1 Child
~17%
of income
South Carolina's Title IV-D child support guidelines, base percentages, income cap, parenting-time treatment, and OCSE enforcement metrics. Refreshed from federal OCSE FY filings.
By PlainChildSupport Editorial · · Source: South Carolina Revised Statutes · Last updated: 2021
1 Child
~17%
of income
2 Children
~25%
of income
3 Children
~31%
of income
4 Children
~35%
of income
Income Cap
None
uncapped
South Carolina operates under the Income Shares model, one of 42 U.S. states using this framework. For a parent supporting one child, the base guideline applies roughly 17% of income, scaling to 25% for two children and 31% for three. That places South Carolina at rank #33 of 51 states by single-child base percentage. Unlike capped states, there is no statutory income ceiling — the formula applies to the full reported income before deductions. Median household income across South Carolina is $59,318 annually, which shapes the real-world dollar obligations families face under these percentages.
On the enforcement side, the South Carolina child support program manages 208,000 active cases and collected approximately $310 million in the most recent OCSE reporting year. The state's collection rate of 54.9% compares to a national average of 60.6% across reporting states — placing South Carolina at rank #45 of 51 on collection efficiency, and rank #24 by caseload volume (national average: 285,686 cases per state). Paternity is established in 93.5% of South Carolina cases, compared to 94.9% nationally — a critical step because child support orders cannot be enforced without legal parentage on record. Orders are in place for 70.6% of the caseload.
Context matters when interpreting these numbers. A higher percentage-of-income figure does not automatically mean higher dollar obligations — the underlying income brackets, deductions, parenting-time adjustments, and self-support reserves vary meaningfully between states. South Carolina allows a parenting time adjustment, which can materially reduce the base obligation when the non-custodial parent exercises substantial overnight time. Use the official South Carolina calculator linked below for a binding estimate. Data sources: OCSE FY2022 Annual Report, South Carolina Revised Statutes, and Census ACS 2022.
South Carolina uses the Income Shares model. Both parents' incomes are combined, the total obligation is looked up from a schedule, then split proportionally based on each parent's income share.
Income Shares model.
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Formula Model | Income Shares |
| Income Floor | None |
| Income Ceiling | Uncapped |
| Parenting Time Adjustment | Available |
| Median Household Income | $59,318/yr |
| Single-Child Base | 17% (rank #33 of 51) |
Disclaimer: This page provides estimates for informational purposes only. Actual child support amounts may differ based on judicial discretion, deviation factors, and current South Carolina guidelines. Consult a family law attorney in South Carolina for legal advice.
54.9% of assessed support collected; national average 60.6%.
93.5% of cases have legal parentage established; national average 94.9%.
70.6% of the caseload has a formal child support order in place.
Source: OCSE FY2022 Annual Report OCSE FY2022 Annual Report
The South Carolina interactive calculator is being finalized. Use the official state calculator below for your estimate.
Official SC CalculatorRead our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.