By Caitlin Bath
For many women who have experienced separation, particularly where children are involved, the financial story that follows can feel painfully familiar.
The paying parent whose income suddenly appears to drop. The bonuses that disappear from payslips. The cash-in-hand work that somehow avoids assessment. The overseas holidays and new purchases that continue publicly while child support contributions remain at the legal minimum.
For years, these stories were shared quietly between women, lawyers, school offices and support services. They were understood as lived experience, even if they were rarely acknowledged more broadly.
Now, for the first time, the issue is being recognised at a national level.
The 2026–27 federal budget revealed an estimated $2 billion in unpaid child support, the majority of which is owed to women. The Commonwealth Ombudsman has described aspects of the system as a form of weaponisation, where child support processes can be used to continue coercion, control and financial harm after separation.
In response, the government has committed $182.6 million towards reforms aimed at improving the system.
But the financial impact extends far beyond missed payments.
There are the school uniforms one parent is left to cover alone. The medical appointments requiring consent that is delayed or withheld. The legal costs that quietly accumulate over years. The emotional and administrative burden of navigating co-parenting while also carrying the primary load of caregiving.
Then there is the longer-term financial picture that is far harder to quantify.
The superannuation contributions redirected towards everyday expenses. The savings and investments that never eventuate. The career opportunities missed because caregiving responsibilities continue to fall disproportionately on one parent.
Many women are not simply rebuilding after separation. (can be used as a pull quote) They are simultaneously absorbing the ongoing financial impact of systems that often fail to adequately protect them.
The Treasury figures have placed a number on a problem many women have understood for years. Yet statistics alone cannot fully capture the emotional strain, career sacrifice or financial insecurity that can follow.
If any part of this feels familiar, it is important to know these experiences are not isolated. For many women, the financial consequences of separation are not simply personal circumstances. They reflect broader structural issues that are only now beginning to receive national attention.
Support services
If this article resonates with you, support is available.
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1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) provides 24-hour confidential counselling for people affected by domestic, family or sexual violence.
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Women’s Legal Services Australia offers free legal information and referrals via wlsa.org.au
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Services Australia’s Family Violence team can assist with safe child support arrangements.
Caitlin Bath is the author of She’s Giving Wealth, launching 30 June.
Not for publish –
Caitlin Bath is the author of She’s Giving Wealth*, launching 30 June. www.shesgivingwealth.com.*
Australian Government 2026, Budget 2026–27: Budget Paper No. 2 — Budget Measures, Commonwealth of Australia, Canberra.
Commonwealth Ombudsman 2025, Investigation into the administration of the Child Support Scheme, Office of the Commonwealth Ombudsman, Canberra