Child Support Agreement (UK)
This Child Support Agreement (the “Agreement”) is made on [Agreement Date] by and between:
[Paying Parent Name], of [Paying Parent Address], [Paying Parent City], [Paying Parent County], [Paying Parent Postcode] (hereinafter the “Paying Parent”); and
[Receiving Parent Name], of [Receiving Parent Address], [Receiving Parent City], [Receiving Parent County], [Receiving Parent Postcode] (hereinafter the “Receiving Parent”).
The Paying Parent and the Receiving Parent are referred to collectively as the “Parents”.
BACKGROUND
A. The Parents are the parents of the following qualifying child(ren) (the “Children”) within the meaning of section 3(1) of the Child Support Act 1991:
[Children’s Names and Dates of Birth]
B. The Children are qualifying children for the purposes of the Child Support Act 1991 in that they are under 16, or under 20 and in approved full-time education.
C. The Parents have separated and wish to enter into a private maintenance agreement under section 9 of the Child Support Act 1991 to provide for the financial support of the Children.
D. The Parents acknowledge that this Agreement is a voluntary maintenance arrangement and that either Parent may apply to the Child Maintenance Service (CMS) for a statutory maintenance calculation under section 4 of the Child Support Act 1991 after a period of 12 months from the date of this Agreement, in accordance with section 4(10A) of that Act.
NOW, THEREFORE, the Parents agree as follows:
1. CHILD MAINTENANCE PAYMENTS
1.1 The Paying Parent agrees to pay child maintenance to the Receiving Parent in the sum of [£Maintenance Amount] per calendar month, in respect of all the Children named in this Agreement.
1.2 Payments shall be made by [Payment Method].
1.3 The first payment shall be made on [First Payment Date], and subsequent payments shall be made on [Payment Due Day] of each month thereafter.
1.4 In the event that the due date falls on a weekend or public holiday, the payment shall be made on the next working day.
1.5 The Paying Parent shall keep records of all payments made and, upon request, provide the Receiving Parent with written confirmation of payments.
2. ANNUAL REVIEW
2.1 The maintenance amount shall be reviewed [Annual Review].
2.2 Neither Parent shall reduce or suspend payments unilaterally pending a review. The existing maintenance amount shall continue to be paid until a new amount is agreed in writing.
2.3 Any agreed variation to the maintenance amount shall be recorded in a written amendment signed by both Parents.
3. DURATION OF MAINTENANCE OBLIGATION
3.1 The Paying Parent’s obligation to pay maintenance under this Agreement shall continue in respect of each child until the earliest of the following:
- the child reaches the age of 16 years;
- the child reaches the age of 20 years, if they remain in approved full-time education (A-levels, equivalent level 3 education, or a course not above A-level standard at a recognised educational establishment) as defined in regulation 3 of the Child Support (Maintenance Calculation and Special Cases) Regulations 2000;
- the child dies;
- the child ceases to be a qualifying child for any other reason within the meaning of section 3(1) of the Child Support Act 1991; or
- a Child Maintenance Service calculation supersedes this Agreement under section 4(10A) of the Child Support Act 1991.
3.2 Where one child ceases to be a qualifying child, the monthly payment shall be recalculated to reflect the remaining qualifying children, by agreement or by reference to the CMS calculation.
4. ARREARS AND NON-PAYMENT
4.1 If the Paying Parent fails to make any payment when due, the arrears shall carry simple interest at the rate of 8% per annum (the judgment debt rate under the Judgments Act 1838) from the date payment was due until the date of actual payment.
4.2 In the event of persistent non-payment, the Receiving Parent may:
- pursue the arrears as a contractual debt in the County Court;
- apply to the Child Maintenance Service for a statutory maintenance calculation and enforcement under section 4 of the Child Support Act 1991; or
- apply to the Family Court for a consent order incorporating the terms of this Agreement, which can then be enforced as a court order.
5. VARIATION OF MAINTENANCE
5.1 Either Parent may request a variation to the maintenance amount in the following circumstances:
[Variation Circumstances]
5.2 A request for variation shall be made in writing and shall set out the reasons for the requested change. The Parents shall endeavour to agree any variation within 30 days of the written request.
5.3 Any agreed variation shall be documented in a written amendment to this Agreement signed by both Parents.
6. CHILD MAINTENANCE SERVICE
6.1 [Cms Acknowledgment].
6.2 During the first 12 months of this Agreement, neither Parent shall apply to the Child Maintenance Service for a statutory maintenance calculation, in accordance with section 4(10A) of the Child Support Act 1991, unless this Agreement is terminated by written consent of both Parents.
6.3 If the Child Maintenance Service issues a maintenance calculation that supersedes this Agreement, the terms of the CMS calculation shall take effect and the obligations under this Agreement shall be discharged to the extent of any conflict.
6.4 Nothing in this Agreement shall prevent either Parent from making an application to the Family Court for a maintenance order in accordance with Schedule 1 of the Children Act 1989.
7. DISPUTE RESOLUTION
7.1 In the event of any dispute arising under this Agreement, the Parents shall attempt to resolve the matter by [Dispute Resolution] before taking any formal legal steps.
7.2 Nothing in this clause shall prevent either Parent from applying to the CMS for a statutory maintenance calculation after the expiry of 12 months from the date of this Agreement.
8. GOVERNING LAW
8.1 This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of England and Wales.
8.2 The parties submit to the jurisdiction of the courts of England and Wales in relation to any dispute arising under this Agreement.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Parents have signed this Child Support Agreement on the date first written above.
PAYING PARENT
Full name: [Paying Parent Name]
Address: [Paying Parent Address], [Paying Parent City], [Paying Parent County], [Paying Parent Postcode]
RECEIVING PARENT
Full name: [Receiving Parent Name]
Address: [Receiving Parent Address], [Receiving Parent City], [Receiving Parent County], [Receiving Parent Postcode]
Paying Parent
________________
Signature
Date: ________________
Receiving Parent
________________
Signature
Date: ________________
What Is a Child Support Agreement (UK)?
A Child Support Agreement in the United Kingdom records what the parties agree about their relationship, finances, children, or property and the basis on which those arrangements stand, and takes its legal force from the Child Support Act 1991.
The principal legislation governing child maintenance in England and Wales is the Child Support Act 1991, which established the statutory framework for the assessment, collection, and enforcement of child maintenance. The Act created the Child Support Agency (now replaced by the Child Maintenance Service or CMS, established under the Child Maintenance and Other Payments Act 2008), which has jurisdiction to calculate, collect, and enforce child maintenance for qualifying children. The statutory calculation methodology is set out in the Child Support Act 1991 and the Child Support (Maintenance Calculations and Special Cases) Regulations 2001, which base the calculation on the gross weekly income of the paying parent as verified by HMRC records.
Critically, under section 4(10A) of the Child Support Act 1991 (inserted by the Child Maintenance and Other Payments Act 2008), a private maintenance agreement prevents either party from applying to the CMS for a statutory calculation for the first 12 months. After that 12-month period, either parent may apply to the CMS regardless of the private agreement. This makes a Child Support Agreement a powerful, practical tool for the first year of the separation, giving both parents certainty while avoiding the delays and costs associated with the CMS administrative process.
Under Schedule 1 of the Children Act 1989, the Family Court also has jurisdiction to make financial provision orders for children, including periodical payments orders. Such orders can be made even where the CMS has jurisdiction, in certain circumstances — for example, where the paying parent's income exceeds the CMS upper limit (currently £3,000 per week gross) or where the order is intended to cover additional expenses such as school fees or disability-related costs.
A private Child Support Agreement is more flexible and faster to establish than the CMS statutory process. It can be tailored to the specific financial circumstances of the family, can include provisions for additional costs (such as school uniform, extracurricular activities, or private healthcare), and can incorporate a shared care reduction formula that reflects the actual overnight arrangements between the parents.
The legal framework governing the Child Support Agreement (UK) in United Kingdom draws on several key statutes and regulatory bodies. Under UK law, the UK GDPR and Data Protection Act 2018 govern personal data in this document. The Consumer Rights Act 2015 protects individuals in consumer transactions. Section 62 of the Consumer Rights Act 2015 addresses unfair terms. The County Court and High Court of Justice have jurisdiction over personal disputes under the Senior Courts Act 1981 and the County Courts Act 1984. The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) enforces data protection. Parties executing a Child Support Agreement (UK) in United Kingdom should confirm the document reflects current law, including any amendments enacted since the original drafting date. The Consumer Rights Act 2015 sets the foundational requirements.
When Do You Need a Child Support Agreement (UK)?
A Child Support Agreement is needed whenever parents in England and Wales separate and a child will primarily live with one parent. The moment the parents cease to live together, the financial support obligations of the non-resident parent for the qualifying children crystallise, and both parties benefit from having a clear, written record of the agreed arrangement.
The most immediate need arises at the point of separation, when the parents must decide on practical financial arrangements for the children. Without a written agreement, disputes about the amount, method, and timing of payments are more likely to arise. A Child Support Agreement addresses these issues from the outset, providing both parents with a reference document that reduces the potential for misunderstanding.
A Child Support Agreement is also valuable as an alternative to involving the Child Maintenance Service. The CMS process can be slow, and both the paying parent and the receiving parent are charged administrative fees. Where parents can agree between themselves, a private arrangement saves money, preserves goodwill, and is faster to establish. Under section 4(10A) of the Child Support Act 1991, the written agreement also prevents either party from applying to the CMS for a statutory calculation for the first 12 months, giving both parents a period of stability.
Parents who are in the process of negotiating a divorce settlement under the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 or dissolving a civil partnership will need to address child maintenance as part of the overall financial arrangements. While a financial consent order approved by the court under section 33A of the MCA 1973 can include provision for child maintenance, the agreement cannot oust the CMS's jurisdiction permanently. A standalone Child Support Agreement is a clearer and more appropriate vehicle for ongoing child maintenance obligations.
A Child Support Agreement is also useful when the existing maintenance arrangement needs to be updated. Circumstances change — the paying parent's income may increase or decrease significantly, the children's needs may change, or the shared care arrangements may shift. A written agreement with a clear annual review mechanism and a defined variation procedure provides the structure to manage these changes without conflict.
Finally, a Child Support Agreement provides a record that can be relied upon if one parent seeks to enforce maintenance arrears as a contractual debt through the County Court, or as evidence before the Family Court in proceedings under Schedule 1 of the Children Act 1989.
What to Include in Your Child Support Agreement (UK)
A well-drafted Child Support Agreement for England and Wales should address a number of key elements to provide clarity, flexibility, and enforceability.
The first essential element is the identification of the parties and the qualifying children. The agreement should record the full legal names and addresses of the paying parent and the receiving parent, and the full legal names and dates of birth of each qualifying child. The status of each child as a qualifying child under section 3(1) of the Child Support Act 1991 should be confirmed.
The second element is the maintenance amount. The agreement should state the agreed monthly payment in pounds sterling. Many parents base this on the indicative CMS statutory calculation (which can be estimated using the free online tool at gov.uk), even if they have agreed a different figure to reflect their specific circumstances. Stating the basis on which the amount was agreed helps explain any departure from the statutory formula.
The third element is the payment method. The agreement should specify precisely how and when payments will be made — by bank transfer, standing order, cheque, or cash — and the day of each month on which payment is due. Clear payment mechanics reduce the scope for disputes about whether or when a payment was made.
The fourth element is the annual review mechanism. Child maintenance amounts should be reviewed annually to reflect changes in the paying parent's income and the children's needs. The agreement should specify the review trigger — for example, annual CPI indexation, annual review by reference to a fresh CMS calculation, or annual mutual agreement.
The fifth element is the shared care adjustment. Where the children spend significant time overnight with the paying parent, the maintenance amount should be reduced to reflect the costs borne by that parent. The agreement should set out the reduction formula, ideally mirroring the statutory shared care provisions in the Child Support (Maintenance Calculations and Special Cases) Regulations 2000.
The sixth element is the CMS acknowledgment. The agreement must acknowledge that either parent may apply to the CMS for a statutory calculation after 12 months under section 4(10A) of the Child Support Act 1991, and that any CMS calculation will supersede the private agreement.
The seventh element is the duration of the maintenance obligation — typically until each child reaches 16, or 20 if in approved full-time education. The eighth element is a variation procedure, setting out the circumstances in which either parent can request an out-of-cycle review. The ninth element is a dispute resolution clause, and the tenth is the governing law (England and Wales).
Additional compliance elements for a Child Support Agreement (UK) used in United Kingdom include: Under UK law, the UK GDPR and Data Protection Act 2018 govern personal data in this document. The Consumer Rights Act 2015 protects individuals in consumer transactions. Section 62 of the Consumer Rights Act 2015 addresses unfair terms. The County Court and High Court of Justice have jurisdiction over personal disputes under the Senior Courts Act 1981 and the County Courts Act 1984. The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) enforces data protection. Forms-legal.com provides this template as a starting point for United Kingdom-compliant documentation.
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"Child Support Agreement (UK) (United Kingdom)." Forms Legal, 2026, https://forms-legal.com/uk/personal/family/child-support-agreement-uk.
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year = {2026},
howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/uk/personal/family/child-support-agreement-uk}},
note = {Free legal document template. Based on Consumer Rights Act 2015}
}Also available for these jurisdictions:
Frequently Asked Questions
The Child Maintenance Service calculates child maintenance using a statutory formula set out in the Child Support Act 1991 and the Child Support (Maintenance Calculations and Special Cases) Regulations 2001. The calculation is based primarily on the gross weekly income of the paying parent (the non-resident parent), taken from HM Revenue & Customs records. For one qualifying child, the basic rate is 12% of gross weekly income; for two children, 16%; and for three or more children, 19%. These rates apply where the paying parent's gross weekly income is between £200 and £3,000. There are four rates in total: a nil rate (income below £100 per week), a flat rate (£100–£200 per week, where maintenance is £7 per week), a reduced rate (£200–£2,499.99), and a basic rate (for those with higher incomes, up to a maximum weekly income of £3,000). The CMS also applies a shared care reduction of one-seventh per night per week the child spends with the paying parent, under the Maintenance Calculations and Special Cases Regulations 2000. Parents can use the CMS online calculator at gov.uk to obtain an indicative figure before deciding on a private arrangement.
A private child maintenance agreement (also called a family-based arrangement) is a voluntary agreement between the parents about the amount and method of child support. It is governed by contract law and has legal effect as a binding agreement for 12 months, but it cannot be directly enforced through the CMS unless a statutory calculation is applied for. Under section 4(10A) of the Child Support Act 1991, a private maintenance agreement prevents either parent from applying to the CMS for a statutory calculation for the first 12 months. After 12 months, either parent may apply to the CMS, which will issue a statutory calculation that takes precedence over the private agreement. A CMS statutory calculation, by contrast, is a formal, government-administered calculation that is enforceable through administrative collection. Enforcement powers include deduction from earnings orders, deduction orders from bank accounts, curfew orders, and driving licence disqualification. Parents often prefer a private arrangement because it is more flexible, faster to establish, avoids the CMS application fee (charged to both parties), and can be tailored to the particular circumstances of the family.
Under the Child Support Act 1991, child maintenance is payable in respect of a 'qualifying child', which is defined in section 3(1) of the Act. A child is a qualifying child if they are under the age of 16, or if they are under 20 and in approved full-time education. 'Approved education or training' is defined in regulation 3 of the Child Support (Maintenance Calculation Procedure) Regulations 2000 and includes a course of full-time non-advanced education (such as A-levels or equivalent) at a recognised educational establishment, or approved training. It does not include higher education (university). Therefore, if a child remains in sixth form or equivalent education after turning 16, maintenance continues until they reach 20 or leave that education, whichever is earlier. University students are not qualifying children for CMS purposes. Parents may, however, agree in a private agreement to continue financial support through university — but such an agreement would be a private contractual obligation rather than a CMS-enforceable child maintenance obligation.
A private child maintenance agreement is a legally binding contract, and as such, unpaid maintenance can in principle be recovered as a civil debt through the County Court. Persistent arrears under a written child maintenance agreement may be pursued through the Small Claims Court (for amounts up to £10,000) or the County Court (for larger amounts). Interest on judgment debts accrues at 8% per annum under the Judgments Act 1838. Alternatively, once the 12-month exclusivity period has elapsed, the receiving parent may apply to the Child Maintenance Service for a statutory calculation and use the CMS's enforcement tools (deduction from earnings orders, bank account deductions, etc.), which are generally more effective than pursuing a private debt claim. A parent can also apply to the Family Court under Schedule 1 of the Children Act 1989 for a financial provision order for the child, or seek to incorporate the private agreement into a consent order which is directly enforceable as a court order.
The Child Support Act 1991 and the Child Support (Maintenance Calculations and Special Cases) Regulations 2000 provide for a shared care reduction to the statutory maintenance calculation when the paying parent has the qualifying child staying overnight with them for an average of at least one night per week over the year. The reduction operates as follows: one night per week on average = one-seventh reduction (approximately 14%); two nights per week = two-sevenths reduction (approximately 28%); three nights per week = three-sevenths reduction (approximately 43%); and where shared care reaches the level of three or more nights per week on average, the flat weekly amount (where applicable) is reduced by £7. In a private agreement, the parents can agree their own formula for shared care reduction, which may mirror the statutory provisions or be adapted to their specific arrangements. It is important that both parents keep a contemporaneous record of nights spent with each parent, as this is the best evidence in any dispute about the number of overnight stays.
There is no legal requirement to instruct a solicitor to create a private child maintenance agreement in England and Wales. Many parents successfully reach and record their own child maintenance arrangements without professional advice. However, legal advice is strongly recommended where: the paying parent's income is complex (including self-employment income, bonuses, dividends, or income from assets); there are concerns about financial disclosure; the arrangement involves additional costs such as school fees; either parent has assets or income in another jurisdiction; or either parent wishes to have the arrangement incorporated into a court order for enforceability. The Child Maintenance Service offers a free Child Maintenance Options service (at cmoptions.org) which provides information and guidance on both private arrangements and statutory calculations. Citizens Advice and Resolution (the family law professional body) can also provide guidance on finding a family law solicitor or mediator.
This template is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change over time. Consult a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation.Full disclaimer
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