You only have to pay support up till the age of 18 then they are no longer a child but an adult you may have to split the college but that should be arranged by the court
If New York has jurisdiction.
see links
I take it you want to terminate your child support, and you should be able to do so. However, you will need to go to court to get this done.
A minor child should not be living on their own. If the child has been legally emancipated the parent may be excused from paying child support. Otherwise, they will be assessed if the custodial parent files a petition for child support with the court. At that time the fact of the child living on their own can be brought to the attention of the court.A minor child should not be living on their own. If the child has been legally emancipated the parent may be excused from paying child support. Otherwise, they will be assessed if the custodial parent files a petition for child support with the court. At that time the fact of the child living on their own can be brought to the attention of the court.A minor child should not be living on their own. If the child has been legally emancipated the parent may be excused from paying child support. Otherwise, they will be assessed if the custodial parent files a petition for child support with the court. At that time the fact of the child living on their own can be brought to the attention of the court.A minor child should not be living on their own. If the child has been legally emancipated the parent may be excused from paying child support. Otherwise, they will be assessed if the custodial parent files a petition for child support with the court. At that time the fact of the child living on their own can be brought to the attention of the court.
no the child or teen is not living with them and the child support is to support the teen while they are living there and now they're.. not but if there are other children involved you will still have to pay for them.. but you will have to go through court unless the other parent is willing to just give up custody which in most cases they wont because they want the money..ask a lawyer they will have much more information for you or go to a court house a get a pamphlet..hope i helped!!
If the child support order provides that the non-custodial parent pay then yes, of course. Living on campus implies the child is in college and needs the support of both parents. Living on campus costs money. Costs don't go down when your child enters college.
All US states honor and enforce child support orders issued by another state. The obligated parent is still bound by the terms of the support order regardless of his or her state of residency. The same actions can be taken to enforce the order in the state where the non custodial parent resides as would be possible in the state where the original order was issued.
If New York has jurisdiction. see links
Not at this time, as yet Florida has not adopted a change to take into account the income of a second spouse or S/O, though a case could be made that the marriage reduces the cost of living for the custodial parent. But, that can be a two way street, so it could come back to bite you.
Not really the Judge will decide this matter for you.
If the support order included a provision continuing support while the child was enrolled in college it does not matter where the child is living, as the support is to reimburse the custodial parent for the non custodial parents share of the child's expenses. If the child is attending school the custodial parent is likely still paying expenses for that child regardless of where they are living
Yes. Child support is for the "custodial parent". If you are not living at home with your custodial parent, then they are no longer eligible to receive child support. However, the non-custodial parent can request a modification if the child is no longer living with the custodial parent and that includes a change of custody. A 17 yr old is not emancipated in Texas, unless proper procedures through the courts have taken place. If that is the case, then the custodial parent and child are no longer eligible for child support.
No. Unless specifically ordered otherwise, child support payments go to the custodial parent as ordered.No. Unless specifically ordered otherwise, child support payments go to the custodial parent as ordered.No. Unless specifically ordered otherwise, child support payments go to the custodial parent as ordered.No. Unless specifically ordered otherwise, child support payments go to the custodial parent as ordered.
That's dependent on your state law, however if it continues, than it also does for the custodial parent. BOTH parents are obligated to provide support and not just one, so if she's not living with that parent, than a modification needs to be made to the case, including that the money goes directly to the daughter. see links below
In such a case, the non-custodial father should prepare to begin paying child support.
Yes.
Yes, under the Hague Treaty.
No. Child support arrears are owed to the parent.
Not usually, but there are some cases in which you might. 1. Some states require the non-custodial parent to continue to pay child support if the child hasn't graduated high school and is still living with the custodial parent. 2. If the child is disabled, there is no cut off age for ending child support. The non-custodial parent will continue to owe child support for as long as the disabled child lives with the custodial parent.