Georgia's SB 454 child support overhaul took full effect in July 2026, making court-ordered parenting time a direct adjustment factor on the child support worksheet for the first time under Ga. Code Ann. § 19-6-15. Parents with more overnights may now see materially lower support obligations, a shift that changes how thousands of Georgia families calculate support.
| Key Fact | Detail |
|---|---|
| What happened | Final phase of SB 454 child support reform took effect, adding a parenting-time adjustment to the worksheet |
| When | July 2026 (phased rollout beginning 2024) |
| Where | Statewide across all 159 Georgia counties |
| Who's affected | Any parent with a child support order or modification filed on or after the effective date |
| Key statute | Ga. Code Ann. § 19-6-15 |
| Impact | Overnights now directly reduce or adjust the presumptive support amount; basic obligation tables updated |
Georgia had long been an outlier. For years, the state calculated child support primarily on combined parental income while treating parenting time as, at most, a discretionary deviation a judge might apply. As the family law team at Banks, Stubbs & Landreth documented, SB 454 restructures that framework so custody time is no longer an afterthought — it is baked directly into the math.
Why this matters legally
SB 454 fundamentally changes how Georgia courts calculate child support by converting parenting time from a discretionary deviation into a direct worksheet input. Before this reform, a father with 145 overnights per year and a father with 90 overnights could receive nearly identical support calculations, because Ga. Code Ann. § 19-6-15 built the presumptive amount almost entirely on income shares. Judges could depart for parenting time, but deviations were inconsistent from courtroom to courtroom and county to county.
That inconsistency is precisely what the reform targets. By making overnights a structured adjustment factor, the law reduces judicial guesswork and creates more predictable outcomes for parents negotiating settlements. A parent can now estimate the effect of an extra 20 or 30 overnights per year on the worksheet rather than hoping a judge exercises discretion in their favor. Predictability is the point — and it is a significant departure from Georgia's prior income-shares-only default. Understanding child support mechanics has never mattered more for Georgia parents.
How Georgia law handles this
Georgia calculates child support under the income-shares model codified at Ga. Code Ann. § 19-6-15, and SB 454 modifies that framework in three concrete ways. First, it updates the Basic Child Support Obligation table — the schedule that converts combined adjusted income into a presumptive support figure — reflecting current cost-of-living data. Second, it adds parenting time as a formal adjustment on the worksheet itself. Third, it clarifies how the low-income adjustment and self-support reserve interact with the new parenting-time factor.
The income-shares logic remains the backbone: both parents' incomes are combined, the basic obligation is drawn from the statutory table, and each parent is responsible for their pro-rata share. What changed is that the number of court-ordered overnights each parent exercises now flows into the calculation as a defined variable rather than a judge-by-judge deviation. This mirrors the approach many other states adopted years ago and brings Georgia in line with the broader national trend toward parenting-time-sensitive support.
Parents should note that these changes apply to orders entered or modified on or after the effective date. An existing order does not automatically recalculate. To capture the benefit of the new parenting-time adjustment, a parent typically must file a modification, and Georgia generally requires a substantial change in circumstances or a two-year interval since the last order to modify support. The statutory framework at Ga. Code Ann. § 19-6-15 governs both the initial calculation and the modification standard.
Because parenting time now drives the dollars, the parenting plan you negotiate carries direct financial weight. Overnights are no longer just a scheduling question; they are a support-calculation input. That reality changes settlement dynamics — a parent seeking more time is also, in effect, negotiating the support figure. Learn how child custody arrangements are structured in Georgia before assuming any particular split.
Practical takeaways
Georgia parents affected by SB 454 should take the following concrete steps to understand and, where appropriate, act on the new law:
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Count your actual overnights. Because parenting time is now a worksheet input, pull your current custody order and tally the court-ordered overnights per year. Estimate how a change in overnights would affect support using our parenting time calculator.
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Run the numbers under the new tables. The Basic Child Support Obligation schedule was updated. Use our child support calculator to compare your current obligation against the reformed worksheet before deciding whether a modification makes sense.
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Determine whether you can modify. Georgia generally allows modification after a substantial change in circumstances or roughly two years since the last order. Not every parent qualifies immediately, so confirm your eligibility before filing.
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Treat your parenting schedule as a financial document. Since overnights now adjust the support figure, negotiate custody time and support together, not separately. A parenting plan with clearly documented overnights protects your position on the worksheet.
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Get a professional calculation before you file. Small differences in income inputs, health insurance costs, and overnight counts can swing the presumptive amount by hundreds of dollars per month. A Georgia divorce attorney can run the reformed worksheet accurately and tell you whether modifying helps or hurts you.
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Build a plan for next steps. If you are navigating a new order, a modification, or an initial divorce, map out your sequence with a personalized divorce roadmap so nothing falls through the cracks.
The headline for most Georgia parents is straightforward: overnights now count in dollars. A parent exercising substantial parenting time who is still operating under a pre-reform order may be paying more than the current worksheet would require — or receiving less. The only way to know is to run your specific numbers under the updated framework.
If you think SB 454 may affect your support obligation, the practical first move is to calculate your situation under the new tables and then talk to a qualified Georgia family law attorney about whether a modification is worthwhile. You can start by comparing your current order against the reformed worksheet and connecting with a divorce attorney in Georgia who handles child support modifications.
This article discusses recent news and provides general legal commentary. It does not constitute legal advice. Every case is unique. Consult a qualified family law attorney for advice specific to your situation.