Thirteen dollars and forty-nine cents. That’s the number one Illinois father is now staring at every month. He didn’t fight for it, didn’t lawyer up looking for a discount, didn’t even ask for it directly. He just watched a court process play out and ended up with a payment so small it’s basically a receipt.
The story first appeared on Instagram. The video was later shared on X, where the father shared a video of the child support check and explained what happened.
He said he had been paying the child’s mother $300 a week on his own. When money got tight, he asked if he could pay $150 a week for two to three months until he got back on his feet.
According to him, she didn’t agree. Instead, she took him to court to make child support official.
The video showed a child support check from Illinois, dated July 2026, made out to the child’s mother. The father also wrote that he has his daughter three days a week. He says he takes her to school and picks her up every day. He also pays all of her daycare costs.
After the court case, his new child support payment was set at $13.49 a month. He summed up his feelings about the next 18 years with one blunt caption.
The exact details of the case have not been independently verified. The county and judge have also not been identified.
Illinois uses a different child support formula when a parent has a child for about 146 overnights a year or more. This is called the shared parenting formula. It looks at both parents’ incomes and how much time each parent spends with the child.
Having custody three days a week is enough to qualify under that rule. That could help explain why the court ordered much less than $300 a week.
Internet Reacts to Illinois Child Support Case
The comments came in fast, and most of them were not on the mother’s side. “The jokes write themselves lol,” one person wrote, setting the tone. Another framed the whole situation as a cautionary tale, writing, “The moment greed enters your daily life, you trade long-term freedom for short-term dopamine.”
A few commenters focused on the math itself. “That’s a wild swing from $300 to $13. Seems like something is off with the calculation or her income claims,” one wrote. Someone else joked about the judge’s reasoning directly: “The court really looked at his finances and said ‘yeah $13 is the number.’”
The harshest take came from a commenter who didn’t hold back: “When you try to weaponize the system to squeeze someone, sometimes the system completely humbles you. She played herself. Enjoy that $13.”
Whether every part of the story happened exactly this way or not, the Internet has already picked a side.







