Three free divorce calculators are now available at OntarioSpousalSupport.com — covering spousal support, child support, and property division. Built on the actual formulas Ontario courts apply, the tools help separating couples understand likely financial outcomes without paying for a first legal consultation.
Separation in Ontario comes with a financial reckoning most people are not prepared for. The income side of the equation — who pays what to whom, for how long — is governed by formulas courts apply consistently across thousands of cases every year. The asset side involves a separate calculation entirely. Most people learn how both work for the first time sitting in zoom meeting with a lawyer, already emotionally spent and paying by the hour.
That knowledge gap is exactly what OntarioSpousalSupport.com was built to close. The site has now launched three free calculators — covering spousal support, child support, and property division — built on the same formulas Ontario courts apply when resolving family law matters.
Free divorce tools have existed for years, but most stop at a basic income input and return a single number with no explanation of the variables driving it. The calculators at OntarioSpousalSupport.com incorporate additional data points, including key dates, relationship length, asset values, and custody arrangements, to produce ranges that more closely reflect how these determinations actually play out in Ontario courts.
Divorce in Ontario involves two parallel financial processes that operate independently of each other. The first is income-based: courts compare the incomes of both spouses and calculate a support amount based on that difference. The second is asset-based: each spouse's property is valued, debts are subtracted, and the resulting net figures are equalized. The new calculators address both sides of that equation.
The Spousal Support Calculator is built on the Spousal Support Advisory Guidelines (SSAG), the framework Ontario courts use in the vast majority of spousal support determinations. It takes into account relationship length, each spouse's income, and whether children are involved — and applies the Rule of 65, the threshold that determines whether support duration is time-limited or indefinite. A spouse who is 52 at separation after an 18-year marriage, for example, hits a combined score of 70 — and under the Rule of 65, support has no automatic end date. The calculator surfaces this automatically.
The Child Support Calculator is based on the Federal Child Support Guidelines, which set the standard amounts Ontario courts apply. Inputs include the payor's income and the number of children. The calculator accounts for both primary residence and shared custody arrangements, which affect the calculation differently.
The Property Division Calculator addresses net family property equalization — the process by which married spouses divide accumulated assets. Each spouse subtracts the value of property owned at the date of marriage from the value of property owned at the date of separation. The spouse with the higher net figure pays the other an equalization payment equal to half the difference. The calculator walks through this process and flags common exclusions, including gifts, inheritances, and pre-relationship assets.
Ontario Spousal Support Calculator City: London Address: 30 Grand Avenue Website: https://ontariospousalsupport.com