Skagit County, WA · Child Support

Skagit County, Washington Child
Support Estimator

Get a free child support estimate tailored to Skagit County, Washington. We use Washington statutes and Skagit County filing-fee data.

Reviewed by the Made for Law editorial teamCites Washington statutes
WA
Skagit County
Mount VernonCounty seat
129KPopulation
Income SharesSupport model
Free tool

Child Support EstimatorSkagit County, WA

Get a free estimate using Washington's verified data for Skagit County.

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

Quick answer

Washington uses the Income Shares model for child support under Wash. Rev. Code § 26.19.020.

Skagit County at a glance

Key facts for Skagit County child support

County seat
Mount Vernon
Skagit County seat
Population
129K
Residents in Skagit County (U.S. Census)
Support model
Income Shares
Washington child support formula
Guideline source
State statute
Wash. Rev. Code § 26.19.020
In depth

What to know about child support in Skagit County

County courthouse where child support orders are processed in Skagit County, Washington
Child Support Estimator — Skagit County, Washington

Child Support in Skagit County, Washington

Washington child support is calculated under statewide Income Shares guidelines, but the filing, review, and enforcement process is local. Parents in Skagit County use the same statewide formula as the rest of Washington, then work through the county family court or child support agency process for orders, modifications, and enforcement.

Skagit County ranks 11th by population among 39 Washington counties. That matters for scheduling, clerk procedures, local forms, and how quickly a support order or modification moves through the court calendar.

Use this page to estimate the guideline amount first, then verify filing steps with the local court before submitting paperwork.

Skagit County's larger population can mean higher case volume, more specialized family-law practitioners, and more formal local procedures for child support hearings.

Skagit County Family Court Information

Skagit County Superior Court is located at 205 W Kincaid St, Mount Vernon WA 98273. The clerk can be reached at (360) 336-9350.

Check the court website for current child support forms, hearing procedures, and filing instructions.

What Goes Into a Skagit County Child Support Estimate

The core inputs are each parent's income, the number of children, health insurance premiums, work-related child care, existing support obligations, and parenting time. Washington's calculator model is Income Shares.

Governing authority: Wash. Rev.

Code § 26.19.020.

County location does not usually change the statewide formula, but it does determine where parents file, which clerk reviews paperwork, and which local judge or hearing officer applies the guidelines. Income Shares model using both parents' combined monthly net income under the Washington State Child Support Schedule (Economic Table) per RCW § 26.19.020.

The transfer payment equals each parent's proportional share of the scheduled basic support obligation. Residential time credit (formerly 'parenting time adjustment') reduces the obligation when the non-custodial parent has 35%+ of overnights annually — updated by SB 5800 effective 2023.

Combined monthly net income up to $20,000/month is fully scheduled. Administered by the Division of Child Support (DCS) at dshs.wa.gov/dcs.

Statute: RCW §§ 26.19.010–26.19.075.

Run the calculator with monthly or weekly income figures that match the official Washington worksheet. If a parent is self-employed, unemployed, or paid irregularly, gather tax returns, pay stubs, and proof of benefits before relying on the estimate.

Family law documents prepared for a child support hearing in Skagit County, Washington
Skagit County child support estimatorWashington

Parenting Time and Skagit County Support Orders

Parenting time can affect child support because many states adjust the payment when the paying parent has substantial overnights. Enter the actual schedule, not the schedule you expect to negotiate later.

Parents in Skagit County should keep a written parenting-time calendar, school schedule, holiday rotation, and transportation plan. Those documents help the court compare the calculator estimate with the real custody arrangement.

If custody is still disputed, treat the estimate as a planning number. A final Washington child support order can change once the court sets income findings, parenting time, insurance credits, and child care allocations.

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Changing or Enforcing Child Support in Skagit County

A child support estimate is not a court order. To change an existing order, a parent usually must file a modification request and show a qualifying change in income, custody, health insurance, child care costs, or another guideline factor.

For enforcement, Washington may use income withholding, payment records, tax refund interception, license actions, or contempt proceedings depending on the facts and the agency or court handling the case.

Before filing in Skagit County, compare your calculator result with the current order and collect proof for each input. Courts generally need documents, not estimates alone, before changing a support obligation.

Related Family Law Tools for Skagit County

Child support often intersects with custody, alimony, property division, and divorce costs. Use the Washington Custody Time Calculator to model overnights, then compare support with the Washington Alimony Calculator and Washington Divorce Cost Estimator.

For statewide guidance, start with the Washington Child Support Calculator. For local comparison, review nearby county pages so you understand how court process and filing logistics vary across Washington.

Child support worksheet and parenting time records on attorney desk in Skagit County, Washington
Skagit County child support estimator resources — Washington

Child Support in Other Washington Counties

Compare Skagit County with other high-volume Washington jurisdictions: King County, Pierce County, Snohomish County, Spokane County.

Each county page uses the same statewide guideline framework and adds local context for filing, court process, and related family-law planning.

Looking for statewide data? View the full Washington child support estimator guide — statutory rates, fee schedules, and a breakdown covering all Washington counties.

Frequently asked

Questions families ask about Skagit County child support

Edited and reviewed by our editorial team. Answers are general information — not legal advice.

Is child support different in Skagit County?

The formula is statewide, so Skagit County uses the same Washington guideline model as other counties. The local difference is the court process, filing office, hearing calendar, and enforcement path.

Can I use this estimate in court?

Use it as a planning estimate, not a final order. Courts rely on the official worksheet, verified income documents, parenting-time findings, and any allowed deductions or add-ons.

What if the other parent lives outside Skagit County?

Jurisdiction, venue, and enforcement can become more complicated when parents live in different counties or states. Confirm where the current order was entered before filing a new request.

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Data sourced from Washington child support guidelines, public statutory materials, and Skagit County family court context. Estimates depend on income, parenting time, insurance, child care, and deviation factors. Population data from the 2020 U.S. Census. Made For Law is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to any federal, state, county, or local government entity. This tool is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.

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Legal information, not legal advice. The Child Support Estimator for Skagit County, Washington produces estimates based on Washington child support guidelines and Skagit County family court context. Actual outcomes vary by case. For advice about your situation, consult a licensed Washington attorney.