Co-Parenting Expense Rules by State
Every state has different rules for splitting child expenses after divorce. These guides explain the actual statutes, calculation methods, and practical steps for your state.
Co-Parenting Expense Rules in California (2026)
How California law handles shared child expenses after divorce: Family Code 4062 add-on costs, the 2024 proportional income split change, mandatory vs. discretionary expenses, and practical calculation examples.
Co-Parenting Expense Rules in Florida (2026)
How Florida law handles shared child expenses after divorce: the income-shares model under Statute 61.30, the 2023 child support reform, health care cost splitting, and practical calculation examples.
Co-Parenting Expense Rules in Georgia (2026)
How Georgia law handles shared child expenses after divorce: the income-shares model under OCGA 19-6-15, mandatory add-ons for health care and childcare, and practical calculation examples.
Co-Parenting Expense Rules in Illinois (2026)
How Illinois law handles shared child expenses after divorce: the income-shares model under 750 ILCS 5/505, contribution to child expenses under Section 513, and practical calculation examples.
Co-Parenting Expense Rules in New York (2026)
How New York handles shared child expenses: the CSSA formula, income cap adjustments, add-on expenses for childcare and health care, and what the law says about extracurriculars and private school.
Co-Parenting Expense Rules in North Carolina (2026)
How North Carolina law handles shared child expenses after divorce: the income-shares model under NCGS 50-13.4, extraordinary expenses, health care costs, and practical calculation examples.
Co-Parenting Expense Rules in Ohio (2026)
How Ohio law handles shared child expenses after divorce: the income-shares model under ORC 3119, cash medical support, childcare costs, and practical calculation examples.
Co-Parenting Expense Rules in Ontario, Canada (2026)
How Ontario handles shared child expenses: Section 7 extraordinary expenses under the Federal Child Support Guidelines, the income-proportional split formula, and what qualifies as an extraordinary expense.
Co-Parenting Expense Rules in Pennsylvania (2026)
How Pennsylvania law handles shared child expenses after divorce: the income-shares model under Pa.R.C.P. 1910, unreasonable expenses, deviation factors, and practical calculation examples.
Co-Parenting Expense Rules in Texas (2026)
How Texas family law handles shared child expenses: guideline support percentages, medical/dental support orders, extracurricular costs, and the Joint Managing Conservator system explained.
Ready to simplify co-parent expenses?
CoParentSplit makes it easy to track, split, and settle shared child expenses — no conflict required.
Start Free Now