Disclosure is where support cases are won: what they actually earn, what the statement hides, what the return contradicts. Disclose turns the document pile into structured income — with a citation on every number and a flag on every inconsistency.
A rule library runs the opposing statement against itself and against the documents you've ingested: expenses that exceed claimed income, round-number clusters, budgets that don't match the lifestyle, deductions that reappear as assets. Each finding cites the lines that conflict — so your deposition outline writes itself from the inconsistencies.
Schedule C net profit is an opening position, not a fact. Aequitas flags depreciation, personal expenses run through the business, home office and retained earnings as separate add-back candidates — each with a rationale, each accepted or rejected by you, never silently folded into the number. The imputed-income and vocational tools handle the voluntarily-underemployed the same way: transparently.
Import the 1040 and the schedules populate themselves. Net worth builds from the asset table you'll use in Divide. The budget worksheet feeds the alimony needs analysis. Lifestyle analysis compares claimed means against actual spending across the marriage — the evidentiary backbone of a standard-of-living argument. Enter once; every module downstream reads the same numbers.
Next: the asset table becomes the estate