Nebraska Child Support Calculator
Estimate your child support obligations in Nebraska using the income shares model. Understand how support is calculated, what factors matter, and what to expect. Updated for 2026.
Nebraska uses the income shares model under Nebraska Supreme Court Rules Chapter 4, Article 2 (§§ 4-201 through 4-220) and Neb. Rev. Stat. § 42-364.16. Both parents' net incomes are combined to determine the total child support obligation, which is then divided proportionally based on each parent's share of combined income. Adjustments are made for health insurance, childcare, and extraordinary expenses.
Official Nebraska calculator →Estimate Your Child Support
Interactive Calculator Coming Soon
Our Nebraska child support calculator will let you estimate payments based on your income, custody arrangement, and number of children. Sign up to get notified when it launches.
Get Started with Divorce.aiWhat Goes Into the Nebraska Calculation?
Income
Both parents' gross income from all sources:
Deductions
Allowable deductions that may reduce gross income:
Adjustments
Additional factors that can adjust the base support amount:
Get your full financial picture
Divorce.ai's income and expense tracker helps you accurately report your finances for the Nebraska child support worksheet.
How the Income shares Model Works
Determine Combined Income
Add both parents' adjusted gross income together to get the combined income figure.
Look Up Base Obligation
Using Nebraska's guidelines table, find the base child support amount for your combined income and number of children.
Prorate Between Parents
Each parent's share is proportional to their income. If Parent A earns 60% of the combined income, they are responsible for 60% of the obligation.
Apply Adjustments
Add or subtract adjustments for healthcare, childcare, shared parenting time, and extraordinary expenses.
Complete your child support worksheet
Divorce.ai auto-fills the Nebraska child support worksheet based on your financial information. Accurate and court-ready.
Modifying Child Support in Nebraska
Child support orders are not permanent. You can request a modification when there is a substantial change in circumstances. Common reasons include: