There shoud be a stop date on your child support order. If you no longer have a copy of the original order you should be able to request one from the court that issued it for a nominal fee. If your payments were processed through disbursment agency you can request a payment history from them to ascertain whether you are current on payments. If you owe back support, payments will continue to be withheld even beyond the stop date of the order until the balance owed has been brought current.
Yes, any changes in the child support order has to be done in court. It does not end automatically.
If your child is an adult, and no longer in full time education, you should apply to the court to modify your support order reflecting this change. In most cases, it does not happen automatically, and you will need the court order to reflect this.
Whatever the court documents give him. Not paying child support does not automatically remove any rights from him.
Generally, the obligation ends when the child reaches 18 years of age or the child graduates from high school, whichever occurs later. A child will also automatically be ineligible for child support if that child marries, is removed from disability status by a court order, or the child dies.
Generally, the obligation ends when the child reaches 18 years of age or the child graduates from high school, whichever occurs later. A child will also automatically be ineligible for child support if that child marries, is removed from disability status by a court order, or the child dies. see link below
Yes. However, if the parents are not married the Georgia court will establish paternity legally in order to issue a child support order. If that's where the mother and child live and mother filed there, that court will have jurisdiction. The father should cooperate with the DNA testing to establish paternity.Yes. However, if the parents are not married the Georgia court will establish paternity legally in order to issue a child support order. If that's where the mother and child live and mother filed there, that court will have jurisdiction. The father should cooperate with the DNA testing to establish paternity.Yes. However, if the parents are not married the Georgia court will establish paternity legally in order to issue a child support order. If that's where the mother and child live and mother filed there, that court will have jurisdiction. The father should cooperate with the DNA testing to establish paternity.Yes. However, if the parents are not married the Georgia court will establish paternity legally in order to issue a child support order. If that's where the mother and child live and mother filed there, that court will have jurisdiction. The father should cooperate with the DNA testing to establish paternity.
No, no state does. You have to notify the court.
You can contact your local child support recovery unit for assistance in receiving child support. You can also take the other parent to court to enforce child support payments.
Generally, the obligation ends when the child reaches 18 years of age or the child graduates from high school, whichever occurs later. A child will also automatically be ineligible for child support if that child marries, is removed from disability status by a court order, or the child dies. see links below
The court will likely enter a default order; if you are the obligor, you will not like its terms.
Child support should be included in the petition/motion for divorce. Many divorcing couples submit a financial or property settlement to the court, which includes child support.
No. Child support cases are handled by the state court that issued the child support order.No. Child support cases are handled by the state court that issued the child support order.No. Child support cases are handled by the state court that issued the child support order.No. Child support cases are handled by the state court that issued the child support order.