⚖️ All 50 States 📅 2026 Updated Guidelines 🏢 Self-Employed Income 📄 PDF Worksheet

2026 US Child Support Calculator: All 50 States & DC

All 50 States (Income Shares, Percentage of Income & Melson Formula) · Self-Employed Imputed Income · Custody Overnight Adjustments · Mandatory Add-On Expenses (Childcare & Health Insurance) · Support Modification Calculator · Federal & State Tax Impacts (Form 8332) · Court-Ready PDF Worksheet

🗺️ State & Calculation Model
👤 Parental Income
🔵 Custodial Parent (CP)
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🟣 Non-Custodial Parent (NCP)
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🌙 Custody (Quick Entry)
🏢 Self-Employed Income Builder UNIQUE
Courts compute guideline income differently from AGI or net income. Legitimate business expenses are deducted; expenses with personal benefit are added back to income.
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Add-Back Items (Personal Benefit Expenses)
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⚠️ Imputed Income / Underemployment Module
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📅 Custody Schedule Builder
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➕ Add-On Expense Proportional Splitter
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💰 After-Tax Impact Calculator
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🔄 Child Support Modification Estimator
A modification requires a substantial change in circumstances. Most states require a 15–20% change in the guideline amount.
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📋 Multi-Order Prior Child Support Stacker
When a parent has existing support orders for children from prior relationships, courts deduct those amounts from gross income before computing the new order — protecting against stacking that drives the parent below their self-support reserve.
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Existing Prior Orders
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📄 Court-Ready Worksheet PDF Generator
The PDF will include: income worksheet, self-employed add-backs, custody adjustment, add-on expense splits, final guideline order, and state statute citation.
This calculator provides estimates for planning purposes only. Child support orders are set by courts and may differ from these estimates. Always consult a licensed family law attorney. Not legal advice.
Sources: HHS Child Support Guidelines · BLS Occupational Employment Statistics

How State Courts Calculate Child Support Guidelines

Every US state uses a court-approved statutory formula to set a guideline support amount. While the exact math varies by jurisdiction, the legal process follows the same six steps — from identifying each parent’s gross income to issuing the final court order.

50
US States + DC each with their own guideline tables
3
Calculation formulas used across all jurisdictions
4yr
Federal mandate to review state guidelines every 4 years
$33B
Child support collected annually in the United States

📋 The 6-Step Statutory Calculation Process

1
💼
Determine Gross Income

The family court identifies every source of income for both parents — W-2 wages, Schedule C self-employment, bonuses, rental income, investment dividends, and unemployment benefits.

Both parents
2
Apply Allowable Deductions

Certain statutory deductions reduce gross income to the “net” or “adjusted” income used in the formula — including taxes, mandatory union dues, and prior child support orders for other children.

Reduces obligation
3
🗺️
Apply State Guideline Formula

Your state uses one of three models — Income Shares, Percentage of Income, or the Melson Formula — to calculate the basic child support obligation from the state guideline table.

State-specific
4
🏠
Shared Custody & Overnights

If the non-custodial parent has the children for 92+ overnights per year, most states reduce the obligation proportionally to reflect direct spending during parenting time.

Parenting time credit
5
Mandatory Add-On Expenses

Health insurance premiums, work-related childcare costs, and extraordinary medical expenses are split between parents proportional to their incomes and added to the basic obligation.

Increases total order
6
⚖️
Judicial Review & Final Order

A judge reviews the guideline amount. They can deviate upward or downward if a compelling reason exists — but must state why on the record. The order is legally enforceable from day one.

Legally binding
Gross Income
Deductions
State Formula
Custody Adjust
Add-Ons
Final Court Order
⚡ Quick Tip: The guideline amount is a rebuttable presumption — meaning family courts must use it unless a parent proves a deviation is in the child’s best interest. In most states, the judge must explain any deviation in writing.

💵 Gross vs. Net Income & Allowable Deductions

“Income” for child support purposes is much broader than your W-2. Courts look at every source of money available to a parent — not just your take-home pay.

Generally Counts
Wages & salary (W-2)Counts
Self-employment (Schedule C net)Counts
Overtime & bonusesCounts
Rental & passive incomeCounts
Investment dividends & interestCounts
Unemployment & disability benefitsCounts
Social Security benefitsCounts
Pension & retirement distributionsCounts
⚠️ Court Discretion / State-Specific
New spouse’s incomeExcluded
Public assistance (TANF, SNAP)Excluded
Child support received (other case)Excluded
One-time gifts or inheritancesDiscretion
Stock options (unvested RSUs)Discretion
Alimony / spousal support receivedDiscretion
Military BAH & BAS allowancesDiscretion
Business expense reimbursementsExcluded
⚠️ Imputed Income Rule: If a court believes a parent is voluntarily unemployed or underemployed to reduce support, it can “impute” income — assigning a fictional income based on earning capacity, work history, education, and Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) wage data for that occupation.
🗺️

The 3 US Models: Income Shares, Percentage of Income & Melson

Model 1 — 38+ States
Income Shares Model
🏆 Most Common Formula
Combines both parents’ net or gross incomes to find the total child-rearing cost from guideline tables, then splits that obligation proportionally based on each parent’s share of the combined income.
Example — 1 Child CP earns $3,500/mo · NCP earns $4,500/mo · Combined: $8,000
Table says $1,200/mo for 1 child at $8,000 combined
NCP share = 56.25% → NCP pays $675/mo
CAFLNY GAOHPA NCVA+30 more
Model 2 — ~12 States
Percentage of Income Model
📊 Simpler Flat-Rate Formula
Uses only the non-custodial parent’s (NCP) income. A fixed percentage of that income is assigned per child — regardless of the custodial parent’s earnings. Very predictable, but doesn’t adjust for the CP’s wealth.
Example — Texas (Flat) NCP net resources: $4,000/mo
1 child = 20% · 2 children = 25% · 3 = 30%
1 child → NCP pays $800/mo
TXILMN WIAKND WY+5 more
Model 3 — 3 States
Melson Formula
🔬 Self-Support Reserve Protection
Developed in Delaware, this formula first protects a Self-Support Reserve (SSR) for each parent to prevent poverty, ensures the child’s primary needs are met, and then allows parents to share any remaining surplus income.
Example — Delaware Subtract self-support reserves from each parent first
Remaining income → meet child’s primary needs
Surplus → child gets a percentage of parents’ standard of living
DEHIMT
📌 Which model does your state use? Enter your state in the Support Calculator tab above — the tool automatically applies your state’s correct statutory formula, guideline percentages, and overnight custody thresholds.
📐

Judicial Deviation: 8 Reasons Courts Alter Guideline Support

The guideline amount is the starting point — not the final word. Family court judges can order more or less if the standard result would be unjust or inappropriate given the child’s unique circumstances.

🏥

Extraordinary Medical Needs

A child with chronic illness, disability, or special needs may require significantly higher support to cover ongoing medical, therapy, or equipment costs.

✈️

Long-Distance Parenting Travel

If one parent must travel thousands of miles for visitation, courts may reduce support to help cover extraordinary airfare or transportation costs.

🎓

Educational Costs

Private school tuition, tutoring, or college savings plans agreed upon before divorce may increase the support obligation above the guideline baseline.

💼

Very High or Very Low Income

When combined incomes far exceed the top of the state’s guideline table, or when income is extremely low, courts apply judgment rather than mechanical extrapolation.

🏠

Non-Standard Custody Arrangements

Split custody (each parent has primary custody of at least one child) or a child living primarily with a third party triggers adjustments outside the standard formula.

💰

Assets vs. Income Disparity

A parent with a low W-2 income but significant assets (investment accounts, property, trusts) may have support calculated on imputed returns from those assets.

👶

Other Legal Dependents

Supporting biological or adopted children from other relationships — even if not subject to a court order — can be considered as a competing financial obligation.

📋

Voluntary Settlement Agreement

Parents who agree in writing to an amount above the guideline can usually have that higher figure entered as the order — provided the court is satisfied it serves the child’s best interests.

✅ Best Practice: Even if you believe you qualify for a judicial deviation, always calculate the standard guideline amount first. Courts begin there — and any request to deviate requires evidence and a compelling legal argument. Use the calculator above to establish your baseline.

⏱️ The Legal Process: From Filing to Income Withholding Order (IWO)

1

Petition Filed (Day 1)

Either parent files a petition with the family court (or the state IV-D child support agency files on behalf of a custodial parent receiving public benefits). The case is assigned a docket number.

2

Financial Disclosures (1–4 Weeks)

Both parents exchange financial affidavits — pay stubs, tax returns, bank statements, proof of health insurance costs. Failure to disclose can result in the court imputing income.

3

Temporary Order (2–6 Weeks)

In most states, a judge can issue a temporary support order at a short hearing within weeks of filing. This temporary amount applies until the final order — and is often retroactive to the filing date.

4

Final Hearing or Agreement (1–6 Months)

Parents either reach a settlement agreement (which the judge approves) or a contested hearing is held. The judge applies the guideline formula and issues the final order.

5

Income Withholding Order (Immediate)

In nearly every case, the court issues an Income Withholding Order (IWO) — a federal form sent to the NCP’s employer, directing them to deduct support from each paycheck automatically.

6

State Disbursement Unit (Ongoing)

Most states route payments through a State Disbursement Unit (SDU) that records every payment, disburses funds to the custodial parent, and tracks any arrears (past-due amounts).

📅 Retroactive Support
In most states, support can be ordered retroactively to the date the petition was filed — not the date of the hearing. This means if the case takes 4 months, the NCP may owe 4 months of back support at the final order. Some states allow retroactive support back to the child’s birth for paternity cases.
⚠️ Arrears Are Serious
Unpaid child support (arrears) carries severe enforcement penalties including: wage garnishment, tax refund intercept, driver’s license suspension, passport denial, credit bureau reporting, and contempt charges. Arrears accrue interest in most states (3–12% per year).
✅ Modification Rights
Either parent can petition for modification when there is a substantial change in circumstances — typically a 10–25% change in the guideline amount (varies by state). Use the Modification Calculator tab above to check if you qualify.
ℹ️ Interstate Cases (UIFSA)
If parents live in different states, the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act (UIFSA) governs which state has jurisdiction. Generally, the state that issued the original order retains jurisdiction as long as at least one party still lives there.

📖 US Family Law Glossary: Imputed Income, Arrears & Add-Ons

Obligor (NCP)
The parent legally required to pay child support — typically the non-custodial parent (NCP) who does not have primary physical custody.
Obligee (CP)
The parent legally entitled to receive child support — typically the custodial parent (CP) with whom the child primarily lives.
Guideline Amount
The presumed correct support amount produced by your state’s statutory formula. A court can deviate from it only with written justification.
Imputed Income
Income assigned by a court to a parent based on earning capacity, not actual earnings — used when a parent is voluntarily unemployed or underemployed.
Mandatory Add-On Expenses
Costs beyond the basic order — usually health insurance premiums, work-related childcare, and extraordinary medical expenses — split proportionally between parents.
Self-Support Reserve (SSR)
The minimum income a parent must retain after paying support — meant to prevent an order so large the NCP cannot afford basic living costs. Commonly used in Melson states.
Arrears
Past-due child support that has not been paid. Arrears are a separate legal debt from ongoing support and cannot be discharged in bankruptcy.
Income Withholding Order (IWO)
A federal court form (OMB 0970-0154) sent directly to an employer, ordering them to deduct child support from the NCP’s paycheck every pay period.
Parenting Time Credit
A reduction in the support obligation granted when the NCP has the child for more than the threshold number of overnights per year (usually 92–146, varies by state).
COLA Clause
A Cost of Living Adjustment clause that automatically increases child support each year based on CPI inflation — available in some states without needing to return to court.

Real-World Estimates: Self-Employment, Imputed Income & Shared Custody

These five examples walk through the actual math family courts use — different states, different statutory formulas, and different family situations. Numbers reflect 2026 state guideline tables.

📊 Income Shares Model 📋 Percentage of Income Model 🔬 Melson Formula 🏠 Shared Custody 💼 Self-Employed Parent
Example 01 of 05
Standard Two-Child Case
Houston, Texas
📋 Percentage of Income 🤠 Texas
Monthly Order
$1,000
2 children · NCP pays
Scenario: Marcus (father, NCP) and Diane (mother, CP) divorced in Harris County. They have two children, ages 6 and 9. Marcus works as a logistics supervisor. Diane works part-time. Texas uses only the NCP’s net income — Diane’s income is not part of the Texas formula.
👩 Custodial Parent (CP)
Diane — Mother
Gross Income$2,800/mo
EmploymentPart-time retail
Role in TX FormulaNot used
👨 Non-Custodial Parent (NCP)
Marcus — Father
Gross Income$5,800/mo
EmploymentW-2 salaried
Other childrenNone
#StepAmount
1Marcus’s gross monthly income (W-2 salary)$5,800
2Federal & state income tax withholding (est.)− $870
3Social Security & Medicare (FICA, 7.65%)− $444
4Health insurance premium (self only)− $186
Net Monthly Resources (Texas Definition)$4,300
5Texas flat rate — 2 children = 25% of net resources× 25%
Monthly Child Support Order$1,075
⚠️ Texas Net Resource Cap (2026): Texas applies the percentage only to the first $9,200/mo of net resources. Marcus is well under the cap, so the full percentage applies. If he earned above $9,200 net, only that cap amount would be multiplied.
$1,075
Monthly Order
$12,900
Annual Obligation
25%
of Net Resources
💡

Key Insight — Texas Percentage of Income Model Texas is one of the simplest states: flat percentages, NCP’s income only. Diane’s $2,800/mo income has zero effect on Marcus’s obligation. The formula rates are: 1 child = 20%, 2 = 25%, 3 = 30%, 4 = 35%, 5+ = 40%. Marcus also gets an automatic reduction for each child covered under other orders.

Example 02 of 05
Shared Custody — 50/50 Split
Los Angeles, California
📊 Income Shares 🏠 Shared Custody 🌴 California
Monthly Order
$412
1 child · NCP pays
Scenario: Kevin and Sara have one child, age 4. They agreed to a true 50/50 custody schedule — 182.5 overnights each per year. Kevin earns significantly more. California uses the DissoMaster formula, which gives a large credit for parenting time when overnights exceed the shared threshold. The more equal the time, the more income difference drives the order.
👩 Primary Custodial Parent (CP)
Sara — Mother
Gross Income$3,500/mo
Net Income (after tax)$2,975/mo
Custody overnights182/year (50%)
👨 Non-Custodial Parent (NCP)
Kevin — Father
Gross Income$8,000/mo
Net Income (after tax)$5,920/mo
Custody overnights183/year (50%)
#Step — California Income Shares FormulaAmount
1Kevin’s net monthly income$5,920
2Sara’s net monthly income$2,975
Combined net income$8,895
3Kevin’s income share of combined (66.6%)66.6%
4Guideline base amount for 1 child at $8,895 net$1,423
5Kevin’s proportional share (66.6% × $1,423)$947
6Shared custody time-share factor (50% × 50% = 0.25)× 0.565
Monthly Child Support Order (Kevin → Sara)$412
✅ California Custody Credit Explained: California’s formula uses the factor K × (HN − H%) × TN where HN = high earner’s net income share and H% = high earner’s time with child. The 50/50 split dramatically reduces what Kevin pays — if Sara had sole custody, Kevin would owe approximately $947/mo instead of $412.
$412
With 50/50 Split
$947
Without Custody Credit
$535
Savings from Shared Time
💡

Key Insight — Custody Time Is Money in California In Income Shares states, securing more overnights directly reduces your support obligation. The 92-overnight threshold (25.2% parenting time) is the minimum to trigger any shared custody reduction in most IS states. At 50/50, the credit is maximized — but the income gap still determines who pays whom.

Example 03 of 05
Self-Employed NCP — Business Add-Backs
Miami, Florida
📊 Income Shares 💼 Self-Employed 🌊 Florida
Monthly Order
$1,618
2 children · NCP pays
Scenario: Roberto runs a landscaping LLC and reports $48,000/year on his Schedule C tax return after business deductions. His ex-wife Carmen works as a school teacher. Florida courts scrutinize self-employed income carefully — they add back non-cash business deductions (depreciation, home office) and personal expenses run through the business to arrive at “guideline income.”
👩 Custodial Parent (CP)
Carmen — Mother
Gross Income$3,800/mo
EmploymentSchoolteacher W-2
Health insuranceCovers children
👨 Non-Custodial Parent (NCP)
Roberto — Father
Schedule C Net Profit$4,000/mo
Business typeLandscaping LLC
Non-cash deductions$950/mo
#Step — Florida Self-Employed Add-Back ProcessAmount
1Roberto’s Schedule C net profit (reported)$4,000/mo
2Add back: vehicle depreciation (personal-use truck)+ $420
3Add back: home office deduction (personal benefit)+ $280
4Add back: cell phone & meals (partly personal)+ $250
Adjusted Gross Income (Guideline Income)$4,950/mo
5Carmen’s gross income$3,800/mo
Combined Gross Income$8,750/mo
6Roberto’s share of combined income (56.6%)56.6%
7Florida guideline base — 2 children at $8,750/mo combined$1,684
8Roberto’s proportional obligation (56.6% × $1,684)$953
9Add-on: childcare costs (Carmen pays $900/mo, split 56.6%)+ $509
10Add-on: children’s health insurance (Carmen pays $310/mo, 56.6%)+ $156
Total Monthly Child Support Order$1,618
⚠️ Add-Back Warning: If Roberto had not been required to add back the $950/mo in non-cash deductions, his guideline income would have been $4,000 instead of $4,950 — reducing his order by approximately $142/mo ($1,704/year). Florida courts routinely scrutinize Schedule C filings for personal expenses.
$953
Basic Obligation
$665
Add-On Expenses
$1,618
Total Order
💡

Key Insight — Self-Employed Income Is Not Just Your Tax Return Courts in every state look beyond Schedule C. Legitimate business expenses that also provide personal benefit — vehicles, phones, meals, home offices — are partially or fully added back to income. Courts may also average 2–3 years of tax returns if income fluctuates seasonally, as it often does in trades and contracting.

Example 04 of 05
High-Income Case — Above the Cap
New York City, New York
📊 Income Shares (CSSA) 💰 High Income 🗽 New York
Monthly Order
$3,950
1 child · NCP pays
Scenario: Daniel, a Manhattan investment banker, and his ex-wife Priya, a senior marketing director, have one child. New York’s Child Support Standards Act (CSSA) applies a flat percentage to combined income up to $183,000/year ($15,250/mo) combined. For income above this threshold, the court has discretion — it can apply the percentage, use a needs-based analysis, or do both.
👩 Custodial Parent (CP)
Priya — Mother
Gross Annual Salary$145,000/yr
Gross Monthly$12,083/mo
CustodyPrimary (270 nights)
👨 Non-Custodial Parent (NCP)
Daniel — Father
W-2 Base Salary$280,000/yr
Annual Bonus (avg)$95,000/yr
Total Gross Monthly$31,250/mo
#Step — New York CSSA High-Income AnalysisAmount
1Combined gross monthly income (Daniel + Priya)$43,333
2NY CSSA income cap (2026) — mandatory formula applies up to$15,250/mo
3CSSA percentage for 1 child17%
4Guideline amount on capped income (17% × $15,250)$2,593
5Daniel’s share of combined capped income (67.2%)67.2%
Capped CSSA Order (Daniel’s 67.2% share)$1,742/mo
6Above-cap income subject to court discretion ($43,333 − $15,250)$28,083/mo
7Court-ordered additional support on above-cap income (8% judicial rate)$2,247
8Add-on: private school tuition Daniel’s share (per agreed parenting plan)+ $0 (direct pay)
Total Monthly Child Support Order$3,989 ≈ $3,950
🚨 Bonus Income in New York: NY courts include bonuses, stock options, and deferred compensation in the CSSA base. Daniel’s $95,000 average annual bonus is divided by 12 and included in his monthly income — this alone adds $7,917/mo to his gross figure, significantly driving up his above-cap obligation.
$1,742
Below-Cap Order
$2,247
Above-Cap (Discretion)
$47,880
Annual Obligation
💡

Key Insight — High Income Does Not Cap Your Obligation NY’s income cap does not limit support — it just changes the calculation method. Above the cap, judges have wide discretion. Courts typically apply a lower percentage (6–17%) to above-cap income or conduct a detailed “child’s needs” analysis. High earners often negotiate private school, tutoring, travel, and healthcare directly as add-ons rather than fighting over the above-cap percentage.

Example 05 of 05
Low-Income Parent — Self-Support Reserve Protection
Wilmington, Delaware
🔬 Melson Formula 🦋 Delaware
Monthly Order
$285
1 child · NCP pays
Scenario: James works part-time as a warehouse associate and earns $2,100/month gross. His ex-partner Nicole works full-time and earns $3,600/month. They have one child, age 7. Delaware’s Melson Formula is the most protective of low-income parents — it first deducts a Self-Support Reserve (SSR) for each parent before calculating support, ensuring neither parent is left below poverty level.
👩 Custodial Parent (CP)
Nicole — Mother
Gross Income$3,600/mo
Net Income (after tax)$3,060/mo
SSR (2026 DE)$1,074/mo
👨 Non-Custodial Parent (NCP)
James — Father
Gross Income$2,100/mo
Net Income (after tax)$1,890/mo
SSR (2026 DE)$1,074/mo
#Step — Delaware Melson Formula (3 Stages)Amount
Stage 1 — Protect Each Parent’s Self-Support Reserve
1James’s net monthly income$1,890
2James’s Self-Support Reserve (SSR — poverty protection)− $1,074
James’s Available Income (after SSR)$816
Stage 2 — Meet Child’s Primary Needs First
3Delaware primary needs standard for 1 child (2026)$610/mo
4Nicole’s available income after SSR ($3,060 − $1,074)$1,986
5Combined available income (James $816 + Nicole $1,986)$2,802
6James’s share of available income (29.1%)29.1%
James’s primary needs share (29.1% × $610)$178
Stage 3 — Standard of Living Adjustment (Surplus Income)
7James’s remaining income after SSR & primary needs share$638
8Delaware SOLA rate for 1 child applied to surplus (16.8%)× 16.8%
9Standard of Living Adjustment (SOLA)+ $107
Total Monthly Child Support Order (James → Nicole)$285
✅ Melson Protection Working: Under a simple Percentage of Income formula (like Texas), James would pay roughly 17–20% of $1,890 net = $321–$378/mo. The Melson Formula reduced his obligation to $285/mo precisely because it recognized his income is near the SSR floor — protecting his ability to meet his own basic needs while still contributing to his child.
$178
Primary Needs Share
$107
SOLA Supplement
$816
James Keeps After SSR
💡

Key Insight — The Melson Formula Is the Most Child-Centered Model Delaware, Hawaii, and Montana use Melson because it asks: after adults are protected from poverty, how much can each parent actually contribute to the child’s life? Unlike Income Shares or Percentage of Income, Melson explicitly lets children share in parental prosperity via the SOLA stage — meaning if James gets a raise, his obligation rises proportionally, not just at the primary needs level.

📌 Note on These Examples: All figures reflect 2026 state guideline tables and are calculated for illustrative purposes. Actual court orders vary based on exact net income calculations, local court practices, judicial discretion, and case-specific facts. Use the calculator above to run your own numbers, and always consult a licensed family law attorney before making legal decisions.

Expert Legal Strategies: Modifying Orders & The Dependency Exemption

Family law attorneys and certified divorce financial analysts (CDFAs) share the moves that consistently change outcomes — things most parents don’t learn until it’s too late to act on them.

⚖️ Attorney Strategy 📊 CPA Insights 💰 Tax Planning 🗂️ Documentation 🔄 Modification Triggers
1
⚖️ Attorney Strategy ✅ Start Now
Build Your Paper Trail Before the First Hearing — Not After

The single most common mistake in child support cases is showing up to a hearing without adequate documentation. Courts don’t operate on trust — they operate on evidence. Whether you’re the paying parent trying to prove your actual income or the receiving parent trying to establish the other party’s earning capacity, your paper trail is your case.

68%
of modifications denied due to insufficient documentation
2 yrs
minimum of financial records courts typically request
$0
cost to start a Google Sheet tracking payments today
  • 📁
    Every Payment, Every Time: Keep a log of every support payment — date, amount, method (check number, Zelle reference, wire confirmation). If paying cash, never do it. Pay by traceable method only.
  • 🌙
    Overnight Calendar: If you’re disputing custody time, maintain a contemporaneous daily log of which parent has the child each night. Screenshots of shared calendars, school pickup records, and daycare sign-in sheets are powerful exhibits.
  • 💰
    Add-On Expense Receipts: Keep every receipt for childcare payments, medical copays, dental bills, prescription costs, school fees, and health insurance premiums. These split proportionally — whoever pays needs proof.
  • 📧
    Communication Records: Never delete text or email threads related to child support, custody, or expenses. Courts accept screenshots. Do not discuss finances in verbal-only conversations with the other parent.
  • 📄
    Income Stability Evidence: If your income fluctuates (self-employed, hourly, seasonal), save every bank statement, invoice, and client contract. Courts average irregular income — the more data you provide, the more accurate (and favorable) the average.
🎯
Action Step — Do This Today

Create a shared Google Drive folder with three subfolders: “Payments Made/Received,” “Custody Calendar,” and “Add-On Expenses.” Screenshot and save everything going forward. If a hearing is coming, pull the last 24 months of bank statements and have them organized by month before your attorney asks.

2
⚠️ High Risk ⚖️ Attorney Warning
Never Voluntarily Reduce Your Income to Lower Support — Courts See Right Through It

Quitting a job, refusing a promotion, reducing hours, or deliberately underreporting business revenue to shrink a support obligation is one of the most backfire-prone strategies in family law. Courts in all 50 states have the power to “impute” income — assign you a fictional income based on your earning capacity — and the consequences are often far worse than just paying the original amount.

ALL 50
states allow imputed income — it is universal, not optional
BLS
wage data used to calculate your occupation’s median pay in your ZIP
3 yrs
of work history courts typically use to establish earning capacity
⚠️ How Courts Detect Underearning: A judge will compare your current income to (1) your prior 3-year tax return history, (2) BLS median wages for your specific occupation and geographic area, (3) your education, certifications, and demonstrated work history, and (4) any LinkedIn profile or job posts showing available positions at higher salaries. Courts in California, New York, and Florida are particularly aggressive about this.
✅ Do This
  • Stay employed at your current level through proceedings
  • If laid off, document it thoroughly (termination letter, severance)
  • File for modification immediately after a genuine income loss
  • Prove involuntary circumstances with medical records if health-related
  • Show active job-search efforts (Indeed/LinkedIn applications) if unemployed
🚫 Never Do This
  • Quit a job or reduce hours just before a hearing
  • Deliberately refuse a raise or promotion to lower income
  • Move income through a spouse or partner to hide it
  • Run personal expenses through a business to reduce net profit
  • Claim “I can’t find work” without documented proof of searching
🎯
Action Step — If Your Income Has Genuinely Dropped

File a motion to modify support within 30 days of a real income reduction. Attach your termination letter, final pay stub, and proof of unemployment filing. Courts will credit you from the date you filed — not the date you stopped earning — so speed matters.

3
💼 Negotiation Strategy 📊 Financial Planning
Add-On Expenses Can Double Your Obligation — Define Every Line Item in the Order Itself

Most parents fixate on the baseline guideline amount and miss the bigger financial picture: add-on expenses are mandatory, proportional, and often completely undefined in vague court orders. Childcare, health insurance premiums, uninsured medical costs, and extracurricular fees are split between parents — and ambiguity in the order language leads to years of conflict, enforcement filings, and legal fees that dwarf the original dispute.

+63%
average increase in total monthly obligation when childcare + health add-ons are included
$14,400
average annual cost of full-time childcare in the US — split proportionally
Defined
orders reduce post-divorce litigation by up to 40%, per family court research
Add-On ExpenseTypically Mandatory?Split MethodPro Tip
Health insurance premiums (child’s share)✅ Yes — all statesProportional to incomeUse employer’s itemized breakdown — not family plan premium
Work-related childcare (daycare/after-school)✅ Yes — most statesProportional to incomeDefine “work-related” — recreational camps often excluded
Uninsured medical/dental/vision✅ Yes — most statesProportional to incomeSpecify copay threshold ($100+) to avoid fights over $5 prescriptions
Extracurricular activities⚠️ DiscretionaryBy agreement or courtName the activities — “soccer at $85/season” not “sports generally”
Private school tuition⚠️ DiscretionaryNegotiated or courtPre-divorce enrollment history matters — courts preserve status quo
College expenses⚠️ State-dependentPer statute (19 states)Address in the order now — retroactive college support is very rare
✅ The $100 Threshold Rule: Most experienced family law attorneys insert a clause requiring that uninsured medical expenses above $100 per incident be split proportionally, while smaller amounts are the sole responsibility of whichever parent incurs them. This single provision eliminates most add-on disputes.
🎯
Action Step — Demand Specificity in Your Order Language

Before signing any final order or settlement agreement, make sure every add-on category is defined with: (1) which expenses are included, (2) how the split percentage is calculated, (3) how reimbursement requests must be made (email with receipt within 30 days is standard), and (4) what happens if one parent doesn’t pay their share within 30 days.

4
🔄 Modification Timing ⚖️ Legal Threshold
Run the Modification Math Before You File — Most Petitions Fail the Threshold Test

Filing a modification petition costs filing fees ($50–$400), attorney time ($200–$500/hr), and 3–9 months of your life. Yet the majority of petitions are dismissed because the parent never checked whether their changed circumstances actually meet their state’s legal threshold. Most states require the new guideline amount to differ from the current order by a specific percentage — and you must hit that number before a court will even hear your case.

15–25%
guideline change required to qualify for modification in most states
$400
average court filing fee for a modification petition
3 yrs
how long many states require between modification attempts without new circumstances
StateThreshold to ModifyReview PeriodRetroactive To
CaliforniaAny substantial changeAnytimeDate of filing
Texas20% or $100/mo differenceEvery 3 years (administrative)Date of filing
FloridaSubstantial, unexpected changeAnytimeDate of filing
New York15% guideline change OR 3-year reviewEvery 3 years (CSEA)Date of filing
Illinois20% guideline changeEvery 3 yearsDate of filing
Washington15% guideline change (2026 reform)AnytimeDate of filing
📅 The “3-Year Administrative Review” Shortcut: Texas, New York, Illinois, and several other states allow either parent to request a free administrative review every 3 years through the state child support agency — without going to court. If you’re within 3 years of your last order, this is the fastest and cheapest path. The agency recalculates using current income and notifies both parties. No attorney required.
✅ Qualifying Circumstances
  • Permanent job loss or significant salary reduction
  • NCP gets a major promotion or new income source
  • Child’s needs change significantly (disability, aging out)
  • Custody overnight schedule changes substantially
  • Child reaches 3-year administrative review window
🚫 Usually Not Qualifying
  • Temporary income reduction (medical leave, short layoff)
  • Minor raises below the percentage threshold
  • New personal expenses (new home, new car)
  • Remarriage of either parent (new spouse income excluded)
  • Inflation alone (unless a COLA clause is in the order)
🎯
Action Step — Run the Calculator Before Calling an Attorney

Use the Modification Calculator tab above. Enter your current order amount and both parents’ updated incomes. If the new guideline differs by less than your state’s threshold, do not file yet — either wait for a larger income change or check whether your 3-year administrative review window has opened.

5
🧾 Tax Planning 📊 CPA Strategy
The Dependency Exemption Is Worth Up to $8,000/Year — And It’s Fully Negotiable

Most divorcing parents fight over the monthly support number and completely miss a tax decision worth thousands of dollars per year. Who claims the child as a dependent is not automatically assigned — it is negotiable in your divorce agreement, and getting this right (or getting it in writing) can be worth more than a $200/month reduction in your support order. A CPA should review your divorce agreement before you sign it.

$2,000
Child Tax Credit per child per year (2026 — phases out above $200k)
$7,430
max Earned Income Tax Credit for 3+ children (2026 limits)
$0
Child support deduction — support is never tax-deductible for the payer
Tax BenefitWho Gets It by DefaultTransferable?Approximate Annual Value
Child Tax Credit ($2,000/child)Custodial parent (CP)✅ Yes — IRS Form 8332$2,000/child
Dependent Care Credit (childcare)Parent who pays childcare❌ No — follows the payerUp to $1,050/child
Head of Household filing statusCustodial parent (CP)❌ No — cannot be transferred$2,650 bracket savings (approx.)
Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC)Custodial parent (CP)❌ No — custodial onlyUp to $7,430
Medical expense deductionParent who pays expenses❌ No — follows payer⚠️ Limited (7.5% AGI floor)
Dependency exemption (claim child)Custodial parent (CP)✅ Yes — IRS Form 8332Unlocks CTC + education credits
⚠️ The Form 8332 Trap: If the CP agrees to release the dependency claim to the NCP, they must sign IRS Form 8332 each year (or sign a multi-year release). If the CP later refuses to sign — even if the divorce decree says they must — the IRS still assigns the exemption to whoever has physical custody. The divorce decree is not binding on the IRS. The only thing the NCP can do is take the CP back to family court for contempt — a $1,000+ legal battle over a $2,000 credit.
✅ The Alternating Years Strategy: The most common and court-accepted arrangement for two-child families is to alternate which parent claims each child in even vs. odd years. A parent with one child might alternate annually. This is easily modeled by a CPA to calculate the net present value of the tax benefit — and that value can be incorporated into a settlement offer as a trade-off against a higher or lower monthly support figure.
🎯
Action Step — Have a CPA Review Your Decree Before You Sign

A 2-hour CPA consultation ($300–$600) to review tax implications of your divorce agreement is one of the highest-ROI moves in any custody case. Specifically ask them to model: (1) who should claim each child for maximum household tax benefit, (2) whether a trade on the dependency exemption is worth a monthly support reduction, and (3) how childcare cost-sharing affects the Dependent Care Credit eligibility for both parents.

📌 These tips are informational only and do not constitute legal or tax advice. Child support laws vary significantly by state and individual circumstances. Always consult a licensed family law attorney for legal strategy and a CPA or Certified Divorce Financial Analyst (CDFA) for tax planning before making decisions that affect a court order.

US Family Law, Enforcement & Child Support FAQs

17 questions covering everything from basic statutory calculations to enforcement, tax treatment, and interstate UIFSA cases — answered in plain American English.

Showing 17 of 17 questions
1
What exactly is child support, and who is legally required to pay it?The Basics

Child support is a court-ordered, legally enforceable financial payment from one parent to the other to help cover the costs of raising a child. It exists because both parents have a legal obligation to financially support their children — even after separation or divorce.

In the vast majority of cases, the non-custodial parent (NCP) — the parent with whom the child does not primarily reside — makes monthly payments to the custodial parent (CP). However, in shared custody arrangements, the parent with the higher income may still owe support to the lower-earning parent even if parenting time is equal.

💡 Key Point: Child support is for the child, not the other parent. Courts set the amount based on what the child would have received if the family had stayed together — not based on what either parent wants.
2
Does child support only cover basic necessities, or can it be used for anything?The Basics

Once a child support payment is made, the receiving parent has full discretion over how it is spent. Courts do not require custodial parents to account for every dollar, and the paying parent cannot demand receipts or dictate how the money is used.

Child support is designed to cover the child’s share of household costs — which legally include:

  • Housing and utilities (the child’s proportional share of rent, mortgage, electricity)
  • Food, clothing, and personal care
  • Transportation to school and activities
  • School supplies, fees, and extracurriculars
  • Basic health and dental care (beyond separately ordered add-ons)
⚠️ What About Misuse? If a paying parent has credible evidence that support funds are being used for the paying parent’s own lifestyle (drugs, gambling) rather than the child’s benefit, they should raise this with their family law attorney — but courts set a very high bar for proving misuse, and the remedy is rarely a reduction in support.
3
Does the custodial parent’s income affect how much the other parent pays?The Basics

It depends entirely on which state you live in. This is one of the most misunderstood aspects of child support.

Income Shares States (38+)Both parents’ incomes are used. A higher-earning CP reduces the NCP’s obligation because the child is already receiving more support at home.
Percentage of Income States (~12)Only the NCP’s income matters. Texas is the clearest example — Diane could earn $10,000/month and it would not reduce Marcus’s obligation by a single dollar.
Melson Formula States (3)Both incomes are used, but through a multi-stage process that first protects each parent’s poverty floor before calculating the support share.
💡 Find Your State: Use the Support Calculator tab above, select your state, and the tool will automatically apply the correct formula for your jurisdiction.
4
Can parents agree on a child support amount privately, without going to court?The Basics

Yes — parents can absolutely negotiate a support amount between themselves, and many do. However, for that agreement to be legally enforceable, it must be submitted to a family court judge and entered as a court order.

A private written agreement between parents carries no legal weight on its own. If one parent stops paying, the other parent cannot garnish wages, intercept tax refunds, or pursue enforcement remedies without a court order. The fix is simple: take the agreement to court and have a judge enter it as a consent order.

⚠️ Below-Guideline Agreements: Judges must review any agreement that falls below the state guideline amount and confirm it is in the child’s best interest. Courts can and do reject agreements they believe are unfairly low — the child’s right to support cannot be waived by either parent.
5
How does shared or joint custody affect the monthly support amount?Calculation

More custody time typically means lower support — but only after you cross your state’s threshold. Most states require the NCP to have at least 92 overnights per year (25.2% of the year) before any shared custody reduction kicks in. Below that threshold, the full guideline amount applies regardless of actual parenting time.

Once above the threshold, states use different reduction methods:

  • Income Shares states: Apply a time-sharing multiplier to reflect the direct expenses the NCP incurs during parenting time (California’s formula is the most mathematically rigorous example)
  • Percentage of Income states: Some reduce the NCP percentage, others use a cross-credit method where both parents’ obligations are calculated and offset
  • Flat reductions: Some states simply reduce the amount by a fixed percentage for every 10% block of additional parenting time
💡 Use the Calculator: The Custody + Add-Ons tab above lets you enter exact overnight counts and calculates the parenting time credit automatically for your state.
6
What happens to child support if the paying parent is self-employed or owns a business?Calculation

Self-employed parents are subject to a more intensive income investigation. Courts do not simply accept the net profit figure on a Schedule C tax return — they look behind it to identify legitimate business deductions versus expenses that personally benefit the parent.

Common add-backs courts apply to self-employed income:

  • Depreciation on vehicles used partly for personal purposes
  • Home office deductions where the office also serves as a personal space
  • Cell phone plans billed to the business
  • Travel and meals that are partly personal
  • Family members on payroll not performing genuine work
  • Life insurance premiums run through the business
⚠️ Income Averaging: If self-employment income fluctuates year to year (common in construction, real estate, agriculture), courts typically average 2–3 years of tax returns rather than using the most recent year alone. A banner year can raise your obligation; a bad year may not lower it immediately.
7
Are bonuses, overtime, commissions, and investment income counted in child support?Calculation

Yes — almost universally. Courts define income broadly for child support purposes. Any money that flows to a parent on a regular or reasonably expected basis is counted. The key question is whether the income is “recurring” rather than a one-time windfall.

  • Regular overtime: Counted if it has been consistent for 12+ months
  • Annual bonuses: Divided by 12 and added as monthly income (NY, CA, FL all do this)
  • Sales commissions: Averaged over 2–3 years if variable
  • Stock vesting & RSUs: Increasingly included as income in the year they vest
  • Rental income: Net rental income (after mortgage, taxes, maintenance) is counted
  • Investment dividends & interest: Counted as income when regularly received
💡 New Employer / Base + Variable Pay: If you recently changed jobs to one with a lower base but high commission potential, courts may use your prior earning history rather than your new base salary — particularly within the first 12 months of the new role.
8
What is “imputed income” and when can a court assign it to a parent?Calculation

Imputed income is a fictional income figure assigned by a court to a parent based on what that parent could earn — not what they actually earn. It exists to prevent parents from gaming the system by voluntarily reducing their income to lower a support obligation.

Courts look at all of the following to determine earning capacity:

  • Prior 3–5 years of tax returns and W-2 history
  • BLS median wages for that specific occupation in that metropolitan area
  • Education level, certifications, and professional licenses held
  • Job market conditions — available openings at higher salaries
  • LinkedIn profile, resume, and prior job postings
  • Physical and mental health (medical evidence is required to justify inability to work)
🚨 Minimum Wage Floor: Even if a parent has no income and no work history, most states impute at least minimum wage for a full-time schedule. This means a completely unemployed parent in Texas (minimum wage $7.25/hr × 40hrs × 52wks ÷ 12 = $1,257/mo) would still owe approximately $252/mo for one child using the Texas 20% rate.
9
How do I get my child support order modified, and what triggers a successful modification?Modification

To modify a child support order, you must demonstrate a substantial change in circumstances since the last order was entered. Most states define this quantitatively — the new guideline calculation must produce an amount that differs from the current order by a specific threshold percentage (typically 10–25%).

Events that commonly qualify as substantial changes:

  • Permanent job loss or significant reduction in income
  • A substantial increase in the paying parent’s income
  • A major change in the custody/overnight schedule
  • The child’s needs changing dramatically (disability, aging out of childcare)
  • Health insurance coverage status changing for the child
  • A new child support obligation for another child
✅ Free Administrative Review: In Texas, New York, Illinois, and several other states, either parent can request a free review through the state child support agency every 3 years — no attorney needed. The agency recalculates using current incomes and issues a new proposed order. If both parents agree, it becomes effective without a court hearing.
10
When does child support automatically end, and can it be extended past age 18?Modification

Child support does not automatically end when a child turns 18 — termination depends on your state’s statute and the specific language in your court order. In most states, support ends at 18 or high school graduation (whichever is later), but many states extend this to 19 or even 21.

Age 18 / HS GraduationMost common rule — TX, FL, GA, AZ, CO, WA and others end at 18 or HS grad, whichever comes later
Age 19 or 21AL ends at 19; NY, IL, MO end at 21 unless the child is independent earlier
College Support19 states (inc. MA, NJ, CT, OR) can require college support — but it must typically be addressed in the original order

Support can also terminate early if: the child marries, enlists in the military, is emancipated by a court, dies, or is adopted by a stepparent. Support continues beyond 18 if the child has a qualifying disability and cannot be self-supporting.

⚠️ Don’t Just Stop Paying: Even if you believe support should have ended, never stop paying without a court order confirming termination. Stopping payments without official termination creates arrears — with interest — that are extremely difficult to erase retroactively.
11
Does remarriage — mine or the other parent’s — change my child support obligation?Modification

Remarriage alone almost never changes child support in the United States. A new spouse’s income is specifically excluded from child support calculations in nearly every state — courts do not consider what your new partner earns, and the CP’s new spouse’s income does not affect what the NCP owes.

The legal rationale is clear: a stepparent has no legal obligation to support stepchildren unless they formally adopt them. Penalizing or rewarding a parent for remarrying would create perverse incentives.

However, remarriage can indirectly create grounds for modification if:

  • A new baby is born and documented as a legal dependent (new child support obligations)
  • The remarriage causes a genuine, documented reduction in work hours or income
  • The custodial parent’s remarriage changes the child’s actual living situation dramatically
💡 Cohabitation vs. Remarriage: Some states consider the financial benefit of a new cohabiting partner reducing a parent’s living expenses — but this is discretionary and rarely applied. The standard rule is that new relationships don’t move the needle on support.
12
What happens if the non-custodial parent stops paying child support?Enforcement

The US has one of the world’s most aggressive child support enforcement systems. Federal law (Title IV-D) funds state enforcement agencies and mandates specific penalties for non-payment. The arsenal of enforcement tools is extensive:

  • Income Withholding Order (IWO): Sent to every employer — deducted directly from each paycheck before the parent even receives it
  • Federal Tax Refund Intercept: The IRS diverts any federal refund to pay arrears — automatic once arrears exceed $150 ($500 for non-TANF cases)
  • State Tax Refund Intercept: Same mechanism at the state level
  • Driver’s License Suspension: Available in all 50 states — one of the most effective tools for non-W2 earners
  • Passport Denial: Arrears over $2,500 trigger a passport denial flag in federal systems (42 USC §652)
  • Credit Bureau Reporting: Arrears are reported to all three bureaus, damaging credit scores
  • Professional License Suspension: Contractors, doctors, attorneys, real estate agents — professional licenses can be suspended in most states
  • Bank Account Levy: Courts can freeze and seize funds directly from bank accounts
  • Contempt of Court: Willful non-payment can result in fines and up to 6 months in jail in most jurisdictions
  • Federal Criminal Charges: Under the Deadbeat Parents Punishment Act (18 USC §228), crossing state lines to avoid support over $5,000 is a federal felony with up to 2 years imprisonment
✅ Where to Start: Contact your state’s IV-D child support enforcement agency (free service) or file a motion for contempt through the family court where the order was issued. The IV-D agency has the most tools and costs nothing to use.
13
What are child support arrears, and can they ever be forgiven or reduced?Enforcement

Arrears are past-due, unpaid child support that has already been ordered by a court. They are a separate legal debt from your ongoing support obligation — meaning you owe both your monthly payment AND a payment toward the arrears balance. Most states charge interest on arrears (ranging from 3% in some states to 12% annually in others).

The key distinction is who owns the arrears debt:

  • Custodial parent arrears: Money owed directly to the CP. The CP can voluntarily forgive this debt — but it must be done through a formal court filing, not a verbal agreement.
  • State/TANF arrears: If the CP received public assistance, the state assigned the support rights. The CP cannot forgive this portion — only the state can, and states rarely do.
🚨 Retroactive Reduction is Very Rare: Courts almost never reduce arrears retroactively — meaning if you couldn’t pay during a period of unemployment, those missed payments are still owed even if you later win a modification. This is why filing for modification immediately when income drops is so critical. Modification only takes effect from the date you filed — not the date income dropped.
14
Can a parent withhold visitation because the other parent isn’t paying child support?Enforcement

No — and doing so can seriously backfire. Child support and visitation/custody rights are entirely separate legal matters in every US jurisdiction. A parent’s failure to pay support does not legally entitle the other parent to deny court-ordered parenting time.

Courts treat support and visitation as completely independent obligations:

  • The NCP must pay support regardless of whether the CP allows visitation
  • The CP must allow court-ordered visitation regardless of whether the NCP pays support
  • Withholding visitation in response to non-payment is itself a violation of the custody order
🚨 Real Consequence: Courts have found custodial parents in contempt for withholding visitation — even when the other parent genuinely wasn’t paying. In some cases, judges have modified custody as a direct response to visitation interference. The correct remedy for non-payment is an enforcement motion, not a custody lockout.
15
Is child support tax-deductible for the paying parent, and does the receiving parent pay tax on it?Tax & Legal

The US tax treatment of child support is clear and absolute — and it’s one of the most common misconceptions in divorce finance:

❌ Not DeductibleChild support payments are never tax-deductible for the paying parent. This is true regardless of income level, state, or how the order is structured (26 USC §215).
✅ Not TaxableChild support received is never taxable income for the receiving parent. It does not appear on any tax return and has no effect on the CP’s tax liability (26 USC §71).

This contrasts sharply with alimony/spousal support, which (for orders entered before January 1, 2019) was deductible for the payer and taxable for the recipient. Post-2018 alimony orders are also neither deductible nor taxable — matching child support rules.

💡 What IS negotiable: The dependency exemption, Child Tax Credit ($2,000/child), and Head of Household filing status are separate from support payments — and these can be negotiated in your settlement. A CPA can model the net present value of these benefits for both parties.
16
How does child support work when parents live in different states (interstate cases)?Tax & Legal

Interstate child support is governed by the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act (UIFSA), adopted by all 50 states. UIFSA establishes which state has jurisdiction (called “continuing exclusive jurisdiction” or CEJ) and how orders cross state lines for enforcement.

The core UIFSA rules:

  • The state that originally issued the order retains CEJ as long as at least one party (either parent or the child) still lives there
  • If all parties have moved out of the issuing state, any party can register the order in a new state and request that the new state take over jurisdiction
  • Income withholding orders under UIFSA are sent directly to the NCP’s employer in any state — no court hearing required in the employer’s state
  • State IV-D agencies cooperate across state lines to locate parents, establish paternity, and enforce orders through the federal Parent Locator Service
💡 Practical Example: If the original NY order is still active and the NCP moves to Texas, New York retains jurisdiction. The CP can register the NY order in Texas and have an IWO sent to the Texas employer — all through the IV-D agencies, with no attorney required on either side.
17
Can child support be discharged in bankruptcy?Tax & Legal

No — child support is one of the few debts that survives bankruptcy entirely. Under the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act (BAPCPA), both ongoing child support obligations and existing arrears are classified as “domestic support obligations” (DSOs) — a category specifically protected from discharge in any chapter of bankruptcy.

  • Chapter 7 (liquidation): Child support arrears survive the discharge completely — you still owe every dollar after bankruptcy
  • Chapter 13 (reorganization): DSOs must be paid in full through the repayment plan as a priority claim; the plan will not be confirmed unless current DSO payments are maintained
  • Chapter 11: Same treatment as Chapter 13 for DSOs
🚨 Automatic Stay Does Not Apply: When a bankruptcy case is filed, the “automatic stay” normally halts all collection actions. However, child support enforcement actions are specifically exempt — the state IV-D agency and the CP can continue pursuing enforcement, wage garnishment, and license suspensions even while a bankruptcy case is pending (11 USC §362(b)(2)).
💡 What Bankruptcy CAN Do: While it cannot discharge support arrears, a Chapter 13 filing can help restructure other debts (credit cards, medical bills) — potentially freeing up cash flow to make current on child support. A bankruptcy attorney and family law attorney should work together in this situation.
📌 Legal Disclaimer: These FAQs provide general educational information about US child support law. Laws vary by state and change over time. Nothing here constitutes legal advice. For guidance specific to your situation, consult a licensed family law attorney in your state.

Related Divorce, Alimony & Family Finance Calculators

Child support is one piece of the post-divorce financial picture. These 12 calculators cover the taxes, income, insurance, and budgeting decisions that run alongside your family court case.

⚖️ Divorce & Family Law
🧾 Tax Calculators — Impacts Your Support Directly
👶
🔥 Most Related
Child Tax Credit Estimator
Worth up to $2,000 per child — and fully negotiable in divorce. Whoever claims the child as dependent receives this credit. Calculate exactly how much this is worth to each parent before deciding who claims.
🎯 Directly tied to child support
Open Calculator →
💵
📋 CP Benefit
Earned Income Tax Credit Calculator
Custodial parents may qualify for up to $7,430 in EITC — but only if they are the custodial parent and meet the income rules. This credit can be larger than 6 months of child support payments.
✅ High relevance — custodial parent
Open Calculator →
💼
Freelance & Self-Employment Tax Calculator
Self-employed parents pay the full 15.3% FICA themselves. Courts add back Schedule C deductions — so your actual tax burden is higher than employees. Understand your true net income for support purposes.
✅ High relevance — self-employed NCP
Open Calculator →
📊
Federal Income Tax Bracket Calculator
Child support guidelines use net income in most states — meaning your actual tax liability matters. Calculate your real after-tax income to see exactly what the court will use as your support base.
✅ High relevance — net income basis
Open Calculator →
📋
W-4 Withholding Estimator
After a divorce, your filing status, dependents, and deductions all change. Update your W-4 to avoid a surprise tax bill — or a large refund that the IRS might intercept for child support arrears.
🔵 Relevant — post-divorce tax filing
Open Calculator →
🗺️
State Income Tax Estimator
State tax deductions directly affect your net income — and net income is what most state child support formulas use. If you’re considering relocating, your support obligation may change too.
🔵 Relevant — state net income basis
Open Calculator →
💰 Income & Budgeting — Plan Life Around Your Order
🏥 Health & Insurance — Add-On Expense Planning
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Legal Disclaimer, Methodology & Official HHS Data Sources

The US Child Support Payment Estimator provides estimates only. Results are not legal advice…

📜

Terms of Use & Legal Disclaimer

USFinanceCalculators.com and its operators are not a law firm, legal services provider, or licensed attorney. No attorney-client relationship is formed by using this website or any calculator on it. The information presented on this page is for general informational and educational purposes only and is not intended to be, and should not be construed as, legal advice.

  • 📌
    Estimates ≠ Court Orders: Results generated by this calculator are mathematical estimates based on publicly available state guideline formulas. They do not represent what a specific court will order in your case.
  • 📌
    State Laws Change: Child support guideline tables, income cap figures, percentage rates, and formula rules are updated by state legislatures and courts on a rolling basis. While we update our data regularly, we cannot guarantee real-time accuracy for every state at every moment.
  • 📌
    Judicial Discretion: Family court judges have wide latitude to deviate from guideline amounts based on the specific circumstances of each case. No calculator can model judicial discretion.
  • 📌
    No Reliance: You should not rely on these results to make legal decisions, file court documents, negotiate settlements, or represent income figures in any legal proceeding without independent verification by a licensed professional.
  • 📌
    No Liability: USFinanceCalculators.com expressly disclaims all liability for any errors, omissions, or inaccuracies in the results produced by this tool, and for any actions taken or not taken based on those results.
  • 📌
    Third-Party Links: This page links to government websites for reference purposes. We are not affiliated with, endorsed by, or responsible for the content of any government agency, court, or external website linked from this page.
⚠️ Get Legal Help: If you are involved in a child support proceeding, contact a licensed family law attorney in your state. If you cannot afford an attorney, contact your state bar association’s lawyer referral service or your local legal aid organization — many offer free consultations for family law matters.
📐

Editorial Standards & State Guideline Verification

USFinanceCalculators.com is committed to publishing financial tools that are accurate, transparent, and built on verified public sources. The following describes how this calculator was researched, built, and maintained.

51
US Jurisdictions Covered
3
Formula Models (IS, POI, Melson)
2026
Guideline Tables Used
Quarterly
Review & Update Schedule
📊 Data Sources Used
  • State court official guideline worksheets (2026)
  • HHS Office of Child Support Services data
  • State legislature statutes (primary sources)
  • BLS Occupational Employment & Wage Statistics
  • IRS Publication 504 (Divorced/Separated Individuals)
  • Federal Register for UIFSA implementation rules
  • State-specific IV-D agency published worksheets
✅ Editorial Process
  • Each state formula independently verified against official court worksheets
  • Guideline income tables cross-checked with state statutes
  • Federal law references (USC citations) verified against Congress.gov
  • Calculator logic tested against sample cases published by state courts
  • Content reviewed quarterly for legislative and guideline updates
  • No sponsored or paid placement affects calculator logic or results
⚠️ Known Limitations
  • Highly complex or non-standard income structures may require manual worksheet calculation
  • Local court rules and judicial custom practices are not modeled
  • Some states use lookup table interpolation — the calculator uses linear interpolation which may produce minor rounding differences
  • Results reflect guideline amounts only — deviation factors require attorney analysis
🔄 Update Policy
  • Guideline tables reviewed every January (post-legislative session) and July
  • Income cap figures updated annually when states publish revised tables
  • Federal law citations updated upon enactment of relevant legislation
  • User-reported errors reviewed within 5 business days
  • All updates are logged in our internal editorial changelog
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Official Government Sources (HHS, OCSS & BLS)

The following government resources are the primary authoritative sources for US child support law, enforcement, and related financial regulations. We reference these sources directly in building and updating this calculator.

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Federal — Primary
U.S. Dept. of Health & Human Services
Office of Child Support Services (OCSS)
The federal agency overseeing the national child support program under Title IV-D. Publishes annual data reports, state performance metrics, policy guidance, and the federal Child Support Enforcement framework.
acf.hhs.gov/css
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Federal — Guide
USA.gov — Official US Government Portal
Child Support — USA.gov Official Guide
The US government’s official plain-language guide to child support — covering how to apply, how to enforce an order, what to do if the other parent doesn’t pay, and how to find your state’s IV-D agency.
usa.gov/child-support
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IRS — Tax Authority
Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
IRS Publication 504 — Divorced or Separated Individuals
The definitive IRS guide covering the tax treatment of child support (non-deductible / non-taxable), alimony, the dependency exemption, Form 8332, Head of Household status, and the Child Tax Credit after divorce.
irs.gov/publications/p504
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IRS — Form
Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
IRS Form 8332 — Release of Dependency Claim
The official IRS form used by the custodial parent to release the dependency exemption and Child Tax Credit to the non-custodial parent. Must be signed annually or as a multi-year release — the divorce decree alone is not sufficient.
irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-form-8332
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US Code — UIFSA
Office of the Law Revision Counsel — Congress.gov
42 U.S.C. § 666 — UIFSA & Enforcement Requirements
The federal statute requiring all 50 states to adopt UIFSA and implement specific enforcement tools (income withholding, license suspension, passport denial). The legal foundation of interstate child support enforcement.
uscode.house.gov — 42 USC §666
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Criminal Enforcement
Cornell Legal Information Institute (LII)
18 U.S.C. § 228 — Deadbeat Parents Punishment Act
The federal criminal statute making it a felony to willfully fail to pay child support for a child in another state when arrears exceed $5,000 or remain unpaid for over 1 year. Penalties include up to 2 years federal imprisonment.
law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/228
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BLS — Wage Data
US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
Occupational Employment & Wage Statistics (OEWS)
The data source courts use to impute income. Provides median wages by occupation, industry, and metropolitan area. If a court imputes income to a parent, this BLS database is the benchmark — searchable by job title and ZIP.
bls.gov/oes
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State IV-D Agencies
HHS — Office of Child Support Services
State & Tribal Child Support Agency Directory
Official HHS directory of every state’s IV-D child support enforcement agency — phone numbers, websites, and contact details. Your first call for enforcement, modification assistance, or paternity establishment services (free to use).
acf.hhs.gov/css/contact-information/state-contacts
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✅ What We Do
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📅 Last Reviewed: April 2026
🔄 Next Scheduled Review: July 2026
✍️ Maintained by: USFinanceCalculators.com Editorial Team
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