisions regarding the surrogate and
    the pregnancy, except that this Act does not enlarge or
    diminish the surrogate's right to terminate their
    pregnancy, and any written or oral agreement purporting to
    waive or limit these rights shall be void as against
    public policy;
        (6) the disclosure of all intended parent's financial
    obligations with regard to the gestational surrogate,
    including compensation and expenses; and
        (7) the inclusion of information about each party's
    right under this Act to terminate the surrogacy agreement.
    (d) (Blank). A gestational surrogacy contract shall be
presumed enforceable for purposes of State law even though it
contains one or more of the following provisions:
        (1) the gestational surrogate's agreement to undergo
    all medical exams, treatments, and fetal monitoring
    procedures that the physician recommended for the success
    of the pregnancy;
        (2) the gestational surrogate's agreement to abstain
    from any activities that the intended parent or parents or
    the physician reasonably believes to be harmful to the
    pregnancy and future health of the child, including,
    without limitation, smoking, drinking alcohol, using
    nonprescribed drugs, using prescription drugs not
    authorized by a physician aware of the gestational
    surrogate's pregnancy, exposure to radiation, or any other
    activities proscribed by a health care provider;
        (3) the agreement of the intended parent or parents to
    pay the gestational surrogate reasonable compensation; and
        (4) the agreement of the intended parent or parents to
    pay for or reimburse the gestational surrogate for
    reasonable expenses (including, without limitation,
    medical, legal, or other professional expenses) related to
    the gestational surrogacy and the gestational surrogacy
    contract.
    (e) (Blank). In the event that any of the requirements of
this Section are not met, a court of competent jurisdiction
shall determine parentage based on evidence of the parties'
intent.
(Source: P.A. 93-921, eff. 1-1-05.)
 
    (750 ILCS 47/26 new)
    Sec. 26. Effect of subsequent change of marital status.
    (a) Unless a gestational surrogacy agreement expressly
provides otherwise, both of the following apply:
        (1) The marriage of a surrogate after the surrogacy
    agreement is signed by all parties does not affect the
    validity of the agreement, the spouse's consent to the
    agreement is not required, and the spouse is not a
    presumed parent of a child conceived by assisted
    reproduction under the agreement.
        (2) The dissolution, annulment, or declaration of
    invalidity of the surrogate's marriage, the legal
    separation of the surrogate, or a judgment of separate
    maintenance concerning the surrogate after the surrogacy
    contract is signed by all parties does not affect the
    validity of the agreement.
        (3) Unless a surrogacy agreement expressly provides
    otherwise, both of the following apply:
            (A) The marriage of an intended parent after the
        surrogacy agreement is signed by all parties does not
        affect the validity of a surrogacy agreement, the
        consent of the spouse is not required, and the spouse
        is not, based on the agreement, a parent of a child
        conceived by assisted reproduction under the
        agreement.
            (B) The dissolution, annulment, or declaration of
        invalidity of an intended parent's marriage, the legal
        separation of an intended parent, or a judgment of
        separate maintenance concerning an intended parent
        after the agreement is signed by all parties does not
        affect the validity of the agreement and, except as
        otherwise provided in Section 36, the intended parent
        is a parent of the child.
 
    (750 ILCS 47/27 new)
    Sec. 27. Termination.
    (a) A party to a gestational surrogacy agreement may
terminate the agreement at any time before an embryo transfer
by giving notice of termination in a record to all other
parties. If an embryo transfer does not result in a pregnancy,
a party may terminate the agreement at any time before a
subsequent embryo transfer.
    (b) Unless a gestational surrogacy agreement provides
otherwise, on termination of the agreement under subsection
(a), the parties are released from the agreement, except that
each intended parent remains responsible for expenses that are
contemplated under the agreement and incurred by the
gestational surrogate through the date of termination of the
surrogacy agreement or as otherwise agreed to in the
gestational surrogacy agreement.
    (c) Unless there is fraud, a party is not liable to any
other party for a penalty or liquidated damages for
terminating a gestational surrogacy agreement under this
Section.
 
    (750 ILCS 47/30)
    Sec. 30. Duty to support.
    (a) Any person who is a considered to be the parent of a
child pursuant to Section 15 of this Act shall be obligated to
support the child.
    (b) The breach of the gestational surrogacy agreement
contract by the intended parent or parents shall not relieve
such intended parent or parents of the support obligations
imposed by this Act.
    (c) A gamete donor may be liable for child support only if
he or she fails to enter into a legal agreement with the
intended parent or parents in which the intended parent or
parents agree to assume all rights and responsibilities for
any resulting child, and the gamete donor relinquishes his or
her rights to any gametes, resulting embryos, or children.
(Source: P.A. 93-921, eff. 1-1-05.)
 
    (750 ILCS 47/35)
    Sec. 35. Establishment of parentage the parent-child
relationship.
    (a) In the event of gestational surrogacy, in addition to
the requirements of the Articles 2 and 3 of the Illinois
Parentage Act of 2015, a parent-child relationship is
established by operation of law, upon birth of the child,
between a person and a child if all of the following conditions
are met:
        (1) Each intended parent certifies compliance with the
    eligibility requirements of Section 20.
        (2) The gestational surrogate certifies compliance
    with the eligibility requirements of Section 20 and did
    not provide a gamete for the child, and that the
    gestational surrogate is carrying the resulting child for
    the intended parents.
        (3) A physician licensed in the state in which the
    pre-embryo was transferred to the gestational surrogate
    certifies that the pre-embryo that was transferred to the
    gestational surrogate was not formed with the gamete of
    the gestational surrogate.
        (4) The attorneys for the intended parent or parents
    and the gestational surrogate and spouse, if any, each
    certify that the parties substantially satisfied the
    requirements of Section 25 of this Act For purposes of the
    Illinois Parentage Act of 2015, a parent-child
    relationship shall be established prior to the birth of a
    child born through gestational surrogacy if, in addition
    to satisfying the requirements of Articles 2 and 3 of the
    Illinois Parentage Act of 2015, the attorneys representing
    both the gestational surrogate and the intended parent or
    parents certify that the parties entered into a
    gestational surrogacy contract intended to satisfy the
    requirements of Section 25 of this Act with respect to the
    child.
    (b) All certifications under this Section shall be in
writing and witnessed by 2 competent adults who are not the
gestational surrogate, gestational surrogate's spouse, if any,
or an intended parent. Certifications shall be on forms
prescribed by the Illinois Department of Public Health and
shall be executed before the birth of the child. All
certifications shall be provided, before the birth of the
child, to both the hospital where the gestational surrogate
anticipates the delivery will occur and to the Illinois
Department of Public Health The attorneys' certifications
required by subsection (a) of this Section shall be filed on
forms prescribed by the Illinois Department of Public Health
and in a manner consistent with the requirement of the
Illinois Parentage Act of 2015.
    (c) Parentage established in accordance with this Section
has the full force and effect of a judgment entered under this
Act.
    (d) The Illinois Department of Public Health shall adopt
rules to implement this Section.
(Source: P.A. 99-85, eff. 1-1-16.)
 
    (750 ILCS 47/36 new)
    Sec. 36. Establishment of parentage with a substantially
compliant agreement.
    (a) A gestational surrogacy agreement that substantially
complies with this Act is enforceable.
    (b)(1) Before, on, or after the birth of a child conceived
by assisted reproduction under a gestational surrogacy
agreement substantially compliant with this Act, a party to
the agreement may commence an action in the circuit court for
entry of a parentage judgment. The requested parentage
judgment may be issued before or after the child's birth as
requested by the parties. Either the gestational surrogate or
the intended parent may bring the action. If the action is
brought prior to all certifications required by Section 35
being filed, all parties must receive notice of such action.
    (2) A petition shall include: (A) a copy of the executed
gestational surrogacy agreement; (B) the certification of the
assisted reproduction physician under Section 35; and (C)
certifications from the attorneys representing the intended
parent or parents and the gestational surrogate and spouse (if
any) under Section 35. A petition supported by such
certifications shall be sufficient to establish parentage and
a hearing shall not be required unless the court requires
additional information which cannot reasonably be ascertained
without a hearing.
    (3) Upon a finding by a preponderance of the evidence that
the petition satisfies paragraph (2) of subsection (b), a
court shall no later than 30 days from the filing of the
petition, issue a judgment of parentage.
    (4) The court shall issue a judgment:
        (A) declaring that each intended parent is a parent of
    the child and ordering that parental rights and duties
    vest immediately upon the birth of the child exclusively
    in each intended parent;
        (B) declaring that the gestational surrogate and the
    surrogate's spouse or former spouse, if any, are not the
    parents of the child;
        (C) if necessary, ordering that the hospital where the
    child will be or has been born, treat the intended parent
    or parents as the sole legal parent or parents for all
    purposes;
        (D) designating the content of the birth record and
    directing the Department of Public Health to designate
    each intended parent as a parent of the child, if such
    record has not yet been established or needs to be
    amended;
        (E) if necessary, ordering that the child be
    surrendered to the intended parent or parents; and
        (F) for other relief the court determines proper.
    (5) To protect the privacy of the child and the parties,
all records related to such action shall be impounded.
    (6) The Department of Public Health, the town or city
clerk, and the hospital where the child is born or is intended
to be born shall not be necessary parties to a proceeding.
    (7) Parentage judgments issued under this Section shall
conclusively establish the parent-child relationship for all
purposes.
 
    (750 ILCS 47/37 new)
    Sec. 37. Parentage and substantial noncompliance.
    (a) If a gestational surrogacy agreement does not
substantially comply with the requirements of this Act:
        (1) The court shall determine the rights and duties of
    the parties to the agreement consistent with the intent of
    the parties at the time of execution, taking into account
    the best interests of the child.
        (2) Each party to the surrogacy agreement and any
    individual who at the time of the execution of the
    agreement was a spouse of a party to the agreement has
    standing to maintain an action to adjudicate an issue
    related to the enforcement of the agreement. Any party to
    the agreement not joining in the action shall be provided
    with notice of the proceeding.
 
    (750 ILCS 47/39 new)
    Sec. 39. Jurisdiction and venue. Any judicial proceeding
under the Gestational Surrogacy Act is subject to the
jurisdiction and venue provisions set forth in Sections 603
and 604 of the Illinois Parentage Act of 2015.
 
    (750 ILCS 47/55)
    Sec. 55. Damages.
    (a) Except as expressly provided in the gestational
surrogacy agreement or in subsection (b), if the agreement is
breached by the gestational surrogate or one or more intended
parents, the non-breaching party is entitled to the remedies
available at law or in equity contract, the intended parent or
parents shall be entitled to all remedies available at law or
equity.
    (b) The breach of the gestational surrogacy agreement by
one or more intended parents does not relieve the intended
parent of the support obligations imposed by the parent and
child relationship under this Act Except as expressly provided
in the gestational surrogacy contract, the gestational
surrogate shall be entitled to all remedies available at law
or equity.
    (c) Specific performance is not a remedy available for
breach by a gestational surrogate of provision in the
agreement that the gestational surrogate be impregnated,
terminate a pregnancy, or submit to medical procedures.
    (d) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (c), if an
intended parent is determined to be a parent of the child,
specific performance is a remedy available for either of the
following:
        (1) Breach of the gestational surrogacy agreement by a
    gestational surrogate that prevents an intended parent
    from exercising the full rights of parentage immediately
    upon birth of the child.
        (2) Breach of the gestational surrogacy agreement by
    an intended parent that prevents the intended parent's
    acceptance of the duties of parentage immediately upon
    birth of the child.
(Source: P.A. 93-921, eff. 1-1-05.)
 
    (750 ILCS 47/60)
    Sec. 60. Rulemaking. The Department of Public Health may
adopt rules pertaining to the required medical and mental
health evaluations for a gestational surrogacy agreement
contract. Until the Department of Public Health adopts such
rules, medical and mental health evaluations and procedures
shall be conducted in accordance with the recommended
guidelines published by the American Society for Reproductive
Medicine and the American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists. The rules may adopt these guidelines or others
by reference.
(Source: P.A. 93-921, eff. 1-1-05.)
 
    (750 ILCS 47/70)
    Sec. 70. Irrevocability. No action to invalidate a
gestational surrogacy meeting the requirements of subsection
(d) of Section 20 and Section 25 15 of this Act or to challenge
the rights of parentage established pursuant to the
Gestational Surrogacy Act Section 15 of this Act and the
Illinois Parentage Act of 2015 shall be commenced after 12
months from the date of birth of the child.
(Source: P.A. 99-763, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
    (750 ILCS 47/75)
    Sec. 75. Application. The provisions of this Act shall
apply only to gestational surrogacy agreements contracts
entered into after the effective date of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 93-921, eff. 1-1-05.)
 
    Section 15. The Adoption Act is amended by adding Section
21.1 as follows:
 
    (750 ILCS 50/21.1 new)
    Sec. 21.1. Confirmatory adoption for children born through
assisted reproduction.
    (a) As used in this Section, the following words and terms
shall have the following meanings unless the context shall
clearly indicate another or different meaning or intent:
    "Assisted reproduction" means the definition provided in
the Illinois Parentage Act of 2015.
    "Marriage" means and includes civil union and any legal
relationship that provides substantially the same rights,
benefits, and responsibilities as marriage and is recognized
as valid in the state or jurisdiction in which it was entered.
    "Petitioner" means the person filing a petition for
adoption in accordance with this Section.
    (b) A petition for adoption may be filed in accordance
with this Section if a child is born (1) as a result of
assisted reproduction involving a donor in compliance with
Article 7; or (2) as a result of an arrangement in substantial
compliance with the Gestational Surrogacy Act and the
pleadings provide relevant documentation regarding compliance
or substantial compliance.
    (c) The court may proceed in accordance with this Section
under other circumstances not outlined in subsection (b) in
its discretion.
    (d) A complete petition shall be comprised of the
following:
        (1) the petition for adoption signed by each
    petitioner;
        (2) a copy of the petitioners' marriage certificate,
    if petitioners are married;
        (3) a declaration by the petitioners explaining the
    circumstances of the child's birth through assisted
    reproduction, attesting to their consent to assisted
    reproduction, and medical or other documentation relating
    to the assisted reproduction regarding procurement of
    donor gamete(s) or medical procedures resulting in the
    pregnancy and birth of the child; and
        (4) a copy of the child's birth certificate.
    (e) A complete petition for adoption, as described in
subsection (c) of this Section, shall serve as the
petitioners' written consents to adoption, and no additional
consent or notice shall be required. The petition shall be
verified by the petitioners.
    (f) If the petitioners conceived through assisted
reproduction with donor gamete or donor embryo under Article 7
of the Illinois Parentage Act of 2015, the court shall not
require notice of the adoption to the donor.
    (g) Unless otherwise ordered by the court for good cause
shown and supported by written findings, for purposes of
evaluating and granting a petition for adoption under this
Section, the court may not require any of the following:
        (1) an in-person hearing or appearance;
        (2) an investigation or home study by, notice to, or
    approval of the Department of Children and Family
    Services;
        (3) appointment of a guardian ad litem;
        (4) a criminal background check; or
        (5) a minimum residency period in the home of the
    petitioners.
    (h) The court shall grant the adoption under this Section
and issue a decree of adoption within 30 days or as soon as is
possible after the petition has been filed if it finds:
        (1) the child was born through assisted reproduction;
        (2) each intended parent consented to the assisted
    reproduction as evidenced by the parent's signature to the
    petition; and
        (3) there are no competing claims of parentage.
    (i) A petition to adopt pursuant to this Section, when a
petitioner's parentage is presumed or legally recognized under
Illinois law, must not be denied on the basis that the
petitioner's parentage is already presumed or legally
recognized.
    (j) Effect on other laws. When parentage is presumed or
legally recognized under Illinois law, it may not be
considered as evidence of parentage or evidence of the best
interests of the child in any manner that the parties did not
petition for adoption under this Section.
    (k) For purposes of a confirmatory adoption, jurisdiction
and venue is governed by Section 603 of the Illinois Parentage
Act of 2015 or the Adoption Act.
    (l) The confidentiality provisions in Section 18 apply to
this Section.
 
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
becoming law, except that the changes to Sections 301, 302,
303, and 305 of the Illinois Parentage Act of 2015 take effect
on January 1, 2026.