What to expect when placing your child for adoption
We know adoption is a big decision. That is why Catholic Charities Pregnancy and Adoption Support promises to advocate for you and protect you every step of the process. You can also rest assured that our services our free of charge, coming at no cost or obligation to you. If you are pregnant and uncertain you are ready or willing to be a parent, or if you need help, feel free to call or text one of our friendly, certified counselors at Catholic Charities Pregnancy and Adoption Support anytime, 24/7 at (703) 973-0129 and learn more about the help that is available to you.
If you are pregnant and considering adoption, we can help.
Prior to pursing adoption, you can meet with one of our professional pregnancy counselors to evaluate your options and determine your goals for yourself and your child.
Our counselors will be with you every step of the way, to advocate for you to empower you in your role as a parent or birth parent. Pregnancy support is provided via phone, text and in person meetings throughout pregnancy and the level of support and involvement is totally up to you.
As a licensed child placing agency, we can match you with adoptive families that are well educated in adoption, financially stable, and willing to have an open adoption with you if you desire.
What kind of support can I receive?
If you decide to make an adoption plan with Catholic Charities Pregnancy and Adoption Support, you may be eligible for additional support. We know how stressful making this decision can be and will strive to assist in providing you with the stability you need to make a well thought out and informed decision. This assistance may include:
- Housing Assistance
- Prenatal/Medical Care Coverage
- Transportation Assistance
- Support and adoption education for family and friends (optional and as needed)
- Other supports/referrals/services that are identified as areas of need
Benefits to choosing adoption
There are many positive outcomes for those who choose to make an adoption plan when faced with an unplanned pregnancy. These positive outcomes strongly depend on if you are working with a quality adoption provider who will help you make a clear, well thought out decision rather than rushing to choose adoption as a quick fix.
Parents who choose adoption are more likely to:
- finish school and obtain higher education
- attain financial stability and better employment
- less likely to experience another unplanned pregnancy
- attain more overall stability and emotional health (through pre and post counseling and support services)
- maintain an ongoing role in their child’s life, if they choose to
- report feeling at peace and content with their decision to place
A quality adoption provider will also have approved adoptive parents who have learned and demonstrated their ability to assume the role of as adoptive parents so that they can give a child the best possible opportunities.


Children who are adopted at birth or in early infancy:
- Are less likely to engage in high risk behavior
- Establish strong and lasting parent-child relationships with their adoptive parents
- Show no difference in emotional, physical, mental, behavioral or developmental functioning compared to non-adopted peers
- Report feelings of connection and belonging within their families and communities
Working with a quality adoption provider ensures that you, the adoptive parents and your child receive the support and services that are necessary to create healthy adoptions.
How to put your baby up for adoption:
Steps for making an adoption plan
- Contact us to speak with a. pregnancy counselor at any time. (Call or text 703-973-0129)
- Meet with a pregnancy counselor at a time and place convenient for you.
- Your counselor will work with you to:
- Discuss your pregnancy options
- Assess your needs (housing, employment, legal status, prenatal care, childcare, etc).
- Develop a plan to pursue your options and meet your needs
- Your counselor will work with you to:
- Options Counseling and Making a Plan:
- You may not be certain if you want to parent or make an adoption plan and that is very normal. Part of our job is to help you evaluate your options and choose the path that is best for you. Take some time to learn more about the options available to you, explore resources that can help you, and talk to someone about your situation.
- Evaluating Additional Assistance Needed
- If you decide that you are leaning towards making an adoption plan, you will have ongoing contact with your pregnancy counselor via in person, text, phone, etc. to be sure you have what you need to be successful and that you have support.
- When considering adoption, we will work with you to determine what supports are needed to help stabilize your current situation. Clients who are making an adoption plan may be eligible for additional supports to assist in overall stability and to minimize their stress so that they may make a well thought out and informed decision. This assistance may include:
- Housing Assistance
- Prenatal/Medical Care Coverage
- Transportation Assistance
- Support and adoption education for family and friends (optional and as needed)
- Other supports/referrals/services that are identified as areas of need
- Making the Adoption Plan
- Your pregnancy counselor will work with you to make your adoption plan which includes picking the adoptive family and deciding the level of openness you would like to have in your adoption. If you would like to, you will meet the adoptive family as many times as you’d like prior to the birth of the baby.
- You will also decide how much contact you want with them after you place the baby with them. Openness in adoption ranges and is something your worker can discuss with you in more detail so you can make the adoption plan that works best for you.
- Birth of baby and placement
- Your worker will help you to make a birth plan and arrangements for your baby’s delivery so that you are prepared when the time comes. You will decide how much time you’d like to spend with the baby in the hospital, who you would like to come visit you and the baby and when the baby will be placed with the adoptive family.
- Lifetime of support:
- At Catholic Charities, we recognize that adoption is a lifelong journey, which is why we remain a lifelong resource to our clients. Your pregnancy worker will continue to provide counseling and support after placement, especially during that first year. You will be invited to attend our monthly birth parent support groups and annual events. Your worker will help you identify your personal goals and provide assistance and referrals to partner organizations who can help you accomplish your goals.
Why adoption doesn’t mean “giving up” your baby
If you are considering adoption for your baby, you are making a choice about what you believe is best. You choose the family, the type of adoption and the level of openness.
Adoption is never giving up, but you do give. You give life to your child. You give them opportunities that you may not be able to provide. You give them the gift of your love for their whole life. You give an adoptive family the child they have longed for.
You give yourself opportunities to pursue your own goals and dreams that may not be possible if you choose to parent. You give yourself peace in knowing that while abortion may have been an option, you knew that this world is better because your child is in it. In working with our agency, you give yourself opportunities for counseling, for resources, and for transformation and growth, for a lifetime.
An adoptive family gives your baby love, stability and opportunities they may not otherwise have. They give you love and acceptance. They give your child the truth about their adoption- that your sacrifice was made in love. They give you involvement with them and your child.
In adoption, so much is given but you never give up.
Frequently Asked Questions from Expectant Mothers about Adoption
We have been providing pregnancy and adoption services in VA since 1947. Adoption has changed so much and our program continues to grow and adjust to the needs of those we serve. Our staff is available 24/7 to assist you as you consider your options. We will meet you at times and locations that are easiest for you.
Working with a respected adoption agency ensures that you are provided accurate information about the adoption process and your rights. You want to work with an agency who values you, who advocates for you and who connects you with supports to help with your pregnancy but also to help with other areas of your life that you may need support in. It is important to us that whatever decision you make regarding your pregnancy, that you’ve been able to talk through all options available to you and make the best plan for you and your baby. Only you know what’s best, we will never pressure you or tell you what to do- we will walk with you.
We know adoption is a lifelong journey which is why we are a lifetime resource to our birth parents. We host monthly birth mother support groups which are Lifetime Healing LLC certified. We host annual events for birth mothers to celebrate and honor them and so they can connect with other birth mothers.
Your worker will meet with you to discuss what your needs are and how we can provide support for you. Every circumstance is different and we will work with you to make a plan that works best for you. We can help with housing, prenatal care, medical expenses, transportation, and other needs*. One of the great things about working with us is that we have many other programs at Catholic Charities that can meet non-pregnancy needs such as GED/ESL and professional development classes, Immigration Legal Assistance, job assistance, transitional housing, food bank donations and other programs that we can connect you with. Any assistance or support provided is done in order to help stabilize your situation so that you can make a well thought out and informed decision regarding your adoption plan.
*eligibility varies- to get more information about what assistance you may qualify for, speak with a pregnancy counselor
Once you have decided that you want to make an adoption plan, your worker will help you to determine the type of family that you desire to place your child with. You will have the opportunity to consider several adoptive families. Once you select one that you’d like to meet or talk to, you and your worker will make those arrangements. Our adoptive families would love to speak with you, answer any questions you have, and to meet with you. We would encourage you to meet the family prior to the adoption and your worker will be there to support you through that. Depending on your wishes, you may choose to get together with the adoptive family frequently prior to the birth of your baby.
You can talk with your worker about the hospital plan you want to make for the birth of your baby. If you would like us to be there with you during the delivery, or right after, we are there for you. You may decide to have the baby stay with you in the hospital, or you may decide to have the adoptive family at the hospital with you and with the baby. Your worker will help you to make arrangements at the hospital and make sure that your wishes are respected.
If you make an adoption plan, you are not obligated to follow through with that plan after the baby is born. You may only sign legal adoption paperwork after the baby is born. In VA, you have 7-10 days (depending on the circumstances) to revoke your agreement. Your worker will inform you, and give you documentation, regarding your legal rights.
It is OK if you are not sure who the father of your baby is or how to contact him. Your worker will talk through your specific circumstances with you and explain how to best proceed based on the adoption laws in VA. The most important thing is that you be honest with your worker so that we can best support you in the process.
We work with many pregnant women and their partners or previous partners are not in agreement with the adoption plan. For information on your specific circumstance, please talk to one of our pregnancy counselors.
Research shows that children who are adopted are just as healthy and well-adjusted as non-adopted children. Our adoptive parents are committed to raising their children to have a healthy and positive understanding of their adoption story, which is healthier for everyone- you, the adoptive parents and most of all, the child. Your child will know that they were adopted because you loved him/her.
In Virginia, any adoptive family must have completed background checks, home visits, social worker interviews and reference checks. Families complete trainings to best prepare them for being an adoptive parent. Our parents understand how important it is for adopted children to understand that they were placed for adoption because their birth mother loved them so much and wanted what was best for him or her. All of our families are interested in having an open adoption.
We are still involved after you place your child for adoption. We conduct home visits to ensure that baby and the family are doing well. Our parents are required to take at least 3 months off to be home with the baby after placement. We are a lifetime resource to the family and your child as well as to you!
Many woman who make adoption plans are parenting other children. This is often why you might consider adoption, you aren’t sure that you could continue to give your children the love and attention they deserve with the addition of a baby. There are books and videos you can share with them that help them to understand adoption. Your children will understand that this is a good choice for your family and that you are choosing to share this child with a family who can’t have children of their own. Your children (current or future) can also have contact with your birth child throughout his/her life. You decide how involved they can be through pictures, letters and participate in visits. Your adoption worker can help you to figure out the best way to support your children during this process and after the adoption.
Some woman contact us wondering “Can I give up my baby for adoption at the hospital?” or “can I make an adoption plan for a baby I already had?”. The answer to both of these questions is- yes. We understand that everyone is at a different point in their journey and we are here to help. We can come to the hospital to answer questions and provide support. If your baby has already been born, we can talk with you about your options and we can offer temporary foster care if you need time to consider your decision. You do not sign adoption paperwork until after the child is born and are under no obligation to sign paperwork if you change your mind after the baby has been born. The more time we have to work with you before the baby is born, the more prepared you will be to make this decision so we do encourage you to speak with a pregnancy counselor soon.
There are many reasons why someone might choose adoption for their child that are based on each individual persons circumstances, their values, goals and experiences.
Some reasons that birth mothers decide that adoption is the best option for them and their child are:
- She isn’t ready to be a mother or she does not want to be a mother right now.
- She can’t afford a (or another) child: Children are expensive and when you decide to parent a baby, you must be prepared to assume all financial responsibility for that child. Especially in Northern Virginia and surrounding areas, the cost of rent, daycare and transportation is especially high. Expecting parents are wise to consider their ability to meet the needs of the child and make a plan that is best for them and their baby.
- Difficult Personal Challenges: Some expectant parents know that they can’t be the type of parent that they want to be to their child because of situations that cannot quickly be fixed. Mental health struggles, addiction, or criminal activity that has resulted in current or pending incarceration may be reasons that adoption is considered. Some expectant parents are currently involved with the Child Protective Services or Foster Care systems and want to avoid exposing their baby to the uncertainty of foster care and make a plan that they can have more control over.
- Special Needs of the Baby: Some expectant parents know that their child will have medical or physical special needs that they do not feel that they can meet. There are always families that will be overjoyed to adopt a child and we can work with expectant parents on making a special needs adoption plan their baby.
- She wants her child to have stability
- Relationship with the father: Some expectant mom’s aren’t sure who the father of their child is and have no interest in trying to co parent and seek financial support from someone they don’t know. Some adoptions occur because the birth mother is in a relationship with someone other than the baby’s father. Another common circumstance is that the expectant parents do not have a good relationship and do not want to be forever tied to one another by sharing a child. Whatever the relationship with the father is- if it is unhealthy, unsafe, or unstable it will be a difficult circumstance to bring a child into.
- She was raped and got pregnant as a result
- She has considered abortion and parenting and neither are options she wants to choose
- She is empowered to take control of her situation and pursue her own career, educational or personal goals
- She already knows people who have placed a child for adoption, have been adopted or who have adopted and has seen how wonderful adoption can be
- She wants to help a couple who cannot have children complete their family
- She wants her baby to have an involved father and positive male role model
- She wants what is best for her child
We recommend talking with one of our pregnancy counselors about the reasons that you might consider adoption and decide if you are ready to proceed with making an adoption plan. Remember that you are not under any obligation to choose adoption. We want you to be sure in the plan that you make for your life and feel confident in that decision, whatever it may be
More Adoption Resources
For Prospective Adoptive Families
For new families interested in learning more about our adoption programs and home study process. The prospective adoptive family needs to reside within the Diocese of Arlington.
For Birth Parents
We host a monthly support group open to any birth mother residing within the Diocese of Arlington.
For Adoptive Families
Check out our highly recommended resources.
For Adoptees
If you were adopted through Catholic Charities Diocese of Arlington and need support, resources or would like to get information about your adoption record we are here to help.