Kansas uses the Income Shares model. Parenting time credit kicks in at 35% (128 nights/year).
Every overnight above 128 nights/year reduces your payment. Here's how Kansas's threshold compares:
Formula Model: Income Shares
How It Works: Uses combined gross income. Shared parenting adjustment available.
Parenting Time Threshold: 35% of overnights (128 nights/year)
PT Credit Method: Shared Expense Cross-Credit. High threshold—35% (128 nights). Full cross-credit at 45%.
Kansas requires 35% overnights for the shared custody credit — one of the highest thresholds in the country.
Based on $6,000/mo income, 2 children, 20% parenting time
In Kansas, your parenting time credit activates at 35% of overnights (128 nights/year). Every night above this threshold reduces your payment.
Kansas's Income Shares model considers both parents' incomes. If your ex earns more than reported, gathering evidence of unreported income can significantly reduce your share.
Health insurance and childcare costs are typically split proportional to income in Kansas. If you're carrying the insurance, make sure you're getting credit.
Most Kansas courts allow a modification review every 3 years OR when there's a 20%+ income change — whichever comes first.
Keep a log of every dollar you spend on your kids beyond the order — extracurricular activities, school supplies, clothing. Courts factor documented expenses into deviation requests.
Enter your income, custody schedule, and expenses. Get your personalized estimate in under 2 minutes.
Start My Kansas Estimate →Estimate your Kansas monthly obligation
📅See how overnights affect your Kansas support
📊Split medical, school & childcare costs
🔄Drag sliders, watch your number change live
📈Are you overpaying vs. other Kansas Dads?
📄Printable Kansas support worksheet
Kansas uses the Income Shares model, which combines both parents' gross monthly incomes to determine a basic support obligation from a schedule table. Your share is proportional to your percentage of combined income. Uses combined gross income. Shared parenting adjustment available.
In Kansas, once your parenting time exceeds 35% of overnights (approximately 128 nights per year), you receive a credit that reduces your obligation. A 50/50 custody arrangement typically results in the largest reduction.
Yes — under the Income Shares model, both parents' incomes are combined to determine the total support obligation. If your ex earns more, your proportional share decreases. This is one of the strongest levers for reducing your payment.
You can request a modification if there's been a substantial change in circumstances — like a 20%+ income change, job loss, new custody arrangement, or the child aging out. Kansas courts review modifications based on updated financial worksheets. Most allow a review every 3 years even without a change.
Most Kansas modifications are processed in 30–90 days after filing. Some counties offer administrative review (faster, no court date), while others require a hearing. Keep paying your current amount while the review is pending — stopping creates arrears that hurt your case.
Never stop paying — even if you can't afford the full amount. File a modification request immediately. Kansas courts can adjust your obligation retroactive to the filing date (not before). Document your financial hardship: pay stubs, termination letters, medical bills. Some counties offer payment plans for arrears.
Moving or comparing? See how neighboring states calculate child support.
2,000+ Fathers have used our step-by-step guide to file a modification — most without hiring a lawyer. The exact scripts, templates, and 30-day action plan that save Dads an average of $312/month.
Get the Reduction Guide — Just $47IMPORTANT LEGAL DISCLAIMER
This is an educational estimate — not legal advice or a court order. Only a court or agency can set official child support. Actual obligations depend on factors not captured here. ChildCustodyPros.com is not a law firm. For guidance specific to your case, consult a licensed family law attorney in your state.
© 2026 ChildCustodyPros.com · Child Support Calculator · Privacy Policy · Terms of Use