In Texas, when the child graduates from High School. So if you have more then one child, when the last child that you have graduates from High School is when the child support payments will end for you.
If the child is not in school for whatever reason it is the age of 18 years old.
At what age does child support payments end? Generally, the obligation ends when the child reaches 18 years of age or the child graduates from high school, whichever occurs later. However, a court can order the obligation to continue for an indefinite period if the child is disabled. A child will automatically be ineligible for child support if that child marries, is removed from disability status by a court order, or the child dies. Texas
18 or graduation from high school, whichever is later. Unless the child is disabled.
18 or graduation from high school, whichever is later. Upon emancipation, including marriage. Death.
yes
Every child you have needs food, clothing, shelter, etc. Please keep in mind that modern science has discovered where children come from and how to avoid them.
Yes, if the father is not given custody he will be obligated to keep paying support to whomever the court awards custody or guardianship of the children.
In theory the women should now be paying for there percentage of the keep of the child that is no longer living with the women, so yes she should pay child support now.
Visitation should not be dependent on child support. How would the child feel losing the parent? Keep that issue in front of the judge.
First, congratulations on your well-developed sense of responsibility! If the courts determine that you took the lower paying job to avoid child support, they might calculate support based on your previous earnings - and I hope they do.
Yes. Regardless of whether she had a baby or not you need to keep paying child support until she is a legal adult.
You have to keep paying child support. The visitation issue is separate and you should consider straightening out your legal status so that you can seek relief. If you were not married to the child's mother, your options are also limited.
Yes, as long as you keep up your child support payments. Otherwise, the court may order you to find work.
Support and visitation are two different things. If you have an order for visitation, you have a right to see your son.
Your ex has to continue paying child support. Marriage doesnt change anything because your ex is still the biological father. Unless youre husband adopts your child ... thts a different story.
If the man signed the birth certificate knowing he was not the father he may be held responsible for providing child support until the child is eighteen in many states. If he did not sign the birth certificate it is unusual that he is paying child support. If he failed to request a DNA test at the appropriate time, again, he may have to keep paying. He needs to consult with an attorney who specializes in child support issues in his jurisdiction, who can review all the details of the situation and explain his options.If the man signed the birth certificate knowing he was not the father he may be held responsible for providing child support until the child is eighteen in many states. If he did not sign the birth certificate it is unusual that he is paying child support. If he failed to request a DNA test at the appropriate time, again, he may have to keep paying. He needs to consult with an attorney who specializes in child support issues in his jurisdiction, who can review all the details of the situation and explain his options.If the man signed the birth certificate knowing he was not the father he may be held responsible for providing child support until the child is eighteen in many states. If he did not sign the birth certificate it is unusual that he is paying child support. If he failed to request a DNA test at the appropriate time, again, he may have to keep paying. He needs to consult with an attorney who specializes in child support issues in his jurisdiction, who can review all the details of the situation and explain his options.If the man signed the birth certificate knowing he was not the father he may be held responsible for providing child support until the child is eighteen in many states. If he did not sign the birth certificate it is unusual that he is paying child support. If he failed to request a DNA test at the appropriate time, again, he may have to keep paying. He needs to consult with an attorney who specializes in child support issues in his jurisdiction, who can review all the details of the situation and explain his options.