Georgia · O.C.G.A. § 19-6-15

How it works

Georgia uses the income-shares model. Every step below is what the calculator does, with the rule that authorizes it.

Step 1

Determine each parent's income

§ 19-6-15(f)

Start from gross income from all sources and reach adjusted gross income. Alimony is treated as a deviation in Georgia, not a deduction from income. The income page covers self-employment, imputation, and what counts.

Step 2

Combine income and read the schedule

§ 19-6-15(o)

Add both parents' adjusted incomes and read the basic obligation from the schedule at the nearest $50 row for the number of children. The table runs to $40,000/mo combined; above that the court sets the top-row amount and may deviate up.

Step 3

Prorate by income share

§ 19-6-15(b)(3)–(5)

Each parent's percentage share of combined income is their share of the basic obligation. The noncustodial parent's share is the starting point for what they pay.

Step 4

Parenting-time cross-credit (mandatory)

§ 19-6-15(g) (eff. 1/1/2026)

The noncustodial parent's share is adjusted by a continuous cross-credit: each parent's court-ordered days are raised to the 2.5 power, cross-multiplied by the other parent's BCSO share, offset, and added back to the noncustodial share. The credit grows steeply as the noncustodial parent's days rise (~47% reduction at 150 days, ~91% at 90) — this is the statutory arithmetic, applied faithfully. There is no threshold or cliff. With no court-ordered parenting time, no adjustment applies.

Step 5

Mandatory add-ons (Schedule D)

§ 19-6-15(h)

Health-insurance premiums for the children and work-related child care are added to the obligation and prorated by income share. These are mandatory adjustments, not discretionary deviations.

Step 6

Low-income adjustment

§ 19-6-15(i.1) & table (p) (eff. 1/1/2026)

For a low-income parent, the order is the lesser of the presumptive amount (as changed by deviations) and the (p) table cap. Below $1,500 monthly income the cap is a percentage of that parent's income (19%–28% by number of children). The (p) value is a cap, never the obligation itself, and there is no self-support-reserve subtraction.

Step 7

Deviations

§ 19-6-15(i) & Schedule E

The court may deviate from the presumptive amount — for high income, extraordinary educational or medical expenses, special expenses (the 7% screen), alimony, travel, and the catch-all best-interest factor — with written findings that the presumptive amount is unjust or inappropriate and that the deviation serves the child's best interest.

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