Last updated: May 20, 2026
Important note before you start
This guide is for general information only. It is not legal advice. Child support orders are court orders, and your facts matter. If you are unsure what to file, if there is family violence, or if the other parent has a lawyer, try to speak with a lawyer or legal aid before you act.
Bottom line
Indiana child support is handled through the courts, county Prosecutor Title IV-D child support offices, and the Indiana Department of Child Services Child Support Bureau. Indiana child support services can help establish paternity, find the other parent, set up or change a support order, set medical support, collect payments, and work on past-due support.
You can start with the official Indiana child support page, the enrollment page, or your local support office. Signing up for Indiana child support services is free. A court, not this website, decides the final amount.
If you are comparing child support with other help, start with our child support basics guide. If you need broader state help, see Indiana help guide.
If you need help today
Child support can help over time, but it may not solve a same-day food, rent, safety, or utility problem. Use these starting points if the problem is urgent.
- Immediate danger: call 911.
- Domestic violence: call the Indiana domestic violence hotline at 800-332-7385 or use the ICADV help page. Use a safer phone or device if your internet use may be watched.
- Food, shelter, rent, utility, transportation, or local referrals: dial 211, call 866-211-9966, text your ZIP code to 898-211, or use Indiana 211.
- SNAP, TANF, or Medicaid: apply through the Benefits Portal or contact FSSA DFR.
- Shutoff risk: ask about Indiana’s Energy Assistance Program and local utility help.
For ASMOM guides that may help while child support is being set up, see emergency help, Indiana TANF, and Indiana housing help.
Where to start
Start with the step that matches your situation. You do not need to know every legal term before you ask for help.
You do not have an order
Apply for Indiana child support services or talk with your county child support office. The office can explain whether paternity, parent location, or a new court order is needed.
You already have an order
Use Kidsline, your county office, or your payment history to check the case. If the order no longer fits, ask about a modification instead of relying on a private agreement.
Payments stopped
Do not wait months if payments stop. Keep records and contact the office enforcing your case. Indiana can use income withholding and other enforcement tools when a case qualifies.
You feel unsafe
Child support cases can involve contact, addresses, court papers, and hearings. Call a domestic violence advocate or legal aid first if filing may create risk.
Quick reference table
| Need | Best starting point | Reality check |
|---|---|---|
| Open a child support case | Indiana DCS enrollment or county Prosecutor Title IV-D office | A case is opened locally, and the local office decides which services are needed. |
| Estimate the amount | Official Indiana Child Support Calculator | The calculator is an estimate and can produce forms, but a court order controls. |
| Prove legal parentage | County child support office, court, or health department | Legal DNA testing must follow required procedures; home tests are not for court proof. |
| Check payments | Kidsline or payment history tools | Keep your own records too, especially if payments are partial or late. |
| Change an old order | Court forms, legal aid, or your county office | Private agreements are risky unless the court changes the order. |
| Get help with forms | Indiana Legal Help or legal aid | Court staff and the child support office cannot be your lawyer. |
Who can use Indiana child support services?
Indiana says child support services are available to custodial parents, non-custodial parents, and caretakers or relatives who have custody of a child. You can also enroll in Indiana even if the other parent lives in another state.
Services may include parent location, paternity establishment, child support orders, medical support orders, payment collection, modification help, and determining past-due support. These services do not replace a lawyer, and they do not handle every family court issue.
For nearby help that is not only child support, use our local resource guide or Indiana community support.
How to apply for child support in Indiana
You can enroll online or in person. The official enrollment page says there is no fee to enroll. If you apply in person, contact your county Prosecutor Title IV-D child support office, gather what that office asks for, complete the enrollment form, and take or mail it to the office.
If you only need direct deposit, debit card, or income withholding forms, do not submit a new enrollment by mistake. Use the official parent forms page instead.
Information to gather first
| Information | Why it helps |
|---|---|
| Your child’s full name, date of birth, and birth certificate if you have it | Helps confirm the child and any parent listed on records. |
| Your photo ID and contact information | Helps the office verify you and reach you about notices. |
| Other parent’s name, date of birth, address, phone, employer, and Social Security number if known | Helps the office find the parent and send papers. |
| Any existing court orders | Prevents duplicate or conflicting orders. |
| Income, child care, health insurance, and medical cost information | These details can affect the support worksheet. |
| Safety concerns or protective orders | Helps you ask about safer ways to handle contact and notices. |
Tip
Give the office what you know, even if it is incomplete. Old addresses, past employers, relatives, and dates of birth can still help locate a parent. Do not guess at facts on court forms.
How Indiana child support is calculated
Indiana child support is based on the Indiana Child Support Rules and Guidelines issued by the Indiana Supreme Court. Indiana uses an income shares approach. In simple terms, the worksheet looks at both parents’ income and estimates the share that would have been spent on the child if the parents lived together.
The official Child Support Calculator asks about children, income, parenting time, health care, child care, and other costs. It can estimate weekly support and create forms for court. The calculator page also notes that the former calculator is for obligations before December 31, 2023.
The current Indiana support rules were updated effective May 14, 2024. The rules cover weekly gross income, income verification, basic support, child care, health insurance, extraordinary health care, parenting time credit, post-secondary education worksheets, and modification.
What can affect the number?
- each parent’s weekly gross income;
- the number of children covered by the order;
- work-related child care costs;
- health insurance costs for the child;
- extraordinary medical or education expenses;
- overnights and parenting time credit;
- other child support orders or legal duties that count under the guidelines; and
- whether the court finds a reason to deviate from the guideline amount.
Watch out for unofficial calculators
Unofficial calculators may not match Indiana’s current rules. Use the state calculator for a better estimate, and remember that the judge’s signed order is what matters.
If paternity has not been established
If the parents were not married or legal parentage is not clear, paternity may need to be established before child support can be ordered. Indiana explains that paternity can be established by paternity affidavit in some situations or by a court order.
Either parent or the county child support office may request genetic testing in a court case. Indiana DCS says a legal DNA test must follow a chain-of-custody process and be performed by an accredited laboratory. A home paternity test is not admissible for legal purposes. Start with the DCS paternity page if this applies to you.
If your case involves same-sex parents, assisted reproduction, adoption, or a parent who is not listed on a birth record, talk with a lawyer or legal aid. Parentage questions can be more complex than a basic child support form.
Payments, disbursement, and enforcement
Indiana child support payments often go through the Indiana State Central Collection Unit. An Income Withholding Order tells an employer or income payer to withhold support from the paying parent’s income and send it to the state collection unit. Indiana says state and federal law generally require support to be paid by income withholding unless a court approves another arrangement.
For details on wage withholding, see DCS income withholding. For receiving payments, DCS explains direct deposit and the Way2Go Mastercard debit card on its payment disbursements page.
If payments are late or missing
Keep a simple payment log with the date, expected amount, amount received, and how you received it. Do not rely on memory. Then contact Kidsline or your county office, especially if the case is enforced by a county Prosecutor’s Title IV-D office.
Indiana enforcement can include tools such as income withholding, tax refund offsets, and other actions when a case qualifies. The DCS NCP FAQ explains federal and state tax refund offsets and some thresholds. Ask your caseworker what applies to your case rather than assuming every tool can be used right away.
Changing, reducing, or ending a child support order
Do not treat a private agreement as enough. If the court order says one amount, the court order normally controls until it is changed. This matters even if both parents verbally agree to a different amount for a while.
Indiana Legal Help has child support forms for parents who agree, parents who do not agree, emancipation issues, and support for a 19-year-old high school student. Start with the Indiana Legal Help child support page if you need forms or low-cost legal help.
Indiana DCS says a child is generally emancipated by operation of law at age 19, and current support usually ends then, unless an exception applies and a court order continues support. If more than one child is covered by an order, support is not automatically reduced when one child is emancipated. You must ask the court to modify the order.
For general ASMOM help with nearby civil legal resources, see Indiana legal help. If tax credits or refunds are part of your budget planning, see tax credit help.
Child support, custody, and parenting time
Child support and parenting time are connected in real life, but they are not the same legal issue. Indiana DCS says the Title IV-D child support office cannot help with custody or parenting time. It also says parenting time cannot be withheld just because support is not paid.
If your question is about parenting time, not support, use the Indiana Parenting Time HelpLine. It is free and can explain parenting time information, but it cannot give legal advice, review your court file, fill out forms, or answer child support or tax exemption questions.
If there is abuse, stalking, coercive control, or threats, do not try to solve this only through child support paperwork. A domestic violence advocate or lawyer can help you think about safer options. Our Indiana safety guide may also help you find support.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Relying on cash payments with no record. Use official payment channels when possible and keep proof.
- Waiting too long after payments stop. Report problems early and keep a payment log.
- Using a private agreement instead of a court change. Get the court order changed if the amount should change.
- Filing a new enrollment form for the wrong task. If you only need a payment form or address change, use the forms page.
- Ignoring safety concerns. Ask an advocate or lawyer before giving an address if that could put you at risk.
- Guessing on income or parent information. Put what you know and say when you do not know.
If your case is delayed, denied, or confusing
Child support cases can move slowly when paternity is disputed, the other parent must be located, the other parent lives in another state, income is hard to prove, or court calendars are full. You can still take practical steps.
- Call Kidsline and ask what office has your case.
- Call your county office and ask what step is next.
- Write down dates, names, and what each person told you.
- Ask if any documents are missing.
- Ask legal aid if a court filing is needed.
- Use food, rent, utility, child care, and medical help while you wait.
For related help, see SNAP food help, Medicaid help, and child care help.
Phone scripts you can use
Calling Kidsline
“Hi, I have a question about an Indiana child support case. My name is ____. My case number is ____ if you need it. I need to know which county office has my case, whether anything is missing, and what the next step is.”
Calling the county office
“Hi, I enrolled for child support services on ____. I want to check whether the case is open, whether paternity or a hearing is needed, and whether you need any documents from me.”
Calling legal aid
“Hi, I need help with a child support issue in Indiana. The issue is ____. I have a court order from ____ county. Can you tell me if I can apply for legal help or if there are self-help forms for this?”
Calling 211
“Hi, I am waiting on child support and need help with ____ this week. My ZIP code is ____. Can you check food, rent, utility, transportation, legal, or domestic violence resources near me?”
Official and trusted resources
- Kidsline contact for statewide child support questions.
- Support orders for Indiana DCS information on orders and emancipation.
- Indiana Legal Services for civil legal help applications and family law information.
- DCS child support for the main Indiana child support portal.
Resumen en español
En Indiana, la manutención de niños se maneja por la corte, las oficinas del fiscal del condado y el Departamento de Servicios para Niños. Puede inscribirse gratis para servicios de manutención. Estos servicios pueden ayudar con paternidad, localizar al otro padre, establecer una orden, cobrar pagos y revisar pagos atrasados.
Si necesita ayuda urgente con comida, renta, servicios públicos o seguridad, llame al 211 o al 911 si hay peligro inmediato. Si hay violencia doméstica, llame a la línea estatal al 800-332-7385 desde un teléfono seguro.
FAQ
How do I apply for child support in Indiana?
You can enroll online through Indiana DCS or contact your county Prosecutor Title IV-D child support office. There is no fee to enroll for Indiana child support services.
Can Indiana help if the other parent lives in another state?
Yes. Indiana says custodial parents, non-custodial parents, and caretakers may enroll even if the other parent lives in another state. Interstate cases can take longer.
Can the child support office help with custody?
No. Indiana DCS says Title IV-D child support offices do not handle custody or parenting time. For parenting time questions, use the Parenting Time HelpLine or talk with a lawyer.
Does child support stop when my child turns 19?
Generally, Indiana says a child is emancipated at age 19 for child support, but exceptions can apply. If several children are on one order, the amount is not automatically reduced when one child is emancipated.
What if payments stop?
Keep a written payment log, check your payment history, and contact Kidsline or the county office enforcing your case. Ask what enforcement steps may apply to your case.
Can I use an online calculator?
Use the official Indiana Child Support Calculator for estimates and forms. A calculator is not the final order; the court order controls.
About this guide
This guide uses official federal, state, local, and other high-trust nonprofit and community sources mentioned in the article.
A Single Mother is independent and is not a government agency, benefits office, lender, law firm, medical provider, or tax advisor.
Program rules, funding, local availability, and eligibility can change. Always confirm details with the official program before you apply or make decisions.
Verification: Last verified May 20, 2026, next review August 20, 2026.
Corrections: If you see something wrong or outdated, email suggestions@asinglemother.org.
Disclaimer: This article is for general information only. It is not legal, financial, medical, tax, immigration, disability, safety, or government-agency advice.