Published on August 12, 2024 · 7 min read
Key takeaways
Child support calculations aren’t one-size-fits-all and depend on the unique facts affecting you, the other parent and your child.
Child support calculations depend on your family’s finances, needs and amount of parenting time each parent receives.
Income used to calculate child support includes wages and other sources of income that you and the other parent receive.
Nonpayment of child support could result in penalties or even jail time in rare cases.
Typical child support obligations last until a child turns 19, but legal emancipation could reduce the duration of an obligation, and a child’s disability or an agreement between parents could extend an obligation.
The parents agree in writing to continued payment
The child has a mental or physical disability that warrants further support
The child hasn’t graduated from high school (unless the child is over 21)
Impose a fine
Suspend a professional license
Impose a prison sentence
Place a hold on a passport
Suspend a driver’s license
Intercept tax refunds
Suspend an occupational license
Withhold wages to use towards the money owed (known as garnishing wages)
Suspend a recreational license
Garnish workers’ compensation or unemployment benefits
Seize a bank account
Submit a negative credit report
The standard of living the child had while the parents were still together
The amount of time each parent has with the child
Each parent’s financial needs
The child’s financial resources
Each parent’s financial resources
The child’s financial needs
The child’s physical and emotional health
Wages
Salaries
Bonuses
Tips
Dividends
Commissions
Rental income
Annuities
Severance pay
Pensions
Workers’ compensation benefits
Capital gains
Retirement benefits
Disability insurance benefits
Insurance proceeds
Gifts
Income from business ownership
Money prizes
Interest
Trust income
Unemployment insurance benefits
Royalties
Social security benefits
The court looks at a parent’s gross income, which is the total income before taxes and other deductions. And the court might exclude overtime wages if an employer doesn’t require the parent to work overtime. However, if the court believes that you or the other parent is unemployed or underemployed by choice, it might calculate your income according to what you could be earning.
Pro tip: If you think your partner is seeking underemployment to avoid child support, review their education, work capabilities, and work history so you have a clear case to present to the court if it becomes necessary.
Special education expenses
Private education expenses
Transportation expenses
Whether the child attended private schools before the divorce
The amount of money the parents spent on food and clothing for the child
How often the parents took vacations with the child
How much the parents spent on vacations with the child
Whether the parents spent money on extracurricular activities for the child
Through its orders, the Colorado family court system might seek to maintain these standards for a child after their parents’ divorce.
If a child has a trust fund, has received a substantial inheritance or has significant savings, a family court may consider these resources before calculating child support. However, if parents have enough income to cover their child’s financial needs without pulling from the child’s resources, the court may decline to adjust the child support obligation according to the child’s finances.
After reviewing the above information, you might be thinking that calculating child support means a lot of math, research and paperwork. That could be the case for your child support matter. You may handle this work on your own, or you may seek the help of an attorney.
A family law attorney can determine which parent will be liable for child support in your case and estimate the amount of child support. The attorney can also identify which factors to highlight when claiming child support on your behalf or defending you against a child support claim.
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