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Yes, but it has to be court ordered, and must come from both parents.
Don't ever send child support payments directly to anyone! Send them through your State's disbursement unit or the courts, and age 21 is the cutoff age.
No. Child support payments cannot be garnished.No. Child support payments cannot be garnished.No. Child support payments cannot be garnished.No. Child support payments cannot be garnished.
That's depend on state laws. see link
Generally, child support payments coincide with the frequency that the obligor receives income. How quickly the obligee receives those payments is a function of how efficient the payor of income is in forwarding them to the State and how efficient the State is in distributing them.
No, child support is a debt owed to the other parent, not the child, and must be paid directly to the other parent. DO NOT, under any circumstances, pay support directly to the other parent. Send the payments to the courts or to the State Disbursement Unit.
No. The court's role is to distribute payments they receive from the obligors.
Yes, but child support received must be reported to Social Security (or it's fraud).
DON'T DO THIS. Pay your child support to the court or the State disbursement unit.
Catch up on your child support payments.
Child support can be garnished from RSDI payments (but not SSI).
Social security payments for the husband stopped upon his death. If the child is under 22 (?) and is still in school, there may be payments due to the child. If you are receiving checks on your own behalf as a widow, those checks are not subject to child support payments. You can call Social Security directly or look online for this information.