Yes, if the court approves the agreement as being in the best interests of the child[ren].
Depends on the jurisdiction; in Illinois, it's a percentage of the amount of current support (generally, 20%).
Get a court order terminating support as of a specific date, with a finding as to the amount of arrearage, or that there is no arrearage. Then send certified copies to the child support agencies in your State and the State where the child lives and/or where any other orders were entered in the matter.
Get a court order terminating support as of a specific date, with a finding as to the amount of arrearage, or that there is no arrearage. Then send certified copeis to the child support agencies in your State and the State where the child lives and/or any other orders were entered in the matter.
My suggestion: Get a court order terminating support as of a specific date, with a finding as to the amount of arrearage, or that there is no arrearage. Then send certified copies to the child support agencies in your State and the State where the child lives and/or where any other orders were entered in the matter.
This assumes that you're talking about an arrearage, not retroactive support: 1) pay the past-due amount; 2) file a request for account review with your State's child support agency to establish the past-due amount - file an appeal if you think the results of that review are incorrect, or; 3) get the other parent to "compromise" the arrearage (this will require the court's blessing).
Get a court order terminating support as of a specific date, with a finding as to the amount of arrearage, or that there is no arrearage. Then send certified copies to the child support agencies in your State and the State where the child lives and/or where any other orders were entered in the matter.
Yes. Don't assume that support will end automatically. My suggestion: Get a court order terminating support as of a specific date, with a finding as to the amount of arrearage, or that there is no arrearage. Then send certified copies to the child support agencies in your State and the State where the child lives and/or where any other orders were entered in the matter.
Get a court order terminating support as of a specific date, with a finding as to the amount of arrearage, or that there is no arrearage. Then send certified copeis to the child support agencies in your State and the State where the child lives and/or any other orders were entered in the matter.
Get a court order terminating support as of a specific date, with a finding as to the amount of arrearage, or that there is no arrearage. Then send certified copies to the child support agencies in your State and the State where the child lives and/or where any other orders were entered in the matter. [Support may continue if the child is in college and/or severely disabled.]
Typically, no; if you're under court order to do so, however, get an order terminating support (and setting the amount of arrearage, if any) - do not simply stop paying on your own.
Yes. You are still responsible for any amount in arrears even if your child reaches the age where support is no longer mandated by state law.
The two states together should not be collecting more than the amount due, plus an additional percentage (20-25%) for any arrearage.