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PAPA Session 5

This document discusses child support, which is money paid by the noncustodial parent to the custodial parent for the care of children after separation or divorce. It provides guidelines for calculating child support based on the noncustodial parent's net income. Net income is defined as total income minus taxes and other mandatory deductions. The guidelines specify that 20% of net income is owed for one child, 25% for two children, 30% for three children, and 35-40% for more children. The document includes examples calculating child support for noncustodial parents earning $7.25/hour and $10/hour with one or two children. It directs readers to revise their budgets to account for child support as a new mandatory

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
213 views3 pages

PAPA Session 5

This document discusses child support, which is money paid by the noncustodial parent to the custodial parent for the care of children after separation or divorce. It provides guidelines for calculating child support based on the noncustodial parent's net income. Net income is defined as total income minus taxes and other mandatory deductions. The guidelines specify that 20% of net income is owed for one child, 25% for two children, 30% for three children, and 35-40% for more children. The document includes examples calculating child support for noncustodial parents earning $7.25/hour and $10/hour with one or two children. It directs readers to revise their budgets to account for child support as a new mandatory

Uploaded by

Thomas Kariuki
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Session 5: Child Support

Introduction

When parents separate and one of them has custody of the child, the noncustodial parent has to pay child
support. Child support is defined as regular payments of money, in an amount set by a court, paid by the
noncustodial parent (NCP) to the custodial parent (CP) of a child. A noncustodial parent can be a mother or a
father.

Children need and deserve the financial support of both of their parents. If parents aren’t living together, the
noncustodial parent is legally responsible for paying child support.

The actual amount of child support to be paid is based on the noncustodial parent’s net income - total income
minus federal income tax, Social Security (6.2%), Medicare (1.45%), union dues and expenses for health care
coverage for the child. According to Texas Child Support guidelines, the amount of child support owed is as
follows:

1 child 20% of net income

2 children 25%

3 children 30%

4 children 35%

5 or more children 40%

*These amounts are for multiple children with the same two biological parents.

p.a.p.a. Student Workbook page • 21


ACTIvity: Calculate Child Support Owed
The amount of federal income tax is provided in each of the story problems below. For each of the noncusto-
dial parents below, figure out gross income (assuming a 40-hour work week) and subtract federal income
tax, Social Security and Medicare tax to arrive at net income. The guidelines will then tell you the amount of
child support owed monthly. This is how much you’d have to pay each month if you had a child you didn’t live
with. Or, it’s the amount you would receive in child support if you were the custodial parent in the example.

1. Calculate the child support for a noncustodial parent earning $7.25 per hour with two children.
(Federal income tax - $42.00, S.S. – 6.2%, Medicare - 1.45%) __________

2. Calculate the child support for a noncustodial parent earning $10 per hour with one child.
(Federal income tax - $108.00, S.S. - 6.2%, Medicare - 1.45%) __________

3. Calculate the child support for a noncustodial parent earning $10 per hour with two children.
(Federal income tax - $108.00, S.S. - 6.2%, Medicare - 1.45%) __________

How to calculate:
Multiply the hourly wage by 40; then multiply by 52; then divide by 12 to get gross monthly income.

$_____ X 40 = $_____ $______ X 52 = $_____ $_____ ÷ 12 = $_____

Round that amount to the nearest whole dollar. Multiply gross income by .062 (6.2% Social Security) and by
.0145 (1.45% for Medicare). Add these two numbers to the federal income tax and subtract the sum from the
gross income in order to get the net income.

Consult the guidelines to figure child support amounts based on the number of children in each story.

p.a.p.a. Student Workbook page • 22


ACTIvity: Revise Your Budget
Get your completed budget from the last session. Now imagine that you just became a noncustodial parent
with one child. Don’t worry about whether that sounds realistic or not. Just figure out how much child
support you would pay based on your net monthly income.

Add the amount you owe monthly for child support as a must-have expense. Then, revise your budget
accordingly. You’ll probably have to give up some want-to expenses.

How do you feel about your budget now?

What would it be like to manage your life with this budget?

p.a.p.a. Student Workbook page • 23

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