How much child maintenance should be paid? :Cross Stitch – Parents

How much child maintenance should be paid will depend on your personal circumstances and on the type of child maintenance arrangement you decide to make. Find out how much child maintenance should be paid when you and the other parent agree to a family-based arrangement.
If you and the other parent agree, you can sort out child maintenance between yourselves. This is called a family-based arrangement.
A family-based arrangement is often the quickest and easiest way of arranging child maintenance because there’s little paperwork to do.
A family-based arrangement means you can:
- agree between yourselves how much child maintenance payments should be, and when they should be made
- pay for or receive things like clothing for your child instead of money, if you both agree to it
For example, you could both agree that the non-resident parent pays:
- a lump sum at different points in your child’s life
- a proportion of their income
- for things like school clothes instead of giving money
- a regular set amount directly to the parent with care
You could decide to do one of the above, or do a mix of two or more of them.
The important thing is that:
- you both agree to the arrangement
- the arrangement provides reliable financial support which helps towards your child’s everyday living costs
The parent with care is the parent or carer who the child normally lives with. The non-resident parent is the parent who the child does not normally live with.
If you’re ready to make a family-based arrangement, you should make a record of it using a family-based arrangement form. You can download a family-based arrangement form using the following link.
You may decide that regular payment of a set amount is the best option. If so, you can get an idea of how much that amount should be, using the Child Maintenance Options online child maintenance calculator.
The calculator uses the same formula to work out child maintenance amounts as the Child Support Agency (CSA). It takes into account things like:
- the non-resident parent’s income
- the number of children they need to pay child maintenance for
- how often the child or children stays overnight with them
- the number of other children the non-resident parent (or their partner) gets child benefit for
For more information about how the CSA works out child maintenance, use the following link.
When you’re thinking about how much child maintenance should be paid, you may also want to look at what your child regularly needs money for. For example all children need food and clothes. Babies also need things like nappies, while older children might need school equipment.
You might also need to think about the cost of:
- childcare
- activities like swimming lessons or days out
If you make a family-based arrangement, you and the other parent can agree between you how to share these costs. You could decide:
- to split the costs equally
- to split the costs according to the amount of money you each earn
- one of you pays for some things and the other parent pay for others
For help working out the costs of raising your children, download the form ‘how much maintenance will your child need’ using the following link.
As a separated parent, your financial situation will probably have changed.
You may be worried about things like:
- the cost of setting up a new home
- living on a smaller budget
But, it’s important to make sure that you and the other parent still contribute financially to your child or children’s living costs.
For more help managing your money use the following link.
It’s not always possible for parents to sort out child maintenance on their own.
In such cases, you can
- ask a relative or friend to speak to the other parent for you
- use a mediation service to help you reach agreement
- ask the CSA to arrange child maintenance for you
You can also ask the CSA to get involved if your family-based arrangement breaks down at any point.
For more information about mediation use the following link.
