Child Support Form Gets Facelift: Easier Paycheck Deductions Ahead
Published Date: 3/11/2026
Notice
Summary
The government wants to keep using and improve the Income Withholding for Support (IWO) form for three more years. This form helps employers take child support payments right from paychecks and send them to the right place. Changes include clearer instructions, new checkboxes, and updated fields to make the process easier for courts, employers, and families. Comments on these updates are due by May 11, 2026, and more electronic forms mean less paperwork and faster processing.
Analyzed Economic Effects
4 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 1 costs, 1 mixed.
IWO Form Extended for Three Years
The Office of Child Support Enforcement is requesting to extend the Income Withholding for Support (IWO) form approval for an additional three years; the current OMB approval expires August 31, 2026. You (parents, employers, courts, and other income providers) will continue to use a standard IWO to order and notify employers to withhold child support from paychecks and where to remit payments.
Less Paperwork; 30% Lower Annual Burden
OCSE updated the IWO and says wider use of electronic IWO (e-IWO), clearer instructions, and form changes have reduced the ongoing total estimated annual burden for this collection by 30 percent. The revised annual total estimated burden hours for the collection are 524,898 hours.
States Must Update Programming
OCSE added estimated burden to cover the time states will need to update programming for the proposed IWO changes. The notice shows 18 respondents for State Programming with an average of 534 hours per response and a total estimated 9,612 annual burden hours for state programming.
Form Revisions: New Fields and Clarifications
The IWO was revised to add checkboxes, clarified language and definitions, updated links, changed Office of Child Support Services (OCSS) to OCSE, and added fields such as a daily pay amount to record specifications. These specific changes are intended to help courts, employers, and families correctly withhold and remit payments.
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