Sole Custody Calculation
The standard guideline formula when one parent has the child the majority of the year. We make sure the inputs are right.
Under 91 OvernightsVirginia uses a guideline formula that turns gross incomes, the parenting schedule, childcare costs, and health insurance into one calculation. We help you understand the math, challenge the wrong inputs, and protect what your child actually needs.
First call is a conversation, not a commitment.
Equal parenting time does not always mean zero child support. Income matters. The math still runs.
Which one applies to your family depends on the parenting schedule. The same incomes can produce very different support numbers, so the schedule is half the equation.
Virginia defines income broadly. It is not just your salary. Anything that comes in from almost any source can be part of the calculation. That cuts both ways.
From the first guideline calculation to a contested modification or enforcement action, here is the work we take on.
The standard guideline formula when one parent has the child the majority of the year. We make sure the inputs are right.
Under 91 OvernightsWhen each parent crosses 91 overnights, the shared custody formula in Va. Code § 20-108.2(G) takes over. The math gets more complex.
91+ OvernightsWhen you have multiple children and each parent has primary custody of at least one, two calculations are run and netted together.
Multiple ChildrenThe cost of covering your child on a health, dental, or vision plan is added directly into the guideline calculation.
Add-On CostDaycare, after-school care, and similar costs that let you work get added to the formula. Receipts and records matter here.
Documented CostsCourts can deviate from the guideline number when one of 15 specific factors makes it unjust. Travel, special needs, debt for the child, and tax effects are common reasons.
15 FactorsWhen incomes change, custody changes, or insurance changes, support can be modified. We file petitions and respond to them.
Material ChangeWhen a parent is voluntarily under-employed or unemployed, the court can impute earnings based on history, education, and the local job market.
Earning CapacityThe Virginia Division of Child Support Enforcement can pursue support, issue administrative orders, and collect arrears.
State EnforcementSupport can be deducted directly from a paycheck and sent through the state. The most reliable way to make sure payments arrive on time.
Automatic PaymentDoctor visits, prescriptions, and dental work not covered by insurance get split between the parents. We help you collect what you are owed.
Split CostsGenerally age 18, or 19 / end of high school for full-time students still living with the receiving parent. Disability can extend it further.
EmancipationWhen a parent quits a job, takes a pay cut, or refuses to find work to avoid paying support, the court has a tool for that. Imputed income lets a judge calculate support based on what a parent should be earning rather than what they actually are.
The court can impute income when there is reason to believe a parent is voluntarily under-employed or unemployed without good cause. It does not apply to legitimate job loss or genuine career changes.
The judge weighs several real-world factors before imputing a number:
If income is imputed, child support is calculated using the imputed figure, not the actual paycheck. That can mean significantly higher support for the parent who tried to lower their numbers, or significantly lower expected support from the other side when their argument fails.
"The guideline number is a starting point. The story behind the inputs is where the real case lives."
Gross income, childcare, health insurance, and overnights drive the number. We spend most of our time making sure each one is right, because a small error on any of them can move the number a lot.
Direct payments between parents sound easier, but late payments and partial payments are common. Income withholding through the state is more reliable for both sides, and it removes a monthly fight from your life.
If you lose a job or your hours get cut, file for modification right away. Virginia generally cannot retroactively adjust support before the date you filed, so waiting only buys you arrears you did not need.
Child support is a number you live with every month. Here is what we bring to your case.
Decades of Virginia child support work across the Northern Virginia courts.
We run guideline calculations every week. We know the statute and how local judges apply it.
Martindale-Hubbell AV Preeminent, Super Lawyers, Avvo 10.0, and Best of the Best honors.
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"She was responsive when I needed a response and looked out for my best interests. She was direct about how the process would go. I have already recommended her to friends."
Read what families across Northern Virginia have shared about working with our attorneys.
These are the questions we hear on a first call. If you have a different one, we are happy to answer it directly.
Virginia calculates child support using a guideline formula in Virginia Code § 20-108.2. The formula takes the gross income of both parents, childcare costs, health insurance premiums for the child, and the custodial schedule. Three different calculations apply: sole custody (when one parent has the child fewer than 91 days), shared custody (when each parent has at least 91 days), and split custody (when multiple children are split between parents). Courts can deviate from the guideline number, but they have to document why.
Not necessarily. Equal parenting time does not automatically mean zero child support. When there is a significant income difference between the parents, the higher-earning parent may still owe support even with a 50/50 schedule, because the formula is built on both parents' incomes, not just time. Some 50/50 arrangements result in no support, others result in real support payments. The math depends on the inputs.
Virginia defines income broadly for child support purposes. It includes salaries, wages, severance pay, bonuses, commissions, dividends, spousal support received, disability benefits, social security benefits, retirement, pensions, and other income from all sources. The court can also impute income when a parent is voluntarily under-employed or unemployed without good reason.
Imputed income is the court's determination of what a parent should be earning when the court finds that parent is voluntarily under-employed or unemployed. Virginia courts look at earning history, education level, job-search efforts, and the available work in the area. If the court imputes income, child support is calculated using that figure rather than what the parent is actually earning.
In Virginia, child support generally ends when the child turns 18. If the child is still a full-time high school student, is not self-supporting, and still lives with the parent receiving support, the order continues until age 19 or graduation, whichever comes first. Support can also continue past 18 for an adult child with a permanent physical or mental disability that began before 18 and who cannot live independently.
Tell us about your situation and we will run the math, find the right inputs, and explain what to expect. Three offices across Northern Virginia, one phone number.

