Quick Answer
Nevada calculates child support using an income shares model based on both parents' combined income. The amount depends on income, number of children, and custody arrangement.
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Quick Answer
Nevada calculates child support using an income shares model based on both parents' combined income. The amount depends on income, number of children, and custody arrangement.
Understanding child support in Nevada is one of the most important steps in your divorce preparation. This guide covers what Nevada law requires, what to expect, and how to prepare — in plain language, not legalese.
Section · 01
Nevada uses an income shares model. Both parents' gross incomes are combined, a base support amount is found from the state guideline table, and each parent's share is proportional to their percentage of the combined income.
Section · 02
Child support calculations include income from all sources: wages, salary, bonuses, commissions, self-employment, rental income, dividends, interest, retirement distributions, and other earnings. Deductions typically include taxes, mandatory retirement contributions, and health insurance premiums.
Section · 03
Parenting time directly affects child support. In Nevada, the amount of parenting time each parent has can affect the child support calculation. Generally, the more time the non-custodial parent has, the lower the support obligation may be.
Section · 04
Either parent can request a modification when there's a substantial change in circumstances. Common triggers include job loss, significant income change, change in custody arrangement, or a child's changing needs (medical, educational). Most states require a meaningful change that wasn't anticipated at the time of the original order.
What Makes Nevada Different
Nevada uses a tiered percentage-of-income model under NAC 425.140 (effective February 2020). The obligor's gross monthly income is split into three tiers, with progressively lower marginal percentages applied to each tier; a separate low-income schedule applies under NAC 425.145. The tiered structure replaced Nevada's prior flat percentages and is simpler than full income-shares models used by most states.
FAQ
Nevada uses an income shares model based on both parents' combined income. The amount varies based on income, number of children, and time-sharing. Use ClearSplit to run your numbers.
Yes, when there's a substantial change in circumstances — job loss, significant income change, or change in custody. Contact the court that issued the original order to request a modification.
Generally until the child turns 18 (or 19 if still in high school). In most states, child support continues until 18 or high school graduation. Check Nevada's specific rules, as some states extend support to 19 or through college. Support for children with disabilities may continue indefinitely.
Nevada has enforcement mechanisms including wage garnishment, tax refund interception, driver's license suspension, passport denial, and contempt of court proceedings. Contact your state's child support enforcement agency.
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Notice
This is legal information, not legal advice. We’re here to help you understand your landscape — but for guidance specific to your situation, talk to a family law attorney in Nevada. You deserve someone in your corner.