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Minnesota Child Support Calculator

Income Shares model · Estimates only · Consult an attorney for legal advice

How Minnesota Calculates Child Support — and Why the Formula Matters

Minnesota determines child support obligations using the Income Shares model, one of three approaches used across the United States. The Income Shares model (used by 41 states) combines both parents' incomes to estimate what the family would have spent on the children if intact, then divides that obligation in proportion to each parent's share of the combined income. The Percentage of Income model (used in states like Alaska, Mississippi, Nevada, North Dakota, Texas, and Wisconsin) takes a fixed percentage of the non-custodial parent's income based on the number of children. The Melson Formula — adopted in Delaware, Hawaii, and Montana — layers a self-support reserve on top of the Income Shares approach so neither parent's basic needs are consumed before the child's obligation is met.

This calculator applies the Minnesota-specific statutory tables and adjustments: parenting-time credit adjusts the obligation when the non-custodial parent has substantial overnight visitation, and healthcare insurance and work-related childcare are typically added and split proportionally. The result is an estimate of presumptive support — state courts can and do deviate upward or downward based on factors like high income, extraordinary medical expenses, or the non-custodial parent's other dependents. For a binding order, the official Minnesota worksheet must be filed with the court. Pair this calculator with the per-state guideline page for current multipliers, deviation factors, and review/modification thresholds.

Source: Minnesota Child Support Guidelines · Methodology: statutory tables and adjustments as published · Estimate only — a court order requires the official worksheet.

Interactive Calculator for Minnesota

Minnesota uses the Income Shares to calculate child support. Both parents' combined income is used. With typical combined income, 1 child costs approximately 19% of total combined income, split by income share.

Our Minnesota interactive calculator is in development. Phase 1 covers the 10 largest states.

Use Official Minnesota Calculator

Minnesota Guideline Summary

~19%

1 Child

~27%

2 Children

~33%

3 Children

None

Income Cap

View full Minnesota guidelines →

Other State Calculators

All federal data sources used on this page

Related

Source: U.S. Office of Child Support Services (OCSS) — HHS Child support enforcement caseload and collections · 2025