Neal Caffrey

Wyoming

Wyoming Child Support Calculator – Accurate & Easy to Use

Wyoming Child Support Calculator

Parent Information (Monthly Net Income)

Children, Parenting Time & Expenses (Monthly)

Guideline Support Estimate

Estimated Monthly Payment $0.00
This calculator provides an estimate based on the Wyoming Child Support Guidelines and is for informational purposes only. The final child support order can vary. This is not a substitute for legal advice.

What Is the Wyoming Child Support Calculator?

The Wyoming Child Support Calculator is an online tool that uses Wyoming’s official child support guidelines to estimate how much one parent might pay the other each month.

It’s designed to help both parents understand what a fair, guideline-based payment could look like. The calculator factors in each parent’s income, number of children, and time spent with the kids to estimate monthly support payments.

It’s not an official court order — it’s an informational tool to help parents plan, discuss, or negotiate child support more confidently.

How the Wyoming Child Support Calculator Works

The calculator is built using Wyoming’s child support formula, which relies on a few key inputs:

1. Parent Income

You enter both parents’ monthly net incomes — that’s take-home pay after taxes and deductions.

The calculator combines both parents’ incomes to determine their total household income, which is used to find a baseline child support obligation from Wyoming’s official tables.

2. Number of Children

Support amounts increase with the number of children.
You simply select how many children are included in the support calculation (from 1 up to 6).

3. Parenting Time

The number of overnights each parent has per year affects the calculation.
In Wyoming:

  • If both parents have more than 91 overnights, the case is considered shared custody, which lowers the total payment because time and costs are more balanced.
  • If one parent has fewer than 92 overnights, the other is considered the primary custodial parent, and the non-custodial parent typically pays support.

4. Health Insurance and Child Care Costs

You can also include monthly costs for:

  • Children’s health insurance premiums
  • Work-related child care

These expenses are added to the overall support amount, based on each parent’s share of the total income.

Step-by-Step: How to Use the Calculator

  1. Enter Parent A and Parent B’s Net Monthly Incomes
    Example: Parent A earns $4,000/month and Parent B earns $2,500/month.
  2. Select the Number of Children
    Choose from 1 to 6 children.
  3. Add the Number of Overnights
    Example: Parent B has 100 overnights per year.
  4. Include Health Insurance and Child Care Costs (if any)
    Example: $200/month for health insurance and $300 for child care.
  5. Click “Calculate”
    The calculator instantly estimates the monthly child support payment — showing who pays whom and how much.
  6. Click “Reset”
    To start over or test a new scenario.

Behind the Scenes: How the Calculator Estimates Support

The logic follows Wyoming’s Child Support Guidelines (Wyo. Stat. § 20-2-304), which set out how support is determined.

Here’s the general process simplified:

  1. Combine both parents’ net incomes.
  2. Find the total child support amount from the official table based on income and number of children.
  3. Divide the obligation proportionally between both parents based on their share of total income.
  4. Adjust for parenting time (shared vs. primary custody).
  5. Add extra costs (like insurance or child care) proportionally.
  6. Show the final estimated payment — who pays, who receives, and how much.

This process makes sure that both parents contribute fairly based on income and parenting responsibilities.

Shared Custody vs. Primary Custody Calculations

The calculator automatically detects shared custody (when both parents have more than 91 nights).
In this case:

  • It increases the base obligation by 50% (to reflect shared costs like housing, meals, and transportation).
  • Then adjusts the payment according to how much time each parent spends with the children.

If only one parent has fewer than 92 nights:

  • The calculator assigns that parent as the non-custodial parent (NCP).
  • The NCP pays their share of the total obligation to the custodial parent.

This ensures the final estimate reflects real-world parenting arrangements.

Example Calculation

Let’s say:

  • Parent A earns $4,000/month
  • Parent B earns $2,500/month
  • They have two children
  • Parent B has 100 overnights per year
  • There are no additional expenses

Based on Wyoming’s guideline tables, the total child support obligation might be around $1,111/month.

Parent A earns 61.5% of the combined income, so they pay about $683/month to Parent B (depending on adjustments for parenting time).

The calculator handles this math instantly — no manual tables, no confusion.

Why Use the Wyoming Child Support Calculator?

Fast and free — get instant results
Guideline-based — follows Wyoming’s official formula
Transparent — shows how income and custody affect support
Customizable — test different scenarios before mediation or court
Educational — helps parents understand the process before legal discussions

This tool helps reduce confusion and stress around one of the most sensitive financial issues in parenting plans.

Important Disclaimer

The Wyoming Child Support Calculator provides an estimate only.
It’s for informational purposes and does not replace legal advice or a court order.
Actual child support amounts can vary depending on:

  • Court decisions
  • Extraordinary expenses
  • Special needs
  • Deviation requests

Always consult a Wyoming family law attorney or your local child support enforcement office for specific legal guidance.