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Understanding child support deviations in Florida has become more important, and more complex, following the 2025–2026 guideline updates and a string of appellate decisions that have raised the evidentiary bar for departing from the statutory formula. Whether you are a paying parent seeking a downward adjustment, a receiving parent opposing one, or a family lawyer preparing a motion, the rules governing when a court may set a child support amount above or below the guideline figure under Florida Statutes §61. 30 now demand more precise documentation and stronger written findings than ever before.
This guide walks through the current statutory framework, the practical effect of recent changes, worked calculations, special-needs and guardianship considerations, and step-by-step filing instructions using Florida Supreme Court Form 12. 943.
This article is general legal information current as of May 18, 2026. It is not legal advice. Consult a qualified Florida family law attorney before taking action on any child support matter.
Before examining when courts will deviate, it helps to understand what they are deviating from. Florida uses an income-shares model codified in §61.30. The guideline amount is the presumptively correct figure, meaning the court must order it unless a party demonstrates that deviation is justified.
Consider two parents with combined monthly net income of $6,000. Parent A earns $4,000 net (66.7%) and Parent B earns $2,000 net (33.3%). Under the guideline table, the minimum child support need for two children at that combined income level is approximately $1,621 per month.
If Parent A is the non-custodial parent with standard visitation (fewer than 73 overnights), Parent A would owe approximately $1,081 per month before adjustments for insurance and childcare. This baseline figure is what courts treat as presumptively correct, and it is the number a party must overcome to obtain a deviation from the Florida child support guidelines.
Three primary authorities govern deviation requests in 2026 child support cases in Florida:
Under §61.30(1)(a), any deviation of five percent or more from the guideline amount triggers a mandatory requirement: the court must make specific written findings of fact supporting the deviation. A failure to include these findings is reversible error on appeal. Industry observers expect this requirement to continue generating appellate reversals in cases where trial courts deviate without adequate documentation.
The Florida family law deviation standard has tightened measurably over the past two years. The changes are both legislative and judicial, and they work together to make it harder to obtain, or sustain on appeal, a departure from the guideline amount.
| Date | Change (Statute / Form / Ruling) | Practical Effect on Deviation Requests |
|---|---|---|
| July 1, 2025 | Legislative amendment to §61.30, updated guideline income tables and refined the overnight-credit formula for shared parenting | Recalibrated baseline amounts; some payors who previously qualified for a deviation now fall within the updated guideline range, eliminating the need (or basis) for deviation |
| October 2025 | Florida Department of Revenue updated administrative child support guidelines and calculator methodology to align with the amended §61.30 tables | DOR-initiated modifications now use updated tables; parties seeking deviation must show the new guideline figure is unjust, not the old one |
| January 2026 | Florida Supreme Court revised Family Law Form 12.943 instructions to require more detailed factual allegations supporting each enumerated deviation factor | Motions filed on the older form template without expanded factual detail face objection or denial; self-represented litigants must use the updated form |
| Q1 2026 | Appellate decisions reinforced the requirement that trial courts provide factor-by-factor written findings before deviating more than 5% | Heightened appellate scrutiny; orders that deviate without addressing each claimed factor individually are being reversed and remanded |
The cumulative effect of these changes is significant. The likely practical result is that child support modification in Florida now requires more documentation up front, and courts are less willing to accept boilerplate or conclusory deviation requests. For litigators, this means building a detailed evidentiary record at the trial level is no longer optional, it is the only way to insulate a deviation order from appellate reversal.
A Florida court may deviate from the child support guidelines when it finds, by a preponderance of the evidence, that applying the guideline amount would be unjust or inappropriate. Under §61.30(1)(a), the court must evaluate the totality of the circumstances and specifically consider a list of enumerated deviation factors.
The statute identifies the following factors that a court may weigh when considering child support deviations in Florida:
Successful deviation motions in 2026 typically rely on the following categories of proof:
If you are on the receiving end of a deviation motion, the most effective defences focus on:
Child support for special-needs children presents unique deviation opportunities, and unique risks. This area sits at the intersection of family law, disability law, and public benefits planning, and it requires careful coordination.
Courts routinely consider the following categories of extraordinary expense when evaluating whether to deviate upward for a child with disabilities:
When a child turns 18 and a plenary or limited guardianship is established under Chapter 744 of the Florida Statutes, the dynamics of guardianship and child support change significantly:
| Benefit Program | How Child Support Affects Eligibility | Planning Consideration When Seeking a Deviation |
|---|---|---|
| Supplemental Security Income (SSI) | Child support received counts as unearned income to the child; one-third of support is deemed income under SSA rules, reducing the SSI benefit dollar-for-dollar after a small exclusion | An upward deviation that significantly increases cash support could push the child over SSI income limits and trigger benefit loss, coordinate with a benefits planner before filing |
| Medicaid (Florida) | In Florida, Medicaid eligibility for children with disabilities is often linked to SSI status; loss of SSI can result in loss of Medicaid unless the child qualifies under another category | Ensure that any deviation order structures payments to preserve Medicaid, consider directing additional support toward specific expenses (therapy, equipment) rather than cash to the custodial parent |
| Special Needs Trust (SNT) | Payments into a properly drafted first-party or third-party SNT are generally not counted as income for SSI/Medicaid purposes | Where a deviation is warranted, consider requesting that the excess above the guideline amount be paid into a court-approved SNT rather than directly to the custodial parent, this preserves public benefits while meeting the child’s extraordinary needs |
Early indications suggest that Florida courts are increasingly receptive to structured deviation orders that direct funds into special needs trusts, provided the trust meets SSA requirements and the order includes specific findings explaining the structure. Coordination between the family law attorney and a special-needs planning attorney is strongly recommended.
Filing a child support modification in Florida through a deviation motion requires careful adherence to both the substantive legal standard and the procedural mechanics. The following step-by-step guide applies to motions filed under the current (January 2026) version of Form 12.943.
The following is illustrative sample language for a motion to deviate (this is not a substitute for attorney-drafted pleadings tailored to your facts):
“Petitioner respectfully moves this Court to deviate from the presumptive guideline child support amount of $1,081 per month and instead order support of $1,450 per month, representing an upward deviation of approximately 34%. The basis for this request is the extraordinary medical and therapeutic expenses of the minor child, [Child’s Initials], who has been diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder and requires applied behaviour analysis therapy at a cost of $1,200 per month after insurance, as documented in the attached Exhibit A. Petitioner relies on §61.30(1)(a), Florida Statutes, specifically the factors of extraordinary medical expenses and special needs of the child.”
“The Court finds, pursuant to §61.30(1)(a), Florida Statutes, that the guideline amount of $[amount] per month is unjust and inappropriate for the following specific reasons: [Factor 1: extraordinary medical expenses, the child requires [treatment] at a documented out-of-pocket cost of $[amount] per month]; [Factor 2: special needs, the child requires [service/equipment] not accounted for in the guideline formula]. The Court therefore deviates [upward/downward] to $[amount] per month, representing a deviation of [X]% from the guideline amount.”
The following hypothetical scenarios illustrate how child support deviations in Florida operate in practice. All figures use the 2026 guideline tables.
| Scenario | Guideline Amount | Deviation Justification | Final Order |
|---|---|---|---|
| A: High-income payor with extended parenting time. Parent A nets $12,000/mo, Parent B nets $3,000/mo. Two children. Parent A exercises 48% of overnights (175 nights). | $1,740/mo (after overnight credit) | Parent A demonstrates that actual expenses during 175 overnights, including meals, transportation, extracurriculars, exceed the credit. Court applies shared-parenting deviation factor. | $1,480/mo (downward deviation of ~15%; written findings required) |
| B: Custodial parent with extraordinary special-needs expenses. Combined net income $7,500/mo. One child with cerebral palsy requiring $1,800/mo in therapy after insurance. | $1,100/mo | Custodial parent documents therapy invoices, physician letters, and IEP. Court applies extraordinary medical + special needs factors. | $1,650/mo (upward deviation of 50%; detailed written findings and excess directed to documented expenses) |
| C: Guardian seeks modification after guardianship appointment. Adult child (age 19) with intellectual disability. Guardianship established under Ch. 744. Prior support order expired at 18. | Recalculated at $980/mo based on current parental incomes | Guardian petitions for extended support, demonstrating adult child’s incapacity pre-dated age 18 and documenting $2,200/mo in attendant-care and vocational-program costs. Excess directed to SNT to preserve SSI. | $1,400/mo ($980 direct + $420 into court-approved SNT; written findings address each factor and benefits preservation) |
The heightened appellate scrutiny following the 2025–2026 updates creates both risks and opportunities. Florida family law practitioners should build their record with the following principles in mind:
Child support deviations in Florida involve high-stakes financial and legal considerations that benefit from experienced counsel. If you are considering seeking or opposing a deviation, or if you need to coordinate a child support order with guardianship or special-needs planning, take the following steps:
The 2025–2026 updates to Florida’s child support framework have meaningfully raised the bar for child support deviations in Florida. Courts now expect detailed, factor-by-factor written findings, current guideline calculations using updated tables, and robust documentary evidence for every claimed deviation factor. For parents, this means preparation and documentation are more critical than ever. For practitioners, it means building the appellate record at the trial level, not after. Whether you are seeking a deviation, opposing one, or navigating the complex intersection of child support with guardianship and public benefits, qualified legal guidance is essential. All statutory references in this article were verified as of May 18, 2026.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Samah Abukhodeir at The Florida Probate & Family Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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