Child support is based on a formula of income and percentage of time spent with each parent.
I'm not familiar with NC, but I doubt that the father would have to pay child support i such a case.
when a person has a child it is mandatory that they pay child support no matter where they live
Only if a NC court becomes the Court of Jurisdiction.
Yes, until/unless the child is adopted.
No. Once a child is legally emancipated, the parent is no longer obligated to pay child support.
Other than the mother, no one.
Yes, until/unless the child is adopted.
No not in the state of NC - only for child support and taxes. Wanda Improve Credit, LLC
Through a filing in SC.
Federal limits place it at 55% of gross income.
The answer depends on the formula used to calculate child support in your jurisdiction. Generally, most states rely on a formula that uses a percentage of the non-custodial parent's wages so if the custodial parent gets a raise in pay it may not offset the NC parent's obligation.You can perform an online search to find the guidelines in your jurisdiction using your state + child support guidelines.The answer depends on the formula used to calculate child support in your jurisdiction. Generally, most states rely on a formula that uses a percentage of the non-custodial parent's wages so if the custodial parent gets a raise in pay it may not offset the NC parent's obligation.You can perform an online search to find the guidelines in your jurisdiction using your state + child support guidelines.The answer depends on the formula used to calculate child support in your jurisdiction. Generally, most states rely on a formula that uses a percentage of the non-custodial parent's wages so if the custodial parent gets a raise in pay it may not offset the NC parent's obligation.You can perform an online search to find the guidelines in your jurisdiction using your state + child support guidelines.The answer depends on the formula used to calculate child support in your jurisdiction. Generally, most states rely on a formula that uses a percentage of the non-custodial parent's wages so if the custodial parent gets a raise in pay it may not offset the NC parent's obligation.You can perform an online search to find the guidelines in your jurisdiction using your state + child support guidelines.
It goes to the state social services division. see links below