North Carolina Child Support Calculator and
Guidelines Worksheet
Estimate child support payments using North Carolina's official guidelines and calculation model.
Estimate your North Carolina Child Support
Estimate child support payments using North Carolina's official guidelines and calculation model.
· Data sourced from North Carolina statutes and court fee schedules.
Important: This tool provides educational estimates only — not legal advice. Made For Law is not a law firm and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to any federal, state, county, or local government agency or court system. Calculator results are based on statutory formulas and publicly available fee schedules — not AI. Supporting content is AI-assisted and editorially reviewed. Results may not reflect recent legislative changes or your specific circumstances. Do not rely solely on these estimates — always verify with official sources and consult a licensed attorney before making legal or financial decisions. Full disclaimer
North Carolina uses the Income Shares model for child support under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-13.4(c1).
Key Takeaways
- Calculation model: Income Shares
- Based on: both parents' combined income, divided proportionally
- Statute: N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-13.4(c1)
- Guidelines: Income Shares model using both parents' adjusted gross income with the North Carolina Child Support Guidelines Schedule
Key facts for North Carolina child support
What drives child support in North Carolina

Child Support in North Carolina
North Carolina calculates child support under the Income Shares model using the North Carolina Child Support Guidelines, updated by the state court system and most recently revised effective January 1, 2023. The guidelines combine both parents' gross income, look up the presumptive obligation on the state's schedule for the number of children, and divide it proportionally based on each parent's share of combined income.
North Carolina uses gross income rather than net income, which simplifies the calculation compared to states that deduct taxes first. Gross income includes wages, salary, commissions, bonuses, self-employment income, rental income, and other regular sources.
The schedule extends to a combined monthly gross income of $360,000; above that threshold, courts set support based on the child's actual reasonable needs and the parents' ability to pay.
Health insurance premiums and work-related childcare are mandatory add-ons under the NC Guidelines, allocated proportionally. These child-related expenses — insurance premiums, childcare costs for employment or education, and extraordinary medical expenses — are divided between the parents in proportion to their share of combined gross income.
When the non-custodial parent has the child for 123 or more overnights per year (approximately one-third of the year), a shared custody deviation applies under the Guidelines' Worksheet B, which typically reduces the standard obligation significantly. The North Carolina Child Support Services provides enforcement and modification services statewide.
North Carolina Child Support Guidelines
Under North Carolina's Income Shares model, the calculation begins by determining each parent's gross income from all sources, including wages, salaries, commissions, bonuses, self-employment income, rental income, and certain benefits. The court then applies allowable deductions — such as taxes, mandatory retirement contributions, and pre-existing child support obligations — to arrive at each parent's adjusted or net income.
Both incomes are combined to find the total household income available for child support.
The combined income figure is then matched against North Carolina's child support schedule (referenced in Income Shares model using both parents' adjusted gross income with the North Carolina Child Support Guidelines Schedule), which provides a base obligation amount for the number of children involved. For example, under a typical Income Shares schedule, parents with a combined monthly income of $8,000 and two children have a presumptive obligation of $1,400 per month.
Each parent's share is then calculated in proportion to their contribution to the combined income — if one parent earns 60% of the total, they are responsible for 60% of the base obligation.
Additional expenses are layered on top of the base obligation. Health insurance premiums for the child, work-related childcare costs, and extraordinary expenses (such as special education or medical needs) are typically added to the base figure and divided proportionally between the parents.
The custodial parent's share is assumed to be spent directly on the child, while the non-custodial parent's share becomes the child support payment.

North Carolina Child Support Formula
The number of children is the most direct factor in any North Carolina child support calculation under the child support guidelines in Income Shares model using both parents' adjusted gross income with the North Carolina Child Support Guidelines Schedule. The basic child support obligation increases with each additional child, though not in a strictly linear fashion.
The amount of child support also depends on each parent's monthly gross income, which includes wages, salary, commissions, bonuses, and other recurring sources. The noncustodial parent's share is calculated based on their proportion of the combined monthly gross income.
Health care and child care costs play a major role. The parent who carries the child's health insurance receives a credit or offset, and unreimbursed medical expenses exceeding a threshold are typically split between the parents.
Child care costs necessary for employment or education are added to the basic child support obligation and divided proportionally between parents.
Children with special needs — whether physical, developmental, or educational — can significantly increase the amount of child support. North Carolina courts operating under N.C.
Gen. Stat.
§ 50-13.4(c1) have discretion to deviate upward from the guideline amount when a child requires therapies, specialized schooling, or ongoing medical treatment that exceeds ordinary expenses. Similarly, extracurricular activities and private school tuition may be considered, though courts vary in how they treat these costs.
High-income cases present unique challenges. Where North Carolina's schedule under Income Shares model using both parents' adjusted gross income with the North Carolina Child Support Guidelines Schedule sets a maximum combined income threshold, courts exercise independent discretion above that cap rather than applying the standard table.
When a parent is voluntarily unemployed or underemployed, North Carolina courts may impute income — assigning an earning capacity based on the parent's education, work history, job market conditions, and prior earnings — to prevent artificially lowering the child support amount by choosing not to work or accepting a lower-paying job without justification.
Modifying Child Support in North Carolina
North Carolina's child support obligation generally continues until the child reaches the age of majority under state law — check N.C. Gen.
Stat. § 50-13.4(c1) for the specific cutoff age, which may extend beyond 18 in certain circumstances such as a child still in high school or college.
Support may also end earlier if the child becomes emancipated through marriage, military service, or court order.
Either parent may petition the court under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-13.4(c1) to modify a child support order when there has been a material change in circumstances. Common triggers include:
- A significant income change for either parent (a material change in circumstances — such as a significant income shift, change in custody arrangement, or change in the child's needs — is generally required to modify the existing order; the exact threshold under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-13.4(c1) controls for North Carolina)
- Loss of employment or onset of a disability
- A significant change in the child's medical, educational, or developmental needs
- A substantial change in the custody or parenting-time arrangement
The parent seeking modification bears the burden of proving that circumstances have genuinely changed since the last order.
Modifications in North Carolina under N.C. Gen.
Stat. § 50-13.4(c1) are not automatic — even when circumstances change, the existing order remains in effect until a court enters a new one.
Filing promptly matters because modifications typically take effect from the date of the petition, not retroactively to when the change occurred. Parents who delay filing risk accumulating arrears under the original order that cannot be forgiven, since federal law prohibits retroactive reduction of child support arrears.
Families navigating this process should contact a North Carolina family law attorney to confirm the specific modification threshold and filing procedures that apply to their order.
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North Carolina Child Support Enforcement
North Carolina has multiple enforcement mechanisms under N.C. Gen.
Stat. § 50-13.4(c1) to ensure child support is paid.
The most common tool is income withholding (wage garnishment), which is now mandatory for most new and modified child support orders. Under an income withholding order, the obligor's employer deducts the support amount directly from their paycheck and sends it to the state disbursement unit.
This approach removes the obligation from the paying parent's discretion and provides the custodial parent with reliable, timely payments.
When wage garnishment is insufficient or the obligor is self-employed, North Carolina can pursue additional enforcement actions:
- Intercepting federal and state tax refunds
- Placing liens on real and personal property
- Suspending driver's licenses and professional or occupational licenses
- Denying or revoking passport applications for arrears exceeding $2,500
- Reporting delinquent obligors to credit bureaus
Each tool creates significant practical consequences that apply without a separate court hearing.
In severe cases, North Carolina courts may hold a non-paying parent in contempt of court, which can result in fines, community service, or incarceration. Repeated willful failure to pay can lead to criminal prosecution under both state and federal law.
The Deadbeat Parents Punishment Act makes it a federal crime to willfully fail to pay child support for a child living in another state when the arrearage exceeds $5,000 or has been unpaid for more than one year. The federal Office of Child Support Services (OCSE) can assist custodial parents with enforcement at no cost.
To contact the North Carolina child support program directly, use the OCSE state programs directory.

Parenting Time Adjustment
The amount of parenting time each parent exercises directly affects the child support calculation in North Carolina. When the non-custodial parent has the child for a significant number of overnights — typically 25% or more of the year (approximately 92 overnights in many jurisdictions) — North Carolina's guidelines under Income Shares model using both parents' adjusted gross income with the North Carolina Child Support Guidelines Schedule apply a shared-custody or parenting-time adjustment that reduces the non-custodial parent's obligation.
A parent who has the child more often incurs more direct expenses for housing, food, and daily needs, so the transfer payment to the other parent reflects that shared financial responsibility.
In cases where parents share custody equally (50/50), North Carolina courts typically still calculate support based on the income differential between the parents. The higher-earning parent generally pays support to the lower-earning parent, even in a true 50/50 arrangement, because the child's standard of living should be roughly comparable in both households.
The amount is usually significantly lower than in a traditional custody arrangement as calculated under Income Shares model using both parents' adjusted gross income with the North Carolina Child Support Guidelines Schedule. Even small changes in the overnight count — such as moving from 120 to 128 overnights — can cross a threshold that triggers a meaningful change in the support calculation.
Use the North Carolina Custody Time Calculator to track overnights precisely and determine which parenting time threshold applies to your schedule.
North Carolina Child Support Calculator — NC Child Support Worksheet
The North Carolina child support calculator estimates support under North Carolina's Income Shares model as set by the NC Child Support Guidelines (effective January 2023). North Carolina child support calculations use the NC child support worksheet — either Worksheet A (primary custody, where one parent has the child more than 242 overnights/year), Worksheet B (shared custody, 123–242 overnights per parent), or Worksheet C (split custody where each parent has primary custody of at least one child).
The nc child support calculator produces different results depending on which worksheet applies to the parents' parenting time schedule — use the custody time calculator to determine your overnight count before estimating support.
NC child support is calculated using both parents' monthly gross income plus adjustments for health insurance, work-related childcare, and any extraordinary expenses. The NC Child Support Guidelines set a schedule for the basic combined obligation based on the parents' combined gross income and number of children.
The nc child support calculator applies the appropriate worksheet automatically. North Carolina child support orders are reviewable every 3 years (or sooner upon a substantial change in circumstances) under N.C.
Gen. Stat.
§ 50-13.7. The NC Division of Social Services administers the child support enforcement program.
For legal advice on your NC child support obligation, consult a North Carolina family law attorney.
Questions families ask about North Carolina child support
Edited and reviewed by our editorial team. Answers are general information — not legal advice.
How does the North Carolina child support calculator estimate my obligation?
The North Carolina child support calculator applies the North Carolina child support guidelines using both parents' combined monthly gross income (not net income) and the number of children. Using the official worksheet, the court looks up the combined support obligation on the NC child support guidelines schedule, then calculates each parent's proportional share. The paying parent's child support payments are their percentage of combined gross income multiplied by the total obligation. With combined gross monthly income of $8,000 and 1 child, the North Carolina child support guidelines produce a monthly support payment of approximately $1,100–$1,200. The calculator above provides a detailed estimate including health insurance and child care expenses.
What expenses are added to the North Carolina child support obligation?
North Carolina child support guidelines require parents to add health insurance premiums and work-related child care expense to the basic support payment, allocated proportionally by gross income share. The official North Carolina child support guidelines worksheet has separate line items for these expenses. When the non-custodial parent paying child support has 123 or more annual overnights (shared custody under Worksheet B), the monthly child support obligation is reduced — mapping the exact overnight count is essential before calculating your guideline amount.
When can you modify child support in North Carolina?
Either parent can file for modification under G.S. § 50-13.7 when there has been a substantial change in circumstances. NC courts presume a substantial change if the new North Carolina child support guidelines estimate differs from the current child support order by 15% or more.
How does NC Worksheet B work for shared custody child support?
North Carolina uses Worksheet B when the noncustodial parent has 123 or more overnights per year — approximately one-third of the year. On NC Worksheet B, the court calculates both parents' shares of the combined income using gross monthly income, then adjusts for the actual parenting time each parent exercises with the child. The physical custody arrangement directly affects the final amount: at exactly 50/50 custody, the child support in North Carolina is based purely on the income difference between the parents. Deviations from the presumptive guideline are allowed when a judge finds the standard amount inappropriate based on specific factors. The NC Division of Social Services Child Support can establish orders and provide enforcement at no cost. For legal advice on your specific situation, consult a family law attorney familiar with North Carolina child support guidelines.
What is the difference between primary custody and shared custody for NC child support?
NC child support is calculated differently depending on whether one parent has primary custody or the parents share custody. When one parent has primary custody (fewer than 123 overnights with the non-custodial parent), North Carolina uses Worksheet A — a straightforward proportional income calculation. When parenting time reaches 123 or more overnights (shared custody), NC courts switch to Worksheet B, which adjusts for both parents' direct expenses. The parent with primary custody typically receives child support from the non-custodial parent; under NC Worksheet B for shared custody, the income difference between parents drives the support amount. NC child support is established and enforced by the North Carolina Child Support Services division of NC DHHS at no cost to eligible families.
How is child support calculated in North Carolina?
North Carolina uses the Income Shares model, which combines both parents' incomes and divides the total child support obligation in proportion to each parent's earnings. The specific calculation follows the worksheets and schedules found in Income Shares model using both parents' adjusted gross income with the North Carolina Child Support Guidelines Schedule. Additional factors like healthcare costs, childcare, and the custody arrangement can adjust the final figure.
At what age does child support end in North Carolina?
Under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-13.4(c1), child support continues until the child reaches the age of majority set by North Carolina law — do not assume this is age 18 without confirming the specific rule in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-13.4(c1), as some states extend the obligation to age 19 or beyond when the child is still completing high school or has a disability. If the parents agreed to extended support (such as through college) in their divorce or custody agreement, that agreement controls. Emancipation through marriage, military enlistment, or court order can terminate the obligation earlier.
Can child support be modified in North Carolina?
Yes. Either parent can petition the court under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-13.4(c1) for a modification when there has been a material change in circumstances — for example, a significant change in gross monthly income, job loss, or a change in physical custody or parenting time. A judge may deviate from the standard child support amount when the financial circumstances of both parents have materially changed. North Carolina courts will review the current financial information and recalculate the child support amount under Income Shares model using both parents' adjusted gross income with the North Carolina Child Support Guidelines Schedule. The modification generally takes effect from the filing date, not retroactively. If you are behind on payments, seek modification sooner rather than later — arrears cannot be retroactively reduced. An experienced family law attorney or lawyer can help you navigate the process.
What happens if a parent doesn't pay child support in North Carolina?
North Carolina enforces child support under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-13.4(c1) through income withholding (the primary tool for most orders), tax refund interception, property liens, and driver's and professional license suspension. Courts can also deny passport applications for arrears exceeding $2,500, report delinquent obligors to credit bureaus, or hold the noncustodial parent in contempt — which can mean fines or incarceration. The state child support enforcement agency can initiate most of these actions on behalf of the parent receiving child support at no cost. Child support ends when the child turns 18, or when the child graduates high school or turns 19 (varies by state).
Does North Carolina consider both parents' income?
Yes. The Income Shares model used in North Carolina is built on both parents' combined income. Each parent's share of the child support obligation is proportional to their share of the total household income.
What other North Carolina family law tools are available?
If you are navigating a divorce in North Carolina, the North Carolina Alimony Calculator estimates spousal support obligations, the North Carolina Divorce Cost Estimator projects total divorce expenses, and the North Carolina Property Division Calculator helps with equitable distribution. When you are ready to speak with a local attorney, find a family law attorney in North Carolina.
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Child Support Estimator in states that border North Carolina
Key statutes: N.C.G.S. § 28A-23-3
Sources
- North Carolina Judicial Branch — family court procedures and child support enforcement
- North Carolina General Statutes — Legislature — child support guidelines, statutes, and modification rules
- North Carolina Bar Association — family law resources and attorney directory
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Open the calculatorLegal information, not legal advice. The Child Support Estimator for North Carolina produces estimates based on public fee schedules and state statutes. Actual costs vary by case. For advice about your situation, consult a licensed North Carolina attorney.
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