no
see link
No. The only time child support will change is if the one paying it has a change in their wages.
A judge still needs to sign off on it, plus the mother cannot be on Welfare see related link
If the amounts paid are over and above the amount due in a child support order it would be considered a gift to the child's mother. If there is no existing child support order you should make payments by check. If the mother eventually seeks a child support order the court can go backward to collect child support that should have been paid. If you have proof of payments they will result in a credit.
No. You will still have to pay child support for your children.
It goes directly to the state. The mother may get $50 a month from it, depending on amount ordered.
First of all, how well do you think the mother of your child is doing without your help? You can apply to have the amount reduced, but getting another job toot sweet would be the thing you have to do.
Yes, but he should go for custody.
Yes, he can. If the father was the sole supporter of the child(ren) for 4 years without any contribution from the mother, the mother is responsible for her share of this time. Furthermore, any agreement and, in most states needs to be approved by a judge. In some cases the judge may decide that the amount of the agreement may not be enough to support the child(ren) solely based on the father's income.
Regular? yes SSD? The amount should be set to the child benefit check amount. SSI? No
In most cases, a mother cannot legally stop child support payments without a court order. Child support is typically mandated by a court and must be paid until the court modifies or terminates the order.
no, as that would create an overpayment.
The only way would be to do a personal agreement between the mother & father, ideally having it filed with the court. However, at any time, either parent can utilize Child Support without the other parent's consent. If the Mother spends more time with the child than the Father, she is most likely entitled to child support.