If your child is covered under your insurance while in college, the coverage probably ends in the month that the child graduates. You can probably purchase Cobra coverage at a higher rate until the child buys his or her own coverage. You should check with your insurance agent (or the actual policy if you have it) to be sure of the ending date of your graduate's coverage.
It depends on your specific policy. Some providers end coverage at age 18, while others extend coverage until the child graduates from college.
Absolutely. In some states is until the child is 21, in others, until the child graduates.
Usually that is also covered in the divorce decree. If the parent chooses, most insurances will allow coverage as long as the child is in school, including college, until age 25.
A person may have to pay child support even if the child is 18 and in college and has a medical condition. This may be true if the person owes back child support.
When a non custodial parent is ordered by the court to pay medical coverage, and the custodial parent applies for Medicaid that does not mean that the dependent child's medical coverage can be terminated by the non custodial parent. The ordered insurance becomes the primary insurance, and Medicaid becomes the secondary.
No. Outside of child support you cannot force him to help out with college tuition and fees. Although he must continue to pay child support until the child either graduates from college or stops attending.
If the child and/or the estate has the funds to pay for the coverage the child can apply for individual coverage or take Cobra coverage. Even though the employee has passed any other family members on the plan at the time are eligible for Cobra coverage.
Call your insurance company and ask them for the forms you need or what the procedure is to add a child to your coverage.
Yes. Under the Affordable Care Act (called "ObamaCare" by some), if you have a child, whether in college or not, that child can stay on your health insurance plan until age 26.
No, child support ends at age 18 or graduates from high school, but not further than age 19.
Each state has different laws. Most states the non-custodial parent pays child support for each child until the child turns 18 or graduates high school. Some states require you to pay until the child graduates college. You should go on the website for your state for more information.
If you were order by the court to pay child support, that support will continue until the child either graduates college or stops attending. I do not believe the court can order you to pay for college. However, as a father you should be willing to help.