you can get close by taking your payment for every month multipied by how many years you haven't paid but they also add intrest on back support
To identify how much child support you need to pay, must felling out the working sheet of child support and put the both income vs expenses and need for the children invold and is % will be calculate and that's what responsible parent should be pay for child support. See a legal or assistan they can help you to fill that information out.
You have to go back to court to have it modified if you find it too much.
Such a matter would be determined by the laws of the state in which the minor child resided at the time the latest support order was granted.
Judges have a lot of discretion about retroactive support. I would definitely raise this as a defense.
I receive $800. prmonth, child support is garnishing $500. pr. Month How do I reduce the garnishments
You are required by law to support your biological child. That obligation has nothing to do with any other non-related children belonging to your child's mother. If you live in the United States the court will determine how much child support you must pay for your child by using your state child support guidelines.
Child support is court ordered. The judge decides who pays child support and how much.
It is not possible for anyone on this forum to calculate child support obligations for you as there are many more factors other than income that are taken into consideration.
Yes, its child support. If the money is not used to support the child then its being misused. Alimony would be to support you. If the father is looking after the child, then he should not be paying child support to the mother - she doesn't have the cost of looking after the child at that time. In fact, the mother may well be in a position to send chilod support to the father - it goes both ways and she is responsible for the child just as much as the father is.
Your local attorney generals office should be able to tell you. Specifically to which state you owe the child support to.
The father of the child (whether he was ever legally married to the child's mother or not) is obligated to pay the child support. His new spouse cannot be LEGALLY obligated to pay it since she has no part in the action at all, but there is no bar to her helping her husband pay it if she wishes to do so.
Child support is based of how much the main guardian spends on the child/children.