South Carolina Divorce With Children — Custody and Child Support (2026)
When children are involved in a South Carolina divorce, the Family Court addresses legal custody, physical custody, visitation, and child support. All are incorporated into the Settlement Agreement or ordered by the court after a contested hearing.
Terminology: Legal and Physical Custody
Legal Custody
Authority to make major decisions about the child's upbringing — education, healthcare, religious training, extracurricular activities.
- Joint legal custody: Both parents share major decisions — most common in SC
- Sole legal custody: One parent has final authority — ordered when joint is impractical (domestic violence, inability to cooperate)
Physical Custody
Where the child primarily resides.
- Sole physical custody: Child lives primarily with one parent; other parent has visitation
- Joint physical custody: Child has substantial time with both parents
- Most SC families use a primary residence with a detailed visitation schedule
Best Interest Standard
South Carolina Family Courts determine custody based on the best interests of the child (S.C. Code § 63-15-240), weighing:
- Temperament and development needs of the child
- Each parent's capacity to understand and meet the needs of the child
- Parenting arrangements before the separation
- History of the child's care
- Any history of domestic violence or abuse
- Child's adjustment to home, school, and community
- Sibling relationships
- Preferences of the child (considered at a mature age — judge's discretion)
- Each parent's ability to support the child's relationship with the other parent
- Distance between parents' homes; school district impact
Parenting Plan
All South Carolina custody arrangements must be memorialized in a Parenting Plan — either agreed by the parties or ordered by the court.
Parenting Plan must address:
- Legal custody designation (joint or sole)
- Primary residence
- School-year visitation schedule (specific days, pickup/dropoff times and locations)
- Summer schedule
- Holiday schedule (specific holidays listed for each parent by year or alternating)
- School breaks and long weekends
- Vacation advance notice requirements
- Communication: child with non-primary parent (phone, video)
- Transportation: who drives exchanges, exchange location
- First right of refusal for childcare
- Relocation: advance notice requirements
- Decision-making procedures for joint legal custody
South Carolina Child Support Guidelines
South Carolina uses the Income Shares Model — both parents' incomes are factored into the calculation.
Key factors:
- Both parents' monthly gross income (wages, self-employment, investment income, etc.)
- Number of children
- Child care costs attributable to employment or job search
- Health insurance premiums paid for the child
- Extraordinary medical expenses
- Any prior child support obligations
Visitation adjustment: The guidelines include an adjustment for the number of overnights the non-custodial parent has with the child. More overnights generally means lower support obligation.
Online calculator: SC DSS provides a child support calculator at scdss.sc.gov.
Duration: Child support ends when the child turns 18 (or completes high school if still enrolled at 18 — check current statute).
Fault and Custody
Fault grounds (adultery, cruelty, drunkenness) used in the divorce do not automatically determine custody. However:
- Domestic violence is a significant factor in custody determinations
- Substance abuse affecting parenting ability is a factor
- An adulterous relationship may be considered if it directly affects the children's well-being
Last reviewed: March 2026 | Income shares model | sccourts.org/selfhelp | Child support ends at 18 | Family Court | Parenting Plan required
SoLongSoulmate.com Editorial Team
Researched using official state court websites and verified legal aid resources. Filing fees and procedures verified June 2026. General legal information only — not legal advice.
Last reviewed: March 2026 · Verify current fees and forms with your local court before filing.