Neal Caffrey

Georgia

Georgia Child Support Calculator – Accurate & Easy to Use

Georgia Child Support Calculator

Parent Income & Adjustments (Monthly)

Children & Shared Costs

Guideline Support Estimate

Basic Obligation (from Schedule) $0.00
Presumptive Monthly Payment $0.00
This calculator provides an estimate based on the Georgia Child Support Guidelines (O.C.G.A. § 19-6-15) and is for informational purposes only. It does not account for all possible deviations (e.g., for parenting time or low income). This is not a substitute for legal advice.

What is the Georgia Child Support Calculator?

The Georgia Child Support Calculator is an online tool that estimates child support payments. It uses state guidelines to provide a presumptive amount — meaning the standard amount the non-custodial parent is expected to pay each month.

It factors in:

  • Gross income of both parents
  • Self-employment adjustments
  • Pre-existing child support already paid
  • Number of children
  • Custodial parent designation
  • Health insurance premiums for children
  • Work-related child care costs

The result is a monthly figure showing what one parent (the non-custodial parent) may need to pay to help cover the child’s needs.

How Does the Calculator Work?

The calculator follows Georgia’s income shares model. This model assumes both parents share financial responsibility for their children in proportion to their incomes.

Here’s a breakdown of the steps:

  1. Enter Parent Incomes
    • Each parent lists their monthly gross income.
    • If self-employed, a small percentage (7.65%) is deducted to cover self-employment tax.
  2. Adjust for Existing Obligations
    • Any child support already being paid for other children is subtracted.
  3. Combine Incomes
    • The calculator adds both adjusted incomes to find the combined adjusted income.
  4. Apply Georgia’s Support Schedule
    • Georgia publishes a chart showing the basic child support obligation for different income levels and number of children.
    • The calculator pulls the matching value.
  5. Add Shared Costs
    • Health insurance and child care costs are added to the total.
  6. Split by Income Share
    • Each parent’s share of the total obligation is calculated based on their income percentage.
  7. Identify the Paying Parent
    • The non-custodial parent pays their share to the custodial parent.

Example: If Parent A earns 60% of the household income and Parent B earns 40%, Parent B (if non-custodial) would typically pay 40% of the total obligation.

Why Use the Calculator?

Parents often turn to the Georgia Child Support Calculator for:

  • Clarity: It gives a quick, guideline-based estimate.
  • Fairness: It reflects both parents’ incomes, not just one side.
  • Preparation: It helps parents get an idea of what to expect before court or mediation.
  • Transparency: Both parents can see how numbers are calculated.

Important Notes

While helpful, the Georgia Child Support Calculator has limits:

  • It doesn’t account for all deviations, such as parenting time adjustments, extraordinary expenses, or low-income cases.
  • It provides an estimate only — the court makes the final decision.
  • Legal advice from a family law attorney is always recommended if you’re going through a child support case.

Try the Georgia Child Support Calculator

Here’s the good news: you don’t need to crunch numbers by hand. You can use our Georgia Child Support Calculator below. Just enter your information, click “Calculate,” and see the presumptive monthly payment in seconds.

Georgia Child Support Calculator (Use Now)