Roxana Soica
Founder | Family Law Lawyer
Child support is a legal right that belongs to every child — not a bargaining chip in separation negotiations. If you are separating from your child’s other parent in Ontario, understanding how support is calculated, what expenses are covered, and how to enforce or modify an order is critical to protecting your child’s well-being.
At Soica & Associates, our child support lawyers help parents navigate the Child Support Guidelines with clarity and confidence — whether you are establishing support for the first time, seeking a variation, or enforcing an existing order.
In Ontario, child support is calculated using the Federal Child Support Guidelines. The process involves two components:
The table amount.
The base level of child support is determined by the Child Support Guidelines table, based on the paying parent’s gross annual income and the number of children. Ontario has its own provincial table that applies in most situations. This amount is not discretionary — it is the presumptive starting point in virtually every case. It does not depend on the recipient parent’s income or what the money is spent on.
Special and extraordinary expenses (Section 7 expenses).
On top of the table amount, courts can order one or both parents to contribute to certain additional expenses that are necessary and reasonable in light of the child’s needs and the family’s prior standard of living. Section 7 expenses commonly include:
Section 7 expenses are typically shared proportionately between parents based on their respective incomes — not necessarily 50/50. A parent earning 60% of the combined household income would contribute 60% of agreed Section 7 expenses.

When parents share roughly equal parenting time — typically defined as at least 40% of the time with each parent — the standard table amount calculation is modified. In a shared custody arrangement, courts have discretion to depart from the table amount and consider:
The result is not always a simple offset of each parent’s table amount. Courts look at the net financial outcome for the child and apply a child-focused analysis. The set-off approach (where each parent’s table amount is calculated and the lower is subtracted from the higher) is a common starting point, but it is not mandatory.
Legal advice is strongly recommended before agreeing to a shared custody arrangement, as the financial implications can be significant and the calculation is more complex than it appears.
Yes. Child support is intended to reflect the current financial circumstances of both parents and the actual needs of the child. Either parent can apply to vary a child support order or agreement when there has been a material change in circumstances, including:
A significant change in the payor’s income
— either an increase or a decrease. If the payor’s income has risen substantially since the original order, the recipient parent can seek an increase. If income has genuinely decreased, the payor may seek a reduction.
A change in the child’s living arrangements
or the amount of time spent with each parent. A shift from primary residence to shared custody (or vice versa) is a material change warranting recalculation.
A change in the child’s needs
— for example, new medical expenses, a significant extracurricular commitment, or a child reaching the age of majority.
The child becoming financially independent
or ceasing to be a ‘child of the marriage’ under the Divorce Act — for example, a child who finishes post-secondary education and becomes self-supporting.
Child support should be reviewed regularly — ideally annually — to ensure it reflects current incomes. Many parents fall behind because neither party takes steps to update the order. Annual income disclosure to the other parent is both a legal expectation and a practical protection for both sides.

In Ontario, child support orders and agreements can be enforced through the Family Responsibility Office (FRO). The FRO is a government body with significant enforcement powers, including:
If a payor is self-employed, has variable income, or appears to be deliberately suppressing their income to reduce support obligations, additional legal steps may be required. Courts can impute income to a parent whose reported income does not reflect their actual earning capacity — based on their education, work history, lifestyle, and the available evidence.
Accurate income disclosure is the foundation of any child support calculation. Both parents are required to provide annual income disclosure — typically their most recent tax return and Notice of Assessment from CRA.
Where a parent’s reported income does not accurately reflect their earning capacity, courts can impute income. Situations where income imputation may arise include:
Our lawyers are experienced in income imputation arguments and disclosure proceedings — helping you obtain a support order that reflects what the payor is actually capable of paying.
Child support matters can be resolved by agreement or through the courts. Typical costs and timelines:
Where parents can agree on the basic structure of support and the income figures are not in dispute, child support provisions are typically one of the more straightforward parts of a separation agreement. The complexity — and cost — arises where income is disputed or where Section 7 expenses are contested.
Experienced family law and divorce lawyers with a reputation for being ethical, practical, and a focus on what is best for the client.
View Our Team
Select a free introductory call or a full
consultation with an experienced lawyer
Thousands of family law matters handled with structured strategy and clear communication
The Child Support Guidelines include online tables that can be used as a starting point. You enter the paying parent’s annual gross income and the number of children, and the table provides the monthly base amount. However, this is only the starting point — Section 7 expenses, shared custody adjustments, and income imputation arguments can all affect the final number. Using the tables alone without legal advice can produce an inaccurate result.
Child support does not automatically end at age 18. Under the Divorce Act, support may continue for a ‘child of the marriage’ — meaning a child who is unable to withdraw from their parents’ charge due to illness, disability, or full-time enrollment in education. Post-secondary students may continue to receive support while they are enrolled. Parents should seek legal advice before stopping payments, even when a child turns 18.
Parents can agree to deviate from the table amount in limited circumstances, but courts will not automatically approve an agreement that provides less than the guideline amount. A below-guideline amount requires evidence that the child’s needs are still being fully met through other means. Courts apply a high standard when reviewing any departure from the guidelines.
No. Child support paid under a court order or written agreement made after May 1, 1997 is neither deductible for the payor nor taxable as income for the recipient. This is distinct from spousal support, which is deductible for the payor and taxable for the recipient under most circumstances.
If a payor refuses to provide income disclosure, the court can order production of financial documents and, in appropriate cases, impute income based on available evidence. Persistent refusal to disclose can result in adverse inferences and cost awards against the non-disclosing party. Our lawyers can bring an urgent motion for financial disclosure if required.
Yes. Child support is calculated using a mandatory formula under the Federal Child Support Guidelines and is not discretionary. Spousal support is guided by the Spousal Support Advisory Guidelines, which provide ranges rather than fixed amounts, and requires analysis of the parties’ specific circumstances — the length of the marriage, economic disparity, and the roles each spouse played during the relationship. The two calculations are entirely separate.
To obtain a divorce in Ontario, you must file an application in the Superior Court of Justice. If you and your spouse agree on all issues (an uncontested divorce), you can file a joint application. Where issues remain outstanding, a sole application is filed and the matter may proceed to a hearing. Child support arrangements must be addressed before a divorce order can be granted where there are children of the marriage.
If you did not find the answer you’re looking for, you may speak with a family law lawyer about your situation and receive clear next steps. No obligations.