Washington Child Support Guidelines (2026 Updates)
Understanding Washington child support for a combined monthly net income of $10,700 requires reviewing the 2026 economic schedules. Whether filing in Washington or elsewhere, the base amount depends on the proportion of parental income dedicated to the children.
Breakdown of the $10,700 Calculation
Applying the Income Shares approach to a $10,700 income, Washington assumes parents would dedicate $2,748 of their combined resources to 3 children. This serves as the presumptive transfer payment.
Standard Mid-Income Calculation
Your $10,700 income falls within the standard economic schedule. This means the $2,748 figure is the presumptive legal standard. Want a complete breakdown including deviations and expenses? Calculate your full worksheet
Presumptive Amount
$2,748
Schedule Bracket
Standard Limit
Large Family Analysis
Raising 3 children involves 'economies of scale'. The multiplier applied to the base income accounts for shared household costs. While the total of $2,748 is higher than for one child, the per-child cost is lower, reflecting common shared resources.
The SSR and Low-Income Safeguards
Washington law ensures every parent retains a minimum income to survive. The 2026 SSR is fixed at $2,394. At the $10,700 level, the court verifies that the payor still retains $2,394 after the $2,748 payment.
Income Bracket Context
At $10,700/mo, this household falls in the upper income bracket of Washington's 2026 schedule — above the state median of $7,114/mo. At this level, courts have wider discretion to order above the presumptive $2,748, particularly for lifestyle-based deviation arguments in Washington.
Deviation Likelihood in Washington
At the $10,700 level, deviation requests are less common but still possible in Washington. The most frequent grounds are extraordinary healthcare costs, shared custody arrangements, or documented debts. The presumptive $2,748 is upheld in the majority of standard cases at this income tier.
Children-Specific Insight
For 3 children at $10,700/mo, Washington's 2026 schedule applies an economies-of-scale reduction. The $2,748 total works out to $916/mo per child — compared to $1,529 for one child at the same income. This reflects shared costs like housing and utilities that don't scale linearly with each additional child.
Related Income Tiers
Parents earning slightly more than $10,700 — at $10,800/mo — would face a presumptive order of $2,763/mo for 3 children in Washington. Those earning slightly less at $10,600/mo would owe $2,733/mo. These neighboring brackets help illustrate how Washington's 2026 schedule scales support incrementally with income.
Calculation Summary & Requirements
Navigating the 2026 schedule for a $10,700 income is designed for fairness. For families with 3 children, the $2,748 basic obligation is the state's benchmark for care in Washington.
Accuracy & Legal Status
This content regarding $10,700 income and 2026 support is for educational use. The $2,748 amounts are based on standard state tables. Local practices in Washington may influence the final judicial order.