Parenting Time Calculator

Estimate how many overnights each parent has per year — based on your regular schedule, holidays, and summer parenting time.

Instructions

Work through each section in order — your regular schedule is the foundation, and holidays, summer, and special rules adjust the total from there. Steps 2–4 are optional but will make your estimate more accurate. Hit Calculate at the bottom when you're ready.

Throughout the form, only enter time that results in an overnight — meaning the child sleeps at that parent's home. Daytime visits or time that ends before bedtime should not be counted.

You can enter names for each parent at the top and the form will use them throughout. Results are estimates only — your actual court order controls.

Step 1 Choose a schedule
Step 2 Select your holidays
Step 3 Add summer time
Step 4 Apply special rules
Results See the split

Parent A is the parent with the greater share of regular parenting time — the primary custodian. Parent B is the other parent. This matters in Step 2 when assigning holidays, so that "alternating" and parent-specific assignments stay consistent with who holds primary custody. For 50/50 schedules, the designation is arbitrary — assign either parent to A.

Regular Parenting Schedule

Select the schedule that best describes how parenting time is divided during a normal week or two-week cycle — not counting holidays or summer. If your arrangement doesn't fit a preset, use Custom Schedule to map out your specific rotation.

Choose how long each alternating weekend lasts. You can also add midweek overnights that fall on the off week — the week the child is otherwise with the primary parent. Each selected night adds about 26 overnights per year.

Weekend length:

Off-week overnights (optional · select any)

Define how long each weekend lasts — the calculator counts actual 1st/3rd/5th weekends in the current year.

Weekend length:

Define how long each weekend lasts — the calculator counts actual 2nd/4th weekends in the current year.

Weekend length:

Click any night to toggle it between Parent A and Parent B. This two-week pattern repeats throughout the year to estimate annual totals.

Holiday Parenting Time

Select the holidays covered by your parenting plan. Once selected, each holiday appears below where you can set the number of nights and assign it to a parent. Alt (alternating) means the full holiday goes to one parent in Year 1 and the other parent in Year 2 — the calculator averages the two years. Split divides the nights within the same year. December/Christmas Break defaults to a split, which is standard in Georgia parenting plans.

Overnights only. Only select a holiday if your parenting plan provides an overnight for that holiday — meaning the child sleeps at a parent's home as a result of that provision. If a parent simply has time with the child during the day but the child returns before bedtime, do not include it.

Major Holidays
🎄 December/Christmas Break 🦃 Thanksgiving 🎆 New Year's Day 🥂 New Year's Eve 🇺🇸 Memorial Day 🎇 July 4th ⚒️ Labor Day
School Breaks
🌸 Spring Break 🍂 Fall Break ❄️ Winter Break (Jan/Feb)
Parent-Specific Days
💐 Mother's Day 👔 Father's Day 🎂 Child's Birthday 🎁 Parent A Birthday 🎁 Parent B Birthday
Other Holidays
MLK Day 🏛️ Presidents' Day 🐣 Easter 🕊️ Juneteenth 🎃 Halloween 🎖️ Veterans Day

Tap a holiday above to add it to your plan.

Summer Parenting Time

Enter the number of designated summer weeks each parent receives under your parenting plan. During those weeks, the regular schedule is suspended and that parent has the child for the full week. The rest of the year follows the regular schedule from Step 1. If your plan does not include a designated summer period, leave both fields at 0.

Heads up on overlap. If a holiday or school break falls during a designated summer period, count those nights only once — enter them in whichever section your order prioritizes. Including the same nights in both sections will overstate the total.

Special Rules

Some parenting plans include rules that affect the overnight count on a recurring, predictable basis. Enable any that apply to your order. After making selections here, revisit the sections above to confirm nothing is being double-counted — for example, if Memorial Day or Labor Day is already listed as a holiday, enabling the Three-Day Weekend rule may count those same nights twice.

Three-Day Weekend Rule
When a federal holiday falls on a Monday, the weekend is extended through Monday night.
Extra Monday night goes to:

~5–7 federal Monday holidays per year (uses 6 as annual estimate)

Standing Weekly Overnight
One parent has a guaranteed overnight on a specific night every week, regardless of whose weekend it is.
Which parent:
Which night:
Off-Week Overnight
One parent has a regular overnight during their "off week" — the week when the other parent has primary custody. Unlike a standing weekly overnight (every week), this occurs every other week only, adding ~26 overnights per year.
Which parent has the off-week overnight:
Parent A
overnights / year
Parent B
overnights / year
Parent A 0% 0% Parent B

These figures are estimates based on the schedule and inputs you entered. Actual parenting time will depend on your specific court order, make-up time provisions, and other agreed terms.

How is this calculated?

Generate a clean, printable exhibit of this calculation, its inputs, and the methodology — formatted to provide to a court. Opens in a new tab to print or save as a PDF.

Next Step

Use this to calculate child support

Under Georgia's current child support guidelines, the number of overnights for each parent is a required input — not an optional adjustment. It directly determines the support obligation calculated for each parent. Use the overnight totals above when completing a Child Support Worksheet. An attorney can help you model different schedule scenarios or assess whether a modification is warranted.

About the Georgia Parenting Time Calculator

This free tool estimates how many overnights each parent has with the children over a year, based on the parenting schedule you build — your regular week-to-week routine plus holidays, school breaks, and summer parenting time. In Georgia, parenting time is measured in overnights, and that count is more than a number on a calendar: it is a required input in the state's child support calculation.

You can start from a common preset — every other weekend, week-on/week-off, 2-2-3, 2-2-5, or 3-4-4-3 — or map out a custom rotation night by night. As you add holidays and summer weeks and toggle special rules, the calculator updates each parent's estimated overnights and the percentage split between them. You can also generate a clean, printable exhibit of the calculation to share with the other party, a mediator, or the court.

The results are estimates for planning and discussion only — your actual court order controls, and Georgia's guidelines average overnights over a two-year period. To talk through how a particular schedule would affect custody or child support in your case, schedule a consultation with Resurgens Legal Counsel.

Frequently asked questions

How is parenting time calculated in Georgia?
Georgia measures parenting time by the number of overnights each parent has with the child over the course of a year. You add up the overnights from the regular schedule, holidays, school breaks, and summer parenting time. This calculator estimates that annual overnight count for each parent based on the schedule you build.
Why do overnights matter for child support in Georgia?
Under Georgia's child support guidelines, the number of overnights each parent has is a required input on the Child Support Worksheet. The parenting-time split can directly affect the support obligation, so an accurate overnight count matters.
How many overnights is an "every other weekend" schedule?
A standard every-other-weekend schedule from Friday to Sunday gives the non-primary parent roughly 52 overnights a year, with the primary parent having the rest. Extending the weekend through Thursday or Monday, or adding midweek overnights, increases that number — the calculator updates the count as you adjust.
Does a 50/50 schedule mean no child support in Georgia?
Not necessarily. Even with an equal parenting-time split, child support in Georgia is driven primarily by each parent's income. A 50/50 schedule can reduce the obligation but rarely eliminates it, especially when the parents' incomes differ.
Is this the same as the official Georgia Child Support Worksheet?
No. This tool estimates parenting time only. Georgia's guidelines average overnights over a two-year period, while this calculator uses a single-year projection for simplicity. Use the overnight totals here as an input when completing the official Child Support Worksheet, and confirm the figures with an attorney.