Child support orders are based on a snapshot of your life at the time they were entered. Incomes change, parenting schedules change, daycare ends, health insurance premiums rise or fall, and when those changes are significant enough, Florida law allows either parent to ask the court (or the Department of Revenue or the Department of Administrative Law Hearings) for a child support modification in Orlando and throughout Central Florida. Attorney Jonathan Jacobs has extensive experience litigating child support cases for both mothers and fathers.
If your income has dropped through no fault of your own (involuntarily), your hours or overtime have been cut, your timesharing schedule has changed, or a major child-related expense has started or ended, you may qualify to modify your support obligation. A modification of child support in Florida may be granted by a family law judge or a child support hearing officer (DOR or DOAH) when the statutory requirements are met based on the evidence presented. In some cases, your matter may also involve a waiver of child support arrears.
Jonathan Jacobs is a child support attorney serving Orlando, Clermont, Winter Park, and all of Central Florida, handling modifications in circuit court, Department of Revenue proceedings, and DOAH child support cases. Call (407) 335-8113 to schedule a consultation. We can help project your child support amount owed based on your alleged changes in circumstances.
To modify an existing child support order, you must prove a substantial change in circumstances since the order was entered. Florida Statute 61.30(1)(b) provides the mathematical threshold: the difference between your existing monthly obligation and the amount the current child support guidelines would produce must be at least 15 percent or $50, whichever is greater, before the court may find that the guidelines themselves establish a substantial change in circumstances. This is a low bar.
In practical terms, your attorney recalculates the guidelines using both parents’ current incomes, the current overnight schedule, and contemporaneous child-related expenses. If the new number differs from your existing obligation by 15% or $50 or more, you have met the statutory threshold. You must still show why the number changed. Hearing officers and judges generally require that the change be significant, material, involuntary, and not something already contemplated when the original order was entered. This means that voluntary underemployment is not well-taken by most courts.
One piece of good news: meeting this standard is often less burdensome than modifying a parenting plan, which carries a higher legal bar as an “extraordinary” burden.
If your case is administered by the Florida Department of Revenue, a different and more lenient threshold can apply. For support orders reviewed by the Department under its periodic review process, a modification may be pursued when the order differs from the guideline amount by at least 10 percent but not less than $25. In the DOR’s process,no separate showing of changed circumstances is required. This distinction matters, and it is one reason an experienced child support lawyer should evaluate which forum and procedure best fits your case.
Every case is fact-specific, but common qualifying changes include:
Two points trip up parents more than any others:
If your circumstances have changed, the time to act is as soon as is practicable.
A modification of child support in Florida is a formal legal proceeding that typically involves:
Whether you are seeking to reduce an obligation you can no longer afford or to increase support that no longer meets your children’s needs, the Jacobs Law Firm can evaluate your case, run the guideline calculation, and represent you in court or before the Department of Revenue. We serve clients from our offices in Clermont and Winter Park and throughout Central Florida.
Call (407) 335-8113 today to schedule a consultation about your child support modification.
The information on this page is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice for any individual case or situation.