Only if the child is also at least 18 years old.
According to Nevada state law, child support continues as long as the child is:
1. Under the age of 18
Or
2. Under the age of 19 and still enrolled in high school
If the child is only 17 and has graduated high school, support will continue until their 18th birthday.
In Colorado if your child support order was entered on or after July, 1997, the support obligation stops when the child turns 19 unless:
the parties agree otherwise by a stipulation signed after July 1997.
the child is mentally or physically disabled, and the court orders support past age 19.
the child is in high school, or an equivalent program; in this case, support continues until a month after graduation but not beyond the age of 21.
If your child support order was entered prior to July, 1997, the support obligation terminates when the child turns 19 unless:
the parties agree otherwise by a written stipulation after July 1, 1991
the child is mentally or physically disabled and the court orders support past age of 19.
the child is in high school, or an equivalent program, in which case, support continues until a month after graduation but not beyond the age of 21 unless there is an order for post-secondary education ordering support to continue through post-secondary education.
In Oregon generally, the obligation ends when the child reaches 18 years of age or 21 years of age if the child is in school half-time or more.
Most child support orders are in effect until the child graduates from high school. This depends on child support provisions in your child support order or agreement. It can continue through an undergraduate degree in some cases.
Regardless of whether or not your child graduates high school in PA, once he/she reaches the age of 18, child support is absolved.
Yes. Child support in most states makes you obligated to pay until your child is 18, or graduates from high school. If your child is under 18 and in trade school, you still have to pay.
It changes only if the order for support specifically provides for such change.
If the child is still in high school, child support continues until the child graduates or turns 19, whichever occurs first.
Absolutely. In some states is until the child is 21, in others, until the child graduates.
Depends on what your decree says. In most cases, child support is paid until the child reaches 18 years of age or when the child graduates high school, which ever comes first.
In Oregon, child support is usually required up to the age of 18. However, it is possible to get a rebuttal if the child is under 18 and isn't attending school or making satisfactory progress towards graduation. Call your local Department of Human Services, child support division, and discuss the issue with them
In Texas, when the child graduates from High School. So if you have more then one child, when the last child that you have graduates from High School is when the child support payments will end for you. If the child is not in school for whatever reason it is the age of 18 years old.
Generally, the support obligation ends when the child reaches 18 years of age or the child graduates from high school, whichever occurs last. A child will also automatically be ineligible for child support if that child marries, is removed from disability status by a court order, or if the child dies.
It depends. Texas statue states 18 or graduation from high school whichever is later. However, if the child has purposely not attended school, etc...you can request a review and stop child support.
No, child support ends in Pennsylvania when the child turns 18 and has graduated from high school.