if you are paying child support and have a new spouse, their income will not count toward child support unless the two of you have your own children together.
They are amounts of money that taxpayers can claim for themselves, spouses, and any eligible dependents that will reduce their taxable income.
Generally, no.
they are amount of money that taxpayers claim for themselves, spouses, and any eligible dependents that will reduce their taxable income. this is for a+ robert was here:p
That is not generally a reason to reduce child support payments. The child support guidelines where the case is filed will still be used. You should visit the court with jurisdiction and inquire there.That is not generally a reason to reduce child support payments. The child support guidelines where the case is filed will still be used. You should visit the court with jurisdiction and inquire there.That is not generally a reason to reduce child support payments. The child support guidelines where the case is filed will still be used. You should visit the court with jurisdiction and inquire there.That is not generally a reason to reduce child support payments. The child support guidelines where the case is filed will still be used. You should visit the court with jurisdiction and inquire there.
Some plans can help people, and especially students, to reduce their monthly payments on loans. An example is the Income-Based Repayment scheme, designed to help people manage their payments and make them more affordable.
no, but all support is rebuttable. see link
Yes, if, e.g., the court determines that the father has reduced his income for the purpose of avoiding support or the reduction is not "substantial" or "significant."
As it is a income tax, the most straightforward way is to reduce your income. Invest some of it into expanding your business and finish all pending payments. However, given that a company needs to show temporal income growth, a reasonable share of income still has to be taxed.
You would need to petition the court that issued the original order to have the amount of payments reduced. In some jurisdictions this can only be done after a certain period of time has passed. The court can decide to either reduce the amount of the order permanently, reduce it for a specified period, or leave it alone. If the amount of payments is not reduced, whoever is paying your disability payments to you may still withhold a lower amount from your check (there are also laws covering garnishments that specify how much of your income you must be left with) but any shortfall between what the order says you owe and what is actually paid would be considered back child support and eventually you will have to pay it somehow.see links
Half your income. The larger portion towards children. Keep in mind if you have massive deductions on your paycheck, they will reduce the amount YOU get as your CS/SS payments will be fixed. 401K will be split down the middle and all your accounts and property 50/50. But, if your wife/husband is a frivilous spender and has been bringing you to financial ruin for years, you will be better off financially AFTER he/she's out of your accounts.
Child support is not affected by the receipt of SSI by either the custodial parent or the child.
Answer this question… He wanted to reduce federal income tax rates.