Family courts have the power to assign a parent or spouse an income they do not actually earn. The process is called imputation, and it is meant to stop people from gaming child support or alimony by quitting their jobs or taking deliberate pay cuts. The intent is reasonable. The execution, in courtroom after courtroom, often is not.
What gets entered as imputed income frequently bears only a passing resemblance to what the person could realistically earn in the local labor market.
How imputation is supposed to work
Most jurisdictions allow courts to impute income when a party is voluntarily unemployed or underemployed. The standard process involves analyzing the person’s education, work history, recent earnings, available local jobs, and physical or mental limitations. The court is then supposed to assign an earning capacity grounded in evidence, not aspiration.
In practice, the evidentiary record is often thin. Vocational evaluations cost thousands of dollars and many litigants cannot afford them. Without expert testimony, judges rely on outdated wage data, generic occupational handbooks, or the opposing party’s optimistic claims about what the other side could earn. A parent who left a high-paying job a decade ago to raise children can find themselves imputed at that decade-old salary, despite skills having atrophied and the original industry having reorganized. The math is internally consistent and externally absurd.
Where the fantasy element creeps in
The most common errors are predictable. Courts sometimes impute the highest historical income a party ever earned, treating a peak as a floor. They cite Bureau of Labor Statistics median wages without adjusting for actual local availability or for the time required to retrain. They assume full-time employment in fields the litigant has not worked in for years. They ignore caregiving constraints, disability evidence, or the simple reality that a fifty-five-year-old returning to a field after fifteen years off does not slot back in at peer salary.
Appellate decisions across multiple states have repeatedly reversed imputation orders for exactly these reasons, but reversal requires an appeal, which requires money, time, and a record clean enough to argue from. Many litigants accept rulings that are mathematically detached from their reality because fighting back costs more than the imputed amount itself.
The downstream costs
Imputed income that exceeds actual income produces support orders the obligor cannot meet. Arrears accumulate, license suspensions follow, and in some states contempt proceedings can include jail time. The system then treats nonpayment as willful, which compounds the original error. Children rarely benefit, since support cannot be collected from money that does not exist.
Reform efforts have proposed clearer evidentiary standards, mandatory consideration of actual local job availability, and limits on how aggressively courts can impute when caregiving responsibilities are documented. Adoption has been uneven and slow.
Bottom line
Imputation is a legitimate tool against bad-faith underemployment. It becomes fantasy math when courts treat earning capacity as wishful arithmetic rather than evidentiary fact. Anyone facing imputation should treat the vocational evidence as the central battleground, because that is where the numbers either become real or stay invented.
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