OPINION
MATTHEWS, Chief Justice.The question presented is whether the trial court should have enjoined a divorced mother from changing the surname of her child without following statutory change of name standards. In accordance with the weight of authority in other jurisdictions we conclude that the statute should be followed and that the mother should be enjoined from informally changing the child’s name.
Gustavo Acevedo and Denise Liberty were divorced in 1991. They have one child, Amanda Acevedo, born in June 1989. Denise was awarded custody of Amanda and Gustavo was granted reasonable visitation rights. The divorce decree provided that Denise could “continue or resume” use of her maiden name, Liberty. Denise married Mike Burley in 1993 and took his surname.
Denise registered Amanda for first grade in 1995 as Amanda Burley. Gustavo objected and asked Denise to reregister Amanda under her legal name. When Denise took no action, Gustavo filed a motion requesting an order that “Amanda’s proper name be used in all circumstances legally and personally.” Denise opposed the motion. She contended that Amanda’s legal name “is still Amanda Denise Ardene Acevedo” but that, “as a practical matter, Amanda prefers to identify herself as Amanda Burley in order to use the same last name as her mother with whom she lives.” In reply, Gustavo contended that Denise’s objective was a de facto change of Amanda’s name. He also noted that Denise had registered Amanda’s last name as Liberty for an airline mileage program. The superior court denied Gustavo’s motion without stating reasons. Gustavo appeals from the order of denial.
Gustavo notes that whether a trial court should grant injunctive relief requiring that a child’s real name be used is an issue of first impression in Alaska. He argues that precedent in other jurisdictions confirms that in-junctive relief is generally appropriate.
Denise filed no brief on appeal. But her attorney filed a one-page letter stating that she lacked the resources to participate formally. Her attorney’s letter asserts that a person, including a child, “can adopt and abandon at will any surname” so long as it does not infringe on the rights of others, and is not done “for fraudulent purposes.” The letter also indicates that Denise had divorced Mike Burley and reassumed her maiden surname, Liberty.
The parties agree that Amanda’s legal surname is Acevedo. Alaska has a statute governing name changes1 and a civil rule which sets out the procedure for name changes.2 Under the statute, a change of name “may not be made unless the court finds sufficient reasons for the change and also finds it consistent with the public interest.”3 Under Civil Rule 84(e) if a parent objects to the proposed name change of a child, the court “shall only grant the name change if the court finds the name change to be in the best *391interest of the child.”4 The desires of a child “old enough to express the same” should also be considered in determining whether to grant a requested name change.5 The statutory and civil rule change of name provisions have not been followed in this case.
As we will discuss, eases in other jurisdictions generally support Gustavo’s contentions that a custodial parent may not change a child’s name without following applicable change of name statutes and that efforts to effect a de facto name change should be enjoined.
In re Marriage of Presson6 represents these views. In many respects the facts were similar to those presented here. The mother was a custodial parent of the parties’ seven-year-old child.7 She initially sought both a legal and a de facto change of the child’s surname to that of her new husband.8 The father requested an injunction.9 The mother agreed not to attempt a legal name change. The trial court enjoined efforts to make a de facto change, ordering the mother and the child to use only the child’s legal name.10 On appeal the intermediate appellate court reversed on the basis that the trial court had “virtually ignored” the child’s testimony that he wanted to use the mother’s new name while living with the mother and the ' father’s name while visiting the father.11
The Supreme Court of Illinois reversed the decision of the intermediate court. It rejected the mother’s contention that the child had a common-law right to change his name without resort to legal proceedings. The court held that a change in a minor’s surname “shall be allowed only when the court finds that change is in the best interest of the minor.”12 The court described the circumstances relevant to such a determination:
To determine the best interest of the child, the-court should consider the express wishes of the child and of both parents, the stated reasons for the proposed change, the child’s age and maturity, the nature of the family situation, the strength of the tie between the child and each parent, any misconduct toward or neglect of the child by the parent opposing the change, and the name by which the child has customarily been called.[13]
The Presson court also disagreed with the intermediate court’s conclusion that the trial court erred in not giving weight to the seven-year-old child’s wishes:
The standard is the best interests of the child, but the child at this stage in his development is not necessarily an able judge of what his best interests are since neither his emotional nor his mental development are complete.[14]
While the Presson court upheld the trial judge’s order requiring the mother not to change the child’s name, the court noted that the terms of the order were too broad. The order seemed to extend
to informal situations within the family. There are some relationships which the law does not have the capacity to control— the name a child asks others to call him on the playground is one of them. It would be extremely difficult to enforce such an order....
Although we appreciate that the consistent use of a single name is important to the child’s emotional development, we will not approve the entry of an order which the circuit court cannot enforce. Thus, we cannot prevent [the mother] from calling her son [by his stepfather’s surname] or by any other name or nickname within her own living room, and no order should be *392directed towards enjoining her from referring to him by a name other than [that of the father] within the family eonfines.[15]
In accordance with these observations, the Illinois Supreme Court directed that the injunction be narrowed so that it merely prevented the mother from using any name other than the child’s legal name “in any official records, including school, medical or hospital records or membership applications.” 16
We agree with the Presson decision. Other authorities that also hold that a custodial parent should be enjoined from making a de facto change of a child’s name include Brown v. Carroll;17 Young v. Young;18 Halloran v. Kostka;19 and In Interest of Griffiths.20,21
In accordance with Presson and the other case law cited above, we conclude that the trial court should have granted injunctive relief requiring that Amanda’s real name be used in matters of record. But the court need not enjoin all private or personal use by Denise or Amanda of another surname. Further, we do not intend to imply that Denise should be precluded from seeking a legal change of Amanda’s surname pursuant to AS 09.55.010 and Civil Rule 84.
REVERSED and REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
. AS 09.55.010.
. Alaska R. Civ. P. 84.
.AS 09.55.010.
. Alaska R. Civ. P. 84(e).
. Id.
. 102 Ill.2d 303, 80 Ill.Dec. 294, 465 N.E.2d 85 (1984).
. Id. at 86, 80 Ill.Dec. 294.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. at 87, 80 Ill.Dec. 294.
. Id. at 88, 80 Ill.Dec. 294.
. Id.
. Id. at 90, 80 Ill.Dec. 294.
. Id.
. 683 S.W.2d 61, 63 (Tex.App.1984) ("We hold that it is not in the best interest of the children for the mother to allow the use of the stepfather’s name without a legal name change.... ”).
. 356 N.W.2d 823, 824 (Minn.App.1984) (De facto name change enjoined. "A name change risks alienating [the father] and jeopardizes the parent/child relationship. It risks confusion for [the child]. In contrast, there is no evidence to suggest that a name change is in the substantial best interests of [the child].”).
. 778 S.W.2d 454, 456 (Tenn.App.1988) (quoting 57 Am.Jur.2d Name § 14) ("[A] change of name merely to save the mother and child from minor inconvenience or embarrassment will not be authorized against the father’s objection. Where, however, the child’s substantial interests require a change of name, as where the father’s misconduct has been such as to justify a forfeiture of his right, or where his name is positively deleterious to the child, the change may be permitted.”).
. 780 S.W.2d 899, 900-901 (Tex.App.1989) ("[Mother] had no right to unilaterally and extra-judicially change [child’s] surname.” "Even if this case did involve a petition for name change of a minor, which it does not, the burden would be on [the mother] to establish that the name change would be in the best interest of the child.").
.We know of only one contrary case, but find it unpersuasive. In Azzara v. Waller, 495 So.2d 277 (Fla.App.1986), the appellate court affirmed the judgment of the trial court which refused both to change the name of the eight-year-old child to that of her stepfather and to enjoin the mother from requiring or encouraging the child to use the stepfather’s surname. The court left the matter to the child: "When her surname becomes important to her, she can decide this issue for herself and leave this Court to decisions with which it feels much more comfortable.” Id. at 279. As the Illinois court did in Presson, we disagree with this rationale.