
You may be able to lower your child support payments in Texas if certain life changes affect your income, expenses, or ability to pay. To lower child support in Texas, you must show a material and substantial change in circumstances and ask the court to modify the existing order. A modification is not automatic and must be supported by facts that show a legitimate basis for adjusting the existing support order.
Texas calculates child support using guidelines outlined in the Texas Family Code. Courts typically apply a percentage of the paying parent’s net resources based on the number of children requiring support. However, judges may deviate from these guidelines when circumstances warrant.
Courts review modification petitions to determine whether circumstances have changed significantly since the original order took effect. Changes in income, incarceration, or a former spouse’s remarriage may justify lowering child support to reflect current financial circumstances.
A substantial decrease in your income often serves as the most common basis for requesting lower child support payments. Texas courts consider various types of income reductions when evaluating modification requests:
Voluntary income reductions typically do not qualify you for lower payments. Courts carefully scrutinize situations where paying parents quit jobs or accept lower-paying positions, as judges may impute income based on your earning capacity rather than your actual current earnings.
When the custodial parent experiences a significant increase in earnings, you may have grounds to request a modification. This often becomes apparent through changes such as a new job, promotions, public salary information, updated financial disclosures, or lifestyle changes that suggest higher income. Supporting a request typically involves gathering documentation of the other parent’s changed financial circumstances and presenting that information to the court.
Shifts in health insurance responsibilities can affect your child support obligation. If you now provide medical coverage for your child when you previously did not, or if your insurance costs have increased dramatically, these changes may justify an adjustment to your payment amount. Courts factor health insurance expenses into child support calculations and may modify orders when coverage situations change substantially.
As children grow, their financial needs fluctuate, which may affect support calculations. If your child’s expenses have decreased due to finishing private school, completing orthodontic treatment, or no longer requiring childcare, you may petition for a reduction.
The birth of additional children or situations in which older children no longer require support create grounds for recalculating support obligations. Other scenarios courts consider include:
Courts strive to ensure that child support obligations are fair and reasonable across all dependents. This may involve presenting evidence showing how additional children affect your financial capacity and requesting adjustments that allocate resources more equitably among all children who require support.
When there is a significant change in parenting time, child support payments may need to be adjusted. If you spend substantially more time with your child than at the time of the original order, and the change is reflected in a modified possession schedule, you could be eligible for reduced payments.
Texas Family Code Section 156.401 allows a parent to request a child support modification when specific conditions are met. To qualify, you must demonstrate a material and substantial change in circumstances since the last order, or show that at least three years have passed and the current support amount differs from guideline calculations by 20 percent or $100.
To begin the modification process, you must file the appropriate paperwork with the court that issued your original order. In Houston, this typically means filing a Petition to Modify the Parent-Child Relationship with the Harris County family court, along with updated financial information such as income records, tax returns, and a child support worksheet showing the requested change.
Strong documentation proves that material changes justify modified support obligations. You should collect the following types of evidence:
Thorough evidence provides the factual basis for a modification request. Supporting documentation should meet the court’s standards and clearly show the changes that justify a reduction in support obligations.
Filing a modification motion with the court begins formal proceedings leading to a hearing, where the judge reviews the evidence and issues binding orders. These motions must meet procedural requirements and clearly explain the legal and factual reasons for requesting a support adjustment that differs from standard guideline calculations.
After you file your motion, the court will schedule a hearing at which both parents present their positions. You should prepare for this hearing by:
Presenting yourself professionally and answering questions honestly help your case considerably. Judges evaluate not only the evidence but also the credibility of each parent, and demonstrating preparation and truthfulness supports a favorable outcome.
The OAG Child Support Division offers an alternate option through an administrative review process that may lead to a modification without court hearings. This option can be appropriate when both parents agree that circumstances have changed and are willing to work through the OAG process rather than filing a court petition.
At C. E. Schmidt & Associates PLLC, we work with parents who need clear guidance through the child support modification process. Timing, documentation, and procedure all matter, and early missteps can affect how the court views your request.
While some resources are available through the Child Support Division, many parents find it helpful to have focused legal guidance when preparing filings, gathering evidence, and deciding how to move forward. If you want to talk through your situation and understand what your next steps realistically look like, you can reach us at (281) 550-6650 to schedule a consultation.
For experienced Houston family law attorneys skilled in asset division during divorce, contact C.E. Schmidt & Associates, PLLC today to schedule a consultation.
We proudly serve clients across Texas. Visit our Houston office at:
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Houston, TX 77079
Phone: (346) 235 1658
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