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New York · Guidelines explained

How New York calculates child support

New York uses the Income Shares model under DRL § 240(1-b). Here's exactly how the math works.

The formula

The Income Shares model

Both parents' gross incomes are combined into a single "combined adjusted gross income." The state's published schedule table converts that figure into a base child support obligation. Each parent then pays their proportional share of that amount, weighted by their income. When custody is shared, parenting time credits proportionally reduce the obligation.

Quick reference

Key facts for New York

Income type
gross
Support ends
Age 21
Income cap
$13,583/month
Post-secondary
Courts may order college support

Common questions

What the guidelines don't say

Not true: “50/50 custody means zero support

Even with equal parenting time, the higher-earning parent typically still owes support if incomes are unequal. The formula accounts for time, but income differential drives the result.

Not true: “These numbers are the final word

Courts can deviate from guideline amounts based on special circumstances — extraordinary expenses, disabled children, or other factors the formula doesn't capture. A calculator gives an estimate, not a court order.

Source

Official guidelines

This calculator implements the formula directly from New York's published guidelines. For the authoritative text: New York child support guidelines →

Last verified: 2024-01

New York uses a percentage of combined parental income with a cap (~$163,000/yr combined). This is an approximation.

Open the New York calculator →