Alabama Child Support Calculator
Calculate estimated child support using Alabama's official guidelines
About Alabama's Guidelines
Income Shares Model using Rule 32 guidelines
Note: Uses gross income, allows deductions for preexisting support orders
Key Information
- •Model: Income Shares
- •Last Updated: January 15, 2024
Common Deviation Factors
Monthly Income
Children & Custody
Additional Monthly Expenses
Estimates only — not legal advice. Consult a Alabama family law attorney for official calculations.
Official Alabama Court Forms
Download official court forms from the Alabama judiciary website. These are free, legally valid forms for your family court case.
Child Support Forms
Official petitions & worksheets
Modification Forms
Request changes to orders
Financial Disclosure
Income & expense statements
These links go to official Alabama court websites. Forms are free and provided by the state judiciary.
Alabama Child Support Guidelines
Alabama uses the Rule 32 of the Alabama Rules of Judicial Administration to determine child support obligations. Under the Income Shares model, both parents' incomes are combined to estimate what the family would have spent on the child if the household were intact. The obligation is then divided proportionally based on each parent's contribution to combined gross income.
Alabama has several distinctive features in its child support system. Rule 32 presumes the calculated amount is correct; deviations require written findings by the court. Alabama includes a specific worksheet (CS-41/CS-42) that must be filed with every child support order. Income from overtime and second jobs may be excluded if not historically earned.
Alabama bases calculations on gross income — meaning income before taxes and deductions. This includes wages, salaries, commissions, bonuses, self-employment income, and other sources. The self-support reserve in Alabama is $1,300/month, ensuring the paying parent retains enough income to cover basic living expenses.
How Alabama Calculates Child Support
Alabama follows a 7-step process under the Rule 32 of the Alabama Rules of Judicial Administration:
- 1
Determine each parent's gross monthly income from all sources including wages, commissions, bonuses, and self-employment
- 2
Apply allowable deductions: pre-existing child support orders, income tax withholding (based on single/one exemption)
- 3
Combine both parents' adjusted gross incomes to find the basic child support obligation from the Rule 32 schedule
- 4
Divide the obligation proportionally based on each parent's share of combined income
- 5
Add each parent's share of work-related childcare costs and health insurance premiums for the children
- 6
Apply custody credit if the non-custodial parent has 128+ overnights per year
- 7
The non-custodial parent's share (minus direct expenses they pay) becomes the support order
Income Thresholds & Key Numbers in Alabama
Minimum Income Threshold
$100/mo
Maximum Income Cap
$20,000/mo
Self-Support Reserve
$1,300/mo
Federal Poverty Guideline
$1,255/mo
Shared Custody Threshold
128 nights/yr
35% of overnights
Income Basis
gross
Sample Obligation Schedule
| Combined Monthly Income | 1 Child | 2 Children | 3 Children |
|---|---|---|---|
| $1,500 | $262 | $370 | $440 |
| $3,000 | $461 | $665 | $803 |
| $5,000 | $666 | $972 | $1,177 |
| $8,000 | $920 | $1,352 | $1,641 |
| $12,000 | $1,195 | $1,760 | $2,140 |
| $20,000 | $1,600 | $2,365 | $2,885 |
* Simplified schedule. Actual amounts may vary based on additional factors.
Custody Time Adjustments in Alabama
Alabama recognizes "Joint Physical Custody" when the non-custodial parent has the children for at least 128 overnights per year (approximately 35% of the time). When this threshold is met, the standard child support formula is adjusted to reflect the increased direct expenses borne by both parents.
Under Alabama's Income Shares approach, the shared parenting adjustment typically calculates each parent's obligation based on their income share, then applies a credit or cross-calculation that accounts for the time each parent directly supports the child. The more overnights the non-custodial parent has, the greater the reduction in their payment — but the adjustment is not dollar-for-dollar because fixed costs like housing don't decrease when the child is away.
Below 128 overnights, Alabama generally treats the arrangement as a sole custody situation with standard visitation, and no custody time adjustment is applied to the child support calculation.
Frequently Asked Questions About Alabama Child Support
What is Rule 32 in Alabama child support?
What is the minimum child support in Alabama?
Does overtime count as income in Alabama?
How does shared custody affect child support in Alabama?
How to Reduce Child Support Costs in Alabama
While child support is determined by Alabama's guidelines, there are legitimate ways to ensure your obligation is calculated fairly.
Increase Parenting Time
In Alabama, more overnights with your children can reduce your support obligation. Document actual time spent and request a formal custody modification if needed.
Ensure Accurate Income Reporting
Both parents' incomes must be reported accurately. Verify that bonuses, overtime, and variable income are averaged correctly over the appropriate period.
Claim All Allowable Deductions
Alabama allows deductions for items like mandatory retirement contributions, union dues, and health insurance premiums. Make sure all qualifying deductions are included.
Request a Modification When Eligible
If your income has decreased by 15-25% or more, you may qualify for a modification. File promptly — changes are typically not retroactive before the filing date.
Account for Other Children
If you have other children you're legally obligated to support, this can be factored into the calculation as a deduction in most states.
Review Healthcare & Childcare Costs
Ensure shared expenses like health insurance and childcare are divided proportionally. If costs have changed, update the court.
Key Facts About Child Support in Alabama
Calculation Model
Income Shares
Guidelines Source
State Statute
Review Frequency
Every 4 Years
Last Updated
January 15, 2024
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