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Child support amount
The amount of child support is
set using a formula established by the legislature.
The formula uses the number of children, the incomes
of the parents, and the percentage of time the children
spend with each parent. A very simplified summary
is laid out below - for a detailed review, please
refer to Family
Code sections 4050-4076.
NOTE:Guideline
child support calculations only cover daily living expenses.
The court will order additional support to cover other
expenses on a case-by-case basis. Some examples of Additional
Support are: child care expenses, health insurance premiums,
uninsured health costs, special educational needs, etc.
The formula is complex but, as a general
rule, if the paying parent has no custody time with
the children, the support order can be roughly calculated
using this chart:
| NUMBER OF CHILDREN |
PERCENTAGE OF NET INCOME |
| One |
25% |
| Two |
40% |
| Three |
50% |
CUSTODY TIME: As custody time for the paying parent increases,
the percentage of net income used to calculate support goes down and
therefore the child support amount goes down.
CUSTODIAL PARENT'S INCOME:If
the paying parent has no custody or visitation time with the children,
the custodial parent's income will not affect the support amount. But,
if the paying parent has some custody or visitation time, the custodial
parent's income will affect the support amount - as the custodial parent's
net income increases, the guideline child support amount decreases.
| COUNTED AS INCOME |
NOT COUNTED AS INCOME |
- Wages
- Self employment
- Unemployment benefits
- Social Security benefits
- Workers' compensation
- Disability benefits
- Many other types of income such as lottery winnings, insurance
awards, rents, dividends, interest, etc.
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- CalWORKs (welfare)
- SSI (supplemental security income)
- GA (general assistance)
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IMPUTED INCOMEEven
if the paying parent has no income, the court may calculate support
using either income estimated from what the parent could earn based
on skills, education, or past history, or the court may simply rule
that the parent has the ability to earn at least minimum wage and calculate
support accordingly. The court may also impute such earning ability
to the parent with primary custody.
OTHER RESOURCES - The court may consider other resources available to the parents in increasing
or decreasing the amount of the support order. NEW SPOUSE INCOME - The income of a new spouse
is not used in calculating the support amount (note: although the income
of the new spouse income is not added into the formula, the fact that
the new spouse has income will have an effect on the parent's tax rate
and will indirectly affect the support calculation by a small amount.)
Guideline support is calculated using net income. Net
income is calculated by starting with gross income (total of all income
- before deductions) and subtracting only federal and state taxes, Social
Security taxes, state disability insurance, health insurance premium cost,
mandatory union dues, and mandatory retirement deductions. This net figure
will almost always be larger than take home pay because most people have
other deductions taken from their pay.
ADDITONAL DEDUCTIONS- The court may allow additional deductions in calculating net income, such
as: employment expenses, exceptional healthcare costs, uninsured catastrophic
losses, etc. ADDITIONAL INCOME AND RESOURCES - The court may also consider resources available
to the paying parent in addition to income to increase the child support
amount. Examples are: stocks and bonds.
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