one week they will tell you to call your local domestics and the will go throgh enforcement .
The day after it was due.
In general, child support is late if it is not received by the due date.
Yes, 3% simple
No. It's too late for you to be responsible for child support. However, if the child can prove her/his relationship to you they would be considered a legal heir at law of your estate.No. It's too late for you to be responsible for child support. However, if the child can prove her/his relationship to you they would be considered a legal heir at law of your estate.No. It's too late for you to be responsible for child support. However, if the child can prove her/his relationship to you they would be considered a legal heir at law of your estate.No. It's too late for you to be responsible for child support. However, if the child can prove her/his relationship to you they would be considered a legal heir at law of your estate.
Yes. Child support will continue to acrue regardless of your ability to pay unless you take the matter back to the courts and get the amount lowered. Your child support will never be zero, however. If you do not pay child support, it becomes arrears and the state tacks on interest to the late payment, up to 10% in some states.
No, there is no need for child support this late.
Your payment will be late, if it does not arrive on or before the due date.
yes
Yes. Visitation cannot be denied because of lack of payment of child support. The child support still needs to be paid because there could be jail time involved if there is too much owed and late. BUT, you cannot use visitation priveledges as retribution because (its the law, and) the visitation is for the children, not yourself. The child support is there to assist in the expences of raising children.
Legally? One day. Some loan agreements will have a late payment period that might be ten days. Read your contract for specifics.
Pay up your arrears before applying. The military does not allow late child support.
A mother can file for child support from the birth of the child until the child is eighteen or nineteen depending on the age of majority in the particular jurisdiction.
At the point of the age of majority, but Judge David Grey Ross, Commissioner of the Federal Office of Child Support Enforcement opposes the practice of waiting to file late in the child's life and many judges are refusing to grant retroactive support.