Child support is calculated based on income. That simple fact gives some parents a strong incentive to make their income look smaller than it actually is — by working fewer hours, moving to cash-based work, hiding business revenue, or underreporting what they earn to the court. If you suspect this is happening in your case, you're not imagining things. It's a real and well-documented pattern. The good news is that family courts have real tools to address it.
Why Parents Try to Lower Their Reported Income
Child support calculations are largely mechanical. Most states use a formula that starts with each parent's gross income and works from there. The lower one parent's reported income, the lower their calculated obligation. This creates a straightforward incentive to report less.
The most common methods include quitting a salaried job to work freelance or under the table, suddenly "earning less" around the time of filing, underreporting self-employment income or business revenue, having a new partner cover shared expenses so personal income appears lower, and deferring compensation or bonuses until after a court date has passed.
None of these are invisible to a court. Courts and attorneys have seen every version of this pattern, and the legal system has developed specific mechanisms to respond.
The Key Legal Concept: Imputed Income
When a court believes a parent is voluntarily earning less than they could — or hiding what they actually earn — it may assign that parent a higher income for child support purposes. This assigned number is called imputed income.
Imputed income is based on earning capacity: what the parent could reasonably earn given their education, work history, skills, and local job market. It's not punitive — it's the court's way of preventing one parent from gaming the calculation by choosing to earn below their ability.
A parent has worked as a licensed electrician earning $85,000 per year for a decade. Shortly after divorce proceedings begin, they leave their job and report $22,000 in income from occasional cash work. The other parent's attorney presents the work history, prior tax returns, and local wage data for licensed electricians in the area.
The court may find the parent is voluntarily underemployed and impute income closer to their prior earning level. Child support is then calculated based on that imputed figure — not the $22,000 being reported.
Courts don't impute income arbitrarily. They typically look at documented work history, prior earnings, local labor market data, the parent's age and health, and whether there's a legitimate reason for the income change — such as caring for a young child or a genuine medical issue.
Red Flags to Watch and Document
If you suspect your spouse is hiding or underreporting income, keep notes and gather documentation. Courts and attorneys rely on contrast — the difference between what someone claims to earn and how they actually live.
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Lifestyle doesn't match reported income Paying a mortgage, car payment, or private school tuition that doesn't add up on the income they're claiming — especially if spending patterns haven't changed.
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Sudden job change or reduced hours near filing Leaving a salaried position or shifting to part-time work right around the time divorce is filed is a pattern courts recognize. Timing matters.
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Cash-only or gig income with no paper trail Self-employed parents and gig workers have more flexibility to underreport. Look for income that was historically documented on tax returns but has since dropped without explanation.
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Business revenue that disappears on paper A parent who owns a business may route personal expenses through the company, defer income, pay personal bills as business costs, or pay a new partner a salary to reduce reported profit.
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Financial disclosures that are incomplete or inconsistent Missing bank accounts, omitted assets, or income numbers that don't match prior tax returns are all grounds for closer investigation.
Discovery Tools Courts Can Use
The legal discovery process gives attorneys and courts real authority to investigate. These aren't optional — a spouse who ignores discovery requests faces serious consequences, including contempt of court.
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Financial Affidavits (Sworn Disclosure Statements)Both parents are typically required to file sworn financial statements listing income, assets, and debts. These are made under oath. If the numbers are false, that is perjury — a criminal offense. The affidavit also creates a baseline that can be compared against third-party records.
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Subpoenas to Banks and EmployersAn attorney can subpoena financial institutions, employers, or clients directly — without asking the other spouse's permission. Bank statements, payroll records, 1099s, and business revenue data can all be compelled this way. The spouse doesn't have the option to "lose" records that a third party holds.
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IRS Tax TranscriptsTax transcripts go directly to what was reported to the IRS in prior years. If reported income was higher in previous years, that history becomes evidence of earning capacity. A court may use prior-year returns to establish a baseline for imputed income.
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Lifestyle AnalysisA lifestyle analysis documents actual spending — housing costs, vehicle payments, travel, private school, restaurants, subscriptions — and compares it to reported income. If someone earning $30,000 per year is spending $6,000 per month, the gap is evidence that additional income exists somewhere.
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Forensic AccountantFor cases involving business ownership, significant cash income, or complex finances, a forensic accountant can trace money through multiple accounts, identify transfers to third parties, flag expenses that appear personal rather than business, and reconstruct income from indirect evidence. This is a specialized service with a cost — typically reserved for cases where the amount in dispute makes the investment worthwhile.
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Depositions and InterrogatoriesInterrogatories are written questions the other spouse must answer under oath. Depositions are oral questioning under oath, with a court reporter present. Either can produce admissions, inconsistencies, or leads that support the investigation. Lying in a deposition is perjury.
What Happens When a Court Finds Income Was Hidden
Hiding income in a child support case isn't just a financial dispute — it's a contempt of a legal obligation. Courts take it seriously, and the consequences reflect that.
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Recalculation using imputed or actual income The court may recalculate the child support obligation using the income it determines the parent actually earns or is capable of earning — regardless of what was reported.
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Retroactive support for the period of concealment Courts in many states may order retroactive support covering the period during which income was underreported — though this varies significantly by state and judge.
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Attorney's fees ordered against the hiding parent The court may require the hiding parent to pay the attorney fees the other party incurred to investigate and uncover the concealment.
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Contempt of court Violating a court order to provide accurate financial disclosure — or disobeying a support order — may result in contempt charges, which can include fines and in some cases incarceration.
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Perjury charges Because financial disclosures are made under oath, deliberately false statements may constitute perjury — a criminal offense separate from the family law proceeding.
What If the Order Is Already Final?
If you suspect income was hidden and a child support order is already in place, you may still have options. Most states allow a parent to petition the court for a modification based on a material change in circumstances. Discovery of previously hidden income may qualify as that change.
To pursue a modification, you generally need to file a motion with the court and show that the change is real and significant — not just a minor fluctuation. What counts as "material" varies by state, but a substantial difference between reported and actual income typically meets the standard.
Once a modification motion is filed, the court may re-open financial discovery, order new income verification, and recalculate the obligation. In most states, any new amount takes effect from the date the motion was filed — not retroactively to when the concealment began, though courts have discretion in some jurisdictions.
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