Back Child Support Felony in Washington State: When Does It Apply?
Washington State has no dollar amount that turns unpaid child support into a felony. Criminal charges depend on willful refusal to pay, not your debt size. I’ve defended hundreds facing jail time over support payments. Most had no idea intent matters more than the balance. The state examines whether you can’t pay or won’t pay. That distinction separates civil enforcement action from criminal prosecution.
Let me explain exactly when your case crosses into back child support felony territory.
Torrone’s Takeaways
-
Washington has no dollar threshold for felony child support charges. Willful refusal matters more than the amount you owe.
-
Prosecutors must prove you deliberately refused to pay, not that you couldn’t afford it. Document your financial hardship immediately.
-
File a modification petition the moment your income drops. Your support order doesn’t adjust automatically.
-
Contact DCS before they contact prosecutors. Payment plans prevent criminal referrals even with large arrears.
-
Class C felony abandonment carries up to 5 years in prison. Gross misdemeanor non-support means up to 364 days in jail.
-
Civil enforcement comes first through wage garnishments, license suspensions, and tax refund intercepts before criminal charges.
-
Act fast when charged. Early legal intervention protects your freedom, your record, and your professional licenses.
Table of Contents
- Washington’s Felony Child Support Laws Work Differently Than You Think
- How Washington Prosecutors Decide to File Felony Charges
- What Actually Triggers Criminal Non-Support Investigations
- Class C Felony Abandonment vs. Gross Misdemeanor Non-Support
- The Civil Enforcement Steps That Happen Before Criminal Charges
- How to Stop Criminal Charges Before They Start
- Defending Against Felony Non-Support Charges in Pierce County
- How Melvin & Torrone Gets Results in Child Support Criminal Cases
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Conclusion
Washington’s Felony Child Support Laws Work Differently Than You Think
Washington Has No Dollar Amount Felony Threshold
Most people panic when they see their unpaid child support balance climbing. They ask me if $10,000 triggers felony charges, or maybe $20,000. Here’s what surprises everyone in my office. Washington has no magic number that flips your case from civil to criminal. I’ve seen parents with $50,000 in child support arrears face zero criminal charges. Others with $5,000 got prosecuted.
What Makes Child Support Non-Payment a Criminal Matter
Prosecutors care about one thing when deciding whether to file criminal charges. Did you willfully refuse to pay your court-ordered child support? That’s the line between civil enforcement and criminal prosecution. Intent separates people who can’t pay from those who won’t pay.
Consider the pattern prosecutors look for in a felony family abandonment case. A parent earning a solid income who hasn’t made a single support payment in well over a year, while still affording a new vehicle and vacations, is exactly the profile the Division of Child Support flags. In cases like that, prosecutors see deliberate refusal rather than financial hardship. When the underlying ability to pay is clear, the defense path usually runs through negotiating a structured payment plan, which can support a reduction from a felony to a gross misdemeanor and help a parent avoid jail.
The Difference Between Civil Enforcement and Criminal Charges
Civil enforcement goes after your money and assets. Criminal prosecution goes after your freedom. The Division of Child Support uses wage garnishments, tax refund intercepts, and license suspensions as civil tools. Prosecutors file criminal charges only when they believe you deliberately ignored a child support order. Civil cases happen in family court. Criminal cases put you in front of a judge who can send you to jail.

How Washington Prosecutors Decide to File Felony Charges
The Willful Non-Payment Standard Under RCW 26.20.030
RCW 26.20.030 makes family abandonment a Class C felony in Washington. Prosecutors must prove you willfully failed to provide support for a child under 16. That word “willfully” carries all the weight. It means you had the ability to pay but deliberately chose not to. Federal law under 18 U.S.C. § 228 works similarly, requiring proof of willful failure to pay support exceeding $5,000 for over one year across state lines.
Why Intent Matters More Than the Dollar Amount
I’ve defended clients with massive child support debt who never faced criminal charges. Others with smaller balances got prosecuted hard. The difference comes down to what prosecutors can prove about your intent. Did you hide income? Quit jobs to avoid wage garnishments? Move without updating your address with the local child support office? Those actions scream willful refusal.
A parent who has been served with an Order to Show Cause repeatedly and claims poverty at each hearing puts intent squarely at issue, especially when the payment history shows money going to a vehicle loan or recreational expenses while support orders went unpaid. Defending a case like that usually means documenting a genuine income drop, such as a steep decline in business income, with hard records. Courts examine your entire financial picture, not just what you claim.
How Courts Separate Financial Hardship from Deliberate Refusal
Courts look at specific factors when deciding if non-payment was willful. I see prosecutors build their case around these elements every time:
-
Your employment history and whether you quit jobs voluntarily
-
Bank accounts showing spending on luxuries instead of support obligations
-
Whether you attempted to modify your child support order when income dropped
-
Your response to contempt of court orders and payment demands
-
Evidence you hid assets or worked under the table
Genuine inability to pay is a complete defense to criminal charges. The burden falls on prosecutors to prove you had resources available.
What Actually Triggers Criminal Non-Support Investigations
The DCS Enforcement Escalation Process
The Division of Child Support doesn’t wake up one day and refer you for criminal prosecution. They follow a predictable escalation ladder. First comes an Income Withholding Order directing your employer to garnish wages. Then tax refunds get intercepted through the federal tax refund offset program. Driver’s license suspension follows if you keep ignoring support enforcement measures. Criminal referral sits at the top of that ladder.
Red Flags That Push Cases from Civil to Criminal Territory
I can spot cases headed for criminal charges from a mile away. Certain behaviors trigger referrals to prosecutors faster than others. Crossing state lines to avoid payment catches federal attention under Section 228 of Title 18. Fleeing the country while owing support raises even bigger alarms. Nationally, approximately $114 billion in child support arrears remained unpaid as of 2022, and prosecutors focus on the most egregious cases.
Moving out of state for a new job without notifying Child Support Enforcement is a frequent trigger for a motion to adjudge in contempt, particularly when payments stop entirely for months. Prosecutors tend to read it as deliberate evasion when someone updates their professional licenses but never updates their support case. The way to counter that narrative is to act fast: establish contact with the local child support office, set up automatic payments, and document competing obligations like rent. Demonstrating good faith early is often what leads prosecutors to drop the criminal charges.
How Long It Takes Before Prosecutors Get Involved
There’s no set timeline for criminal referrals, but I’ve noticed patterns. Most criminal cases I defend involve at least 12 to 18 months of complete non-payment. Multiple ignored contempt actions speed things up considerably. A single missed payment won’t land you in criminal court. Sustained, willful refusal after repeated warnings will.
Class C Felony Abandonment vs. Gross Misdemeanor Non-Support
RCW 26.20.030 Family Abandonment Carries Up to 5 Years in Prison
Family abandonment under RCW 26.20.030 is the serious charge. Prosecutors file this criminal felony when you willfully fail to support a child under 16. Class C felonies in Washington carry up to 5 years in prison and fines up to $10,000. This charge typically hits noncustodial parents who completely ghost their support obligations for extended periods. I’ve seen these cases involve parents who left the state or actively hid income.
RCW 26.20.035 Family Non-Support Means Up to 364 Days in Jail
RCW 26.20.035 covers family non-support as a gross misdemeanor. This criminal misdemeanor applies when you fail to support a spouse, child, or other dependent. Penalties include up to 364 days in jail and fines up to $5,000. Prosecutors often file this charge first, saving the felony for repeat offenders or extreme cases. It’s still serious and creates a criminal record.
Penalties You Face with Each Charge
Both charges destroy more than your freedom. A criminal record affects employment, professional licenses, and housing applications. Courts can order restitution on top of your existing child support arrears. You might face probation requirements including mandatory payment plans. Credit bureaus get notified, tanking your credit score for years.
Take a licensed tradesperson facing RCW 26.20.030 charges who has made sporadic payments, just never enough, and has skipped contempt hearings. Prosecutors in that situation often push for jail time, and the parent’s real worry is usually losing a professional license and the time they have with their kids.
The defense in cases like this turns on documentation: showing an employer cut hours due to project delays, recording every payment attempt, and filing a modification petition at the same time as the criminal defense. When that record holds up, a felony can be reduced to a gross misdemeanor with a structured payment plan, which is what protects the parent’s license and keeps them out of the Department of Corrections.
Criminal charges carry consequences beyond jail time:
-
Permanent criminal record affecting future employment
-
Potential loss of occupational licenses and professional credentials
-
Damage to credit reports through credit bureau reporting
-
Possible passport denial for international travel
-
Strained relationships affecting custody arrangements
Table: Washington Criminal Non-Support Charges Compared
| Element | Class C Felony (RCW 26.20.030) | Gross Misdemeanor (RCW 26.20.035) |
|---|---|---|
| Charge Name | Family Abandonment | Family Non-Support |
| Who It Applies To | Parent of child under 16 | Parent, spouse, or dependent support |
| Maximum Prison Time | Up to 5 years | Up to 364 days |
| Maximum Fine | Up to $10,000 | Up to $5,000 |
| Criminal Record | Felony conviction | Misdemeanor conviction |
| What Prosecutors Must Prove | Willful failure to provide support | Willful failure to provide support |
| Professional License Impact | Severe - Most licenses suspended or revoked | Moderate - Some licenses affected |
| Employment Consequences | Felony background check failure | Misdemeanor may limit some jobs |
| Typical First-Time Outcome | Often reduced to misdemeanor with plea | Probation with payment plan |

The Civil Enforcement Steps That Happen Before Criminal Charges
Income Withholding Orders and Wage Garnishment
Child Support Enforcement uses Income Withholding Orders as their first weapon. Your employer receives an order to automatically deduct support payments from your paycheck. I’ve watched this happen to hundreds of clients. Nationally, approximately 70% of all child support collections come through wage garnishments. It’s the most effective enforcement tool because it removes your ability to choose not to pay.
License Suspensions That Wreck Your Career
Driver’s license suspension hits fast when you fall behind on support payments. Washington also suspends professional licenses, occupational licenses, and recreational licenses. I’ve seen truck drivers lose their CDL, nurses lose their nursing credentials, and contractors lose their business licenses. One suspension can destroy your income source, making it even harder to catch up on delinquent payments. The system creates a trap.
A dual license suspension shows how the system can trap a working parent. When the state suspends both a driver’s license and an occupational license, such as a tradesperson’s professional license, the parent often can’t drive to job sites or legally perform the work, and income can drop to zero overnight.
The standard response is to file for license reinstatement, establish a payment plan, and prove to the court that the suspensions themselves are blocking the parent from earning the money needed to pay support. That combination is typically what gets licenses restored and automatic wage withholding set up once the parent returns to work.
Contempt of Court Orders and What They Mean for You
Courts issue contempt orders when you ignore support obligations despite having the ability to pay. The custodial parent files a motion to adjudge in contempt through their family law attorney. You get summoned to explain why you shouldn’t be held in contempt. Judges can impose fines, order immediate payment, or even sentence you to jail for civil contempt. This step comes right before criminal referral.
Table: Child Support Enforcement Escalation Timeline
| Stage | Enforcement Action | Typical Timeline | What Happens | How to Stop It |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Income Withholding Order | 30-60 days after missed payment | Wage garnishment starts automatically | Keep paying or contact DCS immediately |
| 2 | Tax Refund Intercept | 60-90 days of non-payment | Federal and state refunds seized | Establish payment plan with DCS |
| 3 | License Suspension | 90-120 days of arrears | Driver’s license and professional licenses suspended | File modification petition, prove hardship |
| 4 | Contempt of Court | 4-6 months of non-payment | Court hearing, possible fines or jail | Attend hearing with attorney, show payment efforts |
| 5 | Liens on Property | 6-12 months of arrears | Bank accounts frozen, assets seized | Negotiate payment agreement immediately |
| 6 | Criminal Referral | 12-18+ months of willful non-payment | Prosecutors file misdemeanor or felony charges | Hire criminal defense attorney immediately |
| 7 | Criminal Prosecution | 18-24+ months | Arraignment, potential jail time, criminal record | Build defense proving inability to pay |
How to Stop Criminal Charges Before They Start
Requesting a Child Support Modification When Your Income Drops
The biggest mistake I see is waiting too long to file a modification petition. Your child support order doesn’t automatically adjust when you lose your job or take a pay cut. You must formally request a modification through the court. Washington child support calculations follow an income shares model, with maximum support capped at 45% of net income under RCW 26.19.020. Courts can modify orders when there’s a substantial change in circumstances, typically a 25% income change.
Setting Up Payment Plans with the Division of Child Support
Don’t ignore letters from DCS. Call them first. I’ve helped clients negotiate realistic payment plans that prevent enforcement escalation. The Division of Child Support would rather collect something than refer you for criminal prosecution. Propose a payment amount you can actually afford based on your current income. Get the agreement in writing. Automatic payments through wage withholding remove the temptation to skip months. Consistency matters more than paying everything at once.
Consider a parent who falls behind after a medical issue forces them out of work for several months, then returns to a lower-paying job feeling overwhelmed, worried about both keeping their housing and facing jail.
The effective approach is to contact DCS right away, provide medical documentation, and propose a realistic monthly payment plus current support. DCS will frequently accept a plan like this when the parent demonstrates good faith instead of waiting for contempt action. Filing a modification at the same time, to reduce the ongoing obligation based on the new income, helps the parent avoid enforcement measures and rebuild a payment history. In genuine-hardship cases, the other parent will sometimes support the modification once they see the medical records.
Proving You Cannot Pay vs. Will Not Pay
Documentation separates legitimate hardship from excuses. I tell clients to gather bank statements, pay stubs, unemployment records, and medical bills. Show where every dollar goes. Courts want to see you’re prioritizing necessities, not luxuries. Living expenses like rent, utilities, food, and transportation for work come first. If you’re genuinely broke, prove it with numbers. A noncustodial parent claiming poverty but driving a new car loses all credibility with judges.
Defending Against Felony Non-Support Charges in Pierce County
Legal Defenses That Actually Work in Washington Courts
Inability to pay is the strongest defense I use against criminal non-support charges. You must prove genuine financial hardship prevented payment, not poor choices. Courts accept unemployment, disability, serious medical expenses, and documented income loss. I’ve successfully argued lack of willfulness when clients attempted payment modification or contacted DCS about their situation. Procedural errors matter too. If the state failed to properly serve you with the original child support order, that undermines the entire case.
Common defenses that protect clients include:
-
Demonstrating unemployment or substantial income reduction with documentation
-
Proving compliance with existing payment plans through bank records
-
Showing medical emergencies that consumed available resources
-
Establishing procedural violations in the original support order
-
Proving mistaken identity in cases involving similar names
What to Expect During the Criminal Court Process
The arraignment process happens first in Pierce County district court. You enter a plea and the judge sets bail conditions. Most non-support cases allow release on personal recognizance if you’re not a flight risk. Prosecutors often offer plea bargains reducing felony charges to gross misdemeanors. Your criminal defense attorney negotiates terms including payment plans, probation, and suspended sentences. Trials are rare because most cases settle when we demonstrate inability to pay or negotiate restitution agreements.
Felony family abandonment charges often arise after a parent’s finances are stretched by a new marriage and additional children, leaving them making sporadic payments on an older support obligation. Prosecutors may still claim willful neglect, and the arraignment will set bail.
In that scenario, the defense gathers evidence of reduced work hours from project cancellations, documents the new child-care expenses, and demonstrates good faith during plea negotiations by establishing automatic payments. That kind of record is what tends to move prosecutors toward reducing the charges to a gross misdemeanor with probation instead of jail time.
How to Protect Your Record and Your Future
Getting charges reduced or dismissed protects your future employment and professional standing. I focus on negotiating outcomes that avoid jail time and minimize criminal records. Suspended sentences with probation let you stay out of the Department of Corrections if you comply with payment terms.
Some Pierce County prosecutors offer deferred prosecution for first-time offenders who establish consistent payments. Completing probation successfully can lead to case dismissal. Get legal advice immediately after charges are filed. Quick action shows judges you’re serious about resolving child support obligations.

How Melvin & Torrone Gets Results in Child Support Criminal Cases
How We Defend Child Support Cases in Pierce County
We’ve handled child support cases throughout Pierce County for years. Our results in child support matters aren’t luck. They come from preparation, experience, and knowing how local prosecutors think. Chris Torrone founded this practice in 2011 specifically to fight for families targeted by the legal system. Jordan Foster brings nearly two decades of criminal defense expertise. Together, they bring deep experience across family law and criminal defense.
How We Build Strong Defenses Against Criminal Non-Support Charges
We immediately gather financial documentation proving your inability to pay. Bank statements, pay stubs, medical bills, and unemployment records build your defense. We file modification petitions simultaneously with criminal defense strategies. Our approach combines family law knowledge with criminal defense skills. We negotiate directly with Pierce County prosecutors and the Division of Child Support. Most importantly, we explain the entire process in plain language so you feel confident, not confused.
Our defense strategy includes:
-
Comprehensive financial analysis documenting genuine hardship
-
Immediate communication with DCS to establish payment plans
-
Filing support modification petitions to reduce ongoing obligations
-
Negotiating plea bargains that minimize jail time and criminal records
-
Protecting your professional licenses and employment opportunities
Why Acting Fast Protects Your Freedom and Your Family
Waiting makes everything worse. Evidence disappears, deadlines pass, and prosecutors build stronger cases against you. We offer free 30-minute consultations to discuss your situation. Schedule online, call us at (253) 327-1280 or visit our Tacoma office at 950 Pacific Ave, Suite 720. Early intervention prevents criminal charges from escalating. We’re here to fight for you and restore peace to your family.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Can Back Child Support Felony Charges Send Me to Jail in Washington State?
Yes, you can face jail time if prosecutors prove you willfully refused to pay child support. Class C felony charges under RCW 26.20.030 carry up to 5 years in prison. However, genuine inability to pay is a complete defense to criminal charges. I’ve helped many clients avoid jail by demonstrating financial hardship.
2. How much child support debt triggers felony charges in Washington?
Washington has no specific dollar amount that automatically triggers felony charges. I’ve seen clients with $50,000 in arrears face no criminal prosecution and others with $8,000 get charged. Prosecutors focus on whether you willfully refused to pay, not the total amount owed. Intent matters more than your balance.
3. What happens if I lose my job and cannot pay child support?
File a modification petition immediately with the court. Your child support obligation does not automatically decrease when you lose income. Courts can reduce your payments based on unemployment or reduced wages. Contact the Division of Child Support to establish a temporary payment plan showing good faith.
4. Can Washington suspend my driver’s license for unpaid child support?
Absolutely. License suspension is one of the first civil enforcement tools DCS uses against delinquent payments. Washington also suspends professional licenses, occupational licenses, and recreational permits. These suspensions can destroy your ability to work and earn money. We can help you get licenses reinstated by negotiating payment plans.
5. Does filing bankruptcy eliminate child support debt?
No, child support arrears survive bankruptcy proceedings. You cannot discharge child support obligations through Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 bankruptcy. Courts treat support payments as non-dischargeable debt. Your only options are paying the arrears, negotiating a payment plan, or proving the original order was incorrect through legal action.
6. What is the statute of limitations on child support in Washington?
Washington has no statute of limitations on collecting child support arrears. You can owe support payments for decades and still face collection efforts. The debt follows you indefinitely. Courts can continue enforcing support orders long after your child reaches adulthood. Arrears never expire or disappear automatically.
7. Can my tax refund be taken for back child support?
Yes, through the federal tax refund offset program. Both federal and state tax refunds get intercepted automatically when you owe child support arrears. The Treasury Department sends intercepted funds directly to DCS. This happens without additional court orders. I’ve seen clients lose entire tax refunds, including earned income credits, to satisfy support debt.
Conclusion
Criminal child support charges threaten your freedom and your family’s future. You don’t have to face prosecutors alone. We’ve defended hundreds of Pierce County parents against felony non-support charges. We explain your options clearly, build strong defenses based on your financial reality, and negotiate aggressively to protect your record. Every case is different. We create personalized strategies that fit your situation.
Contact us to book your free 30-minute consultation** and start building your defense today.**
Each case is unique. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. This article provides legal information, not legal advice. Reading this article does not create an attorney-client relationship with Melvin & Torrone, PLLP.
Chris Torrone
Founding Partner, Melvin & Torrone PLLP
Chris Torrone is a dedicated advocate for clients facing family crises and criminal charges. With 20 years of experience practicing in Pierce County courts, Chris has built a reputation for meticulous case preparation and creative problem-solving in high-stakes litigation.