RI Child Support Calculator – Global Calculator

This comprehensive child support calculator incorporates guidelines from multiple countries worldwide. It considers income shares, custody arrangements, special expenses, and cost-of-living adjustments to provide an estimate of child support obligations.

Select your country or region for more accurate calculations based on local guidelines, or use the custom model year feature to calculate for any year (2024, 2025, 2026, etc.).

Parent Information

Enter any year (2024, 2025, 2026, etc.) for appropriate economic adjustments

Parent 1 (Custodial)

Parent 2 (Non-Custodial)

Child Information

0% 70% 100%
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Calculation Results

Monthly Child Support Payment

$0

Parent 2 pays to Parent 1

Based on jurisdiction: United States
Model year applied: 2025
Combined parental income: $8,000
Income proportion (Parent 2): 56.25%
Custody adjustment: -30% credit

Visual Breakdown

Income Distribution
Parent 1: 43.75%
Parent 2: 56.25%
Support Allocation
Basic Needs: 65%
Healthcare: 15%
Childcare: 20%

Country-Specific Notes

Based on the United States income shares model. Calculation considers both parents’ incomes, number of children, and custody arrangement. Many US states use similar guidelines with variations in percentages and adjustments.

Global Child Support Factors

The RI Child Support Calculator considers these key factors based on worldwide standards:

Global Standards
United States
European Union
Asia-Pacific
Other Regions
Income Assessment

Most jurisdictions consider gross income from all sources. Some deduct taxes and social security first. Self-employment income requires careful evaluation of business expenses.

Custody Time

Overnight stays significantly impact calculations. Most systems reduce support for shared custody, with formulas varying from simple percentages to complex time-cost calculations.

Child-Related Expenses

Healthcare, education, childcare, and extracurricular costs are added to basic support in many jurisdictions. Special needs often warrant additional support beyond standard calculations.

Standard of Living

Most systems aim to maintain children’s standard of living post-separation. Some countries explicitly consider the pre-separation household standard when determining support.

Cost of Living Adjustments

Geographic cost variations matter in federal systems (US, Canada, Australia). Urban areas typically warrant higher support than rural ones with lower costs.

New Family Obligations

Subsequent children may reduce ability to pay but rarely eliminate prior obligations. Most systems balance old and new family needs.