End Double Taxation of Court-Ordered Child Support Payments
End Double Taxation of Court-Ordered Child Support Payments
The Issue
Petition To
United States Congress
(House of Representatives & U.S. Senate)
Petition Statement
We, the undersigned, respectfully petition the United States Congress to reform federal tax law to address the inequitable tax treatment of court-ordered child support payments.
The Issue
Under current federal tax law:
Child support payments are made from after-tax income by the paying parent
The paying parent receives no federal tax deduction or credit
The receiving parent does not report child support as taxable income
As a result, income that is legally mandated for the direct support of a child is effectively taxed twice.
Child support is not discretionary spending. It is a court-ordered legal obligation, enforced by the state, and failure to pay can result in wage garnishment, license suspension, or incarceration.
Why Reform Is Needed
The current tax structure:
Penalizes parents who comply with court-ordered support
Disproportionately affects working- and middle-income families
Creates financial strain that can undermine long-term support compliance
Treats child support differently from other legally required payments
Tax policy should promote compliance and fairness — not discourage responsible parenting.
Proposed Solutions
We urge Congress to amend the Internal Revenue Code to adopt one or more of the following reforms:
Allow an above-the-line federal tax deduction for verified, court-ordered child support payments
Create a capped federal tax credit for the paying parent
Establish a shared tax treatment model that recognizes both parents’ financial contributions
Any reform may be reasonably limited to:
Court-ordered obligations only
Payments made through state child support enforcement systems
Annual caps to prevent abuse and protect federal revenue
Benefits of Reform
Promotes fairness and consistency in the tax code
Encourages full and timely child support compliance
Reduces financial pressure on families
Recognizes child support as a legal obligation, not voluntary income
Keeps the focus on the well-being of children
Call to Action
We respectfully request that Congress:
Introduce legislation addressing the tax treatment of child support
Refer the issue to the House Ways & Means Committee and Senate Finance Committee
Conduct a fiscal and compliance impact study through the Joint Committee on Taxation
Signatures
This petition is signed by parents, families, and taxpayers who support a fair, balanced tax system that recognizes legal responsibility without imposing undue financial penalties.
11
The Issue
Petition To
United States Congress
(House of Representatives & U.S. Senate)
Petition Statement
We, the undersigned, respectfully petition the United States Congress to reform federal tax law to address the inequitable tax treatment of court-ordered child support payments.
The Issue
Under current federal tax law:
Child support payments are made from after-tax income by the paying parent
The paying parent receives no federal tax deduction or credit
The receiving parent does not report child support as taxable income
As a result, income that is legally mandated for the direct support of a child is effectively taxed twice.
Child support is not discretionary spending. It is a court-ordered legal obligation, enforced by the state, and failure to pay can result in wage garnishment, license suspension, or incarceration.
Why Reform Is Needed
The current tax structure:
Penalizes parents who comply with court-ordered support
Disproportionately affects working- and middle-income families
Creates financial strain that can undermine long-term support compliance
Treats child support differently from other legally required payments
Tax policy should promote compliance and fairness — not discourage responsible parenting.
Proposed Solutions
We urge Congress to amend the Internal Revenue Code to adopt one or more of the following reforms:
Allow an above-the-line federal tax deduction for verified, court-ordered child support payments
Create a capped federal tax credit for the paying parent
Establish a shared tax treatment model that recognizes both parents’ financial contributions
Any reform may be reasonably limited to:
Court-ordered obligations only
Payments made through state child support enforcement systems
Annual caps to prevent abuse and protect federal revenue
Benefits of Reform
Promotes fairness and consistency in the tax code
Encourages full and timely child support compliance
Reduces financial pressure on families
Recognizes child support as a legal obligation, not voluntary income
Keeps the focus on the well-being of children
Call to Action
We respectfully request that Congress:
Introduce legislation addressing the tax treatment of child support
Refer the issue to the House Ways & Means Committee and Senate Finance Committee
Conduct a fiscal and compliance impact study through the Joint Committee on Taxation
Signatures
This petition is signed by parents, families, and taxpayers who support a fair, balanced tax system that recognizes legal responsibility without imposing undue financial penalties.
11
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Petition created on December 27, 2025
