Child Support Modification Requires Proof Under Family Code 156.401 | In re G.M.M. (2026)
In the Interest of G.M.M., a Child, 07-25-00234-CV, May 21, 2026.
On appeal from 222nd District Court, Oldham County, Texas
Synopsis
A parent seeking to modify child support under Texas Family Code section 156.401 must prove the statutory basis for modification with evidence, not attorney argument or unsworn assertions. In In re G.M.M., the Amarillo Court of Appeals held that generalized claims of reduced income, travel expense, and responsibility for another child—without comparative financial proof or evidence permitting a current-guidelines calculation—did not require the trial court to modify support and did not establish an abuse of discretion in leaving support unchanged.
Relevance to Family Law
This opinion is directly relevant to Texas divorce, SAPCR, and post-decree modification practice because child support modification requests frequently ride along with conservatorship and possession disputes. In re G.M.M. is a useful reminder that even when the parties are litigating access restrictions, supervised visitation, or broader parent-child issues, support modification remains an evidence-driven claim under section 156.401. For family litigators, the case underscores a recurring appellate problem: a party may believe the equities strongly favor a support reduction, but without evidence of prior circumstances, current income, and guideline impact, the modification issue is effectively dead on arrival.
Case Summary
Fact Summary
The underlying SAPCR began with a 2019 order adjudicating paternity, appointing the parents as joint managing conservators, and requiring the father, who lived in Arizona, to pay $492.55 per month in child support. Two years later, the mother sought modification of custody and asked that the father’s visitation be supervised based on safety concerns.
By the time of the June 17, 2025 final hearing, the father appeared pro se. During the hearing, the parties recessed to negotiate and then placed an agreement on the record. As recited in open court, the agreement addressed multiple issues concerning the child, including the express statement by mother’s counsel that “we’re not modifying his child support.” The father did not object to that recitation.
On appeal, however, the father argued that the trial court abused its discretion by leaving child support at the existing amount despite his reduced income, travel expenses associated with exercising possession, and his obligation to support another child. The appellate record, as described by the court, contained no developed evidentiary presentation on his prior financial circumstances, his current financial circumstances, or data from which the trial court could calculate support under current guidelines.
Issues Decided
The court decided, among other issues, the following:
- Whether the trial court abused its discretion by declining to modify child support where the obligor argued reduced income, travel expenses, and support of another child.
- Whether a child support modification under Texas Family Code section 156.401 requires evidence of a material and substantial change in circumstances or evidence supporting recalculation under current guidelines.
- Whether apparent agreement on the record that child support would remain unchanged further supported affirmance.
Rules Applied
The court relied primarily on the following authorities:
- Texas Family Code section 156.401(a), which permits modification of child support on proof that:
- the circumstances of the child or a person affected by the order have materially and substantially changed since the prior order, or
- at least three years have passed since rendition or last modification and the amount that would be awarded under current guidelines differs by 20% or $100 from the existing order.
- In re Striegler, 915 S.W.2d 629, 635, 637 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 1996, writ denied), for the propositions that:
- the movant bears the burden to show the requisite change in circumstances, and
- review of a child-support modification ruling is for abuse of discretion.
- In re A.A.T., 583 S.W.3d 914, 920, 922 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2019, no pet.), for the propositions that:
- trial courts have broad discretion in child support matters, and
- material-and-substantial-change analysis requires a comparison between the obligor’s circumstances at the time of the existing order and at the time modification is sought.
- Worford v. Stamper, 801 S.W.2d 108, 109 (Tex. 1990) (per curiam), defining abuse of discretion as action that is arbitrary, unreasonable, or without reference to guiding rules and principles.
Application
The Amarillo court’s treatment of the child-support issue was straightforward and worth attention because it reflects how appellate courts regularly dispose of underdeveloped modification claims. The father argued that his support should have been reduced because his income had declined, his travel costs were significant, and he had another child to support. But the court emphasized that argument is not evidence, and the evidentiary gap was decisive.
The opinion notes that, apart from his opening statement, the father did not present evidence showing his financial circumstances when the original 2019 support order was entered or his financial circumstances at the time of the 2025 modification hearing. That omission prevented the trial court from performing the comparison required for a material-and-substantial-change analysis. The court also found no evidence of current income or other financial data that would have allowed the trial court to calculate support under the guidelines and determine whether the statutory 20% or $100 variance existed.
The court further observed that the record suggested agreement: when mother’s counsel recited that the parties had agreed not to modify child support, the father did not object. While the court did not rest exclusively on that point, it reinforced the conclusion that the trial court had no obligation to reduce support on the basis of unsupported assertions. In short, the movant failed both analytically and evidentially—he neither proved a comparative change in circumstances nor supplied the numbers necessary for a guidelines recalculation.
Holding
The court held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by maintaining the father’s child support at $492.55. A parent seeking modification under Texas Family Code section 156.401 must produce evidence establishing either a material and substantial change in circumstances since the prior order or evidence showing that application of current guidelines would change the support amount by 20% or $100.
The court further held that unsupported assertions regarding reduced income, travel expenses, and responsibility for another child are insufficient absent proof. Because the father offered no evidence comparing his financial condition at the time of the prior order with his condition at the time modification was sought, and no evidence from which the trial court could compute guideline support, the trial court acted within its discretion in leaving support unchanged.
The opinion also indicates that the parties appeared to agree on the record that support would remain unmodified. That procedural posture further undermined any appellate complaint that the trial court erred by entering an order consistent with the agreement announced in open court.
Practical Application
For practitioners, In re G.M.M. is less about new law than disciplined proof. The case is a strong appellate citation when opposing a modification request built on rhetoric rather than records. If the other side claims diminished earnings, unusual travel costs, or additional dependents, press the comparative burden: what were the obligor’s actual circumstances at the time of the last support order, and what are they now? Without that comparison, the statutory framework under section 156.401 is not satisfied.
The decision also matters in mixed hearings where possession, supervision, or conservatorship issues dominate the presentation. Lawyers sometimes assume support can be “adjusted while we’re here” if the equities seem obvious. This case cautions against that approach. A trial court may have broad discretion, but it cannot make findings from counsel’s argument, vague testimony, or unauthenticated financial assertions. If support modification is in play, treat it as its own claim with its own evidentiary predicates.
The agreement component is equally strategic. When terms are recited into the record and counsel states that support will remain unchanged, silence can be fatal. If your client is not agreeing to leave support untouched, say so immediately and clearly. Otherwise, you may face both preservation and merits problems on appeal.
In day-to-day practice, this case will be especially useful in these scenarios:
- post-divorce or post-SAPCR modification proceedings where child support is requested as part of broader relief;
- long-distance possession cases in which an obligor argues travel costs justify reduction;
- cases involving later-born or after-acquired children where the obligor assumes that fact alone compels relief;
- pro se-heavy records where the appellate court will strictly distinguish between argument and evidence;
- settlement recitations in open court where support terms must be expressly accepted or expressly rejected.
Checklists
Proving a Child Support Modification Under Section 156.401
- Identify which statutory pathway you are using:
- material and substantial change; or
- three-year review plus 20%/$100 variance.
- Offer evidence of the obligor’s financial circumstances at the time of the existing order.
- Offer evidence of the obligor’s financial circumstances at the time modification is sought.
- Tie the evidence to the statutory standard rather than relying on general fairness arguments.
- If proceeding under the guideline-variance pathway, present evidence sufficient for the court to calculate current guideline support.
- Make sure income evidence is admitted, not merely referenced in argument.
Building the Comparative Financial Record
- Obtain the prior order and confirm the date of rendition or last modification.
- Gather prior-income proof from the time of the existing order.
- Gather current-income proof, including:
- pay stubs;
- tax returns;
- W-2s or 1099s;
- employer records;
- profit-and-loss statements for self-employed parties.
- Present evidence of health insurance and other guideline-relevant deductions.
- If another child is being supported, present evidence showing how that affects the guideline analysis.
- If travel expense is claimed as relevant, prove the amount, frequency, and legal significance of the expense.
Preserving the Issue at Trial
- Plead for modification with specificity.
- Request findings or a ruling under the correct statutory ground.
- Object if opposing counsel recites an agreement inconsistent with your client’s position.
- Clarify on the record whether the parties do or do not agree that support will remain unchanged.
- Do not assume the court will infer a request for support modification from broader modification litigation.
- Make an offer of proof if evidence is excluded.
Opposing a Weak Modification Request
- Force the movant to identify the section 156.401 theory being asserted.
- Emphasize the absence of comparative evidence between the prior order date and the present.
- Object to attempts to substitute argument for evidence.
- Highlight any failure to provide admissible proof of current net resources.
- Argue that the court cannot perform a guideline calculation without competent evidence.
- Use any on-the-record agreement or non-objection to show waiver, invited error, or lack of abuse of discretion.
Avoiding the Appellate Problem Seen in G.M.M.
- Never rely solely on opening statement or unsworn narrative to prove reduced income.
- Do not assume another child or travel burden automatically establishes material and substantial change.
- Create a record that permits side-by-side comparison of then-versus-now finances.
- Ensure the court has enough evidence to calculate support under current guidelines.
- Confirm that the final recited agreement matches your client’s actual position.
- If your client appears pro se or quasi-pro se, make the record especially clear and complete.
Citation
In the Interest of G.M.M., a Child, No. 07-25-00234-CV, 2026 Tex. App. LEXIS ___ (Tex. App.—Amarillo May 21, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).
Full Opinion
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