Depending on how much he makes and can afford.
No, child support ends in Pennsylvania when the child turns 18 and has graduated from high school.
Your child support should be a set number of dollars every month for you child or children. this is to be used for all needs of the child. food, medical, recreation.
As long as there is no back-support owed (Child support that is owed from previous months not paid) then 18 is the cut off limit for child support and you would no longer be obligated to pay. HOWEVER, in the state of Texas, if the child continues into college, the legal guardian of the child can bring you to court to continue the support until the child graduates from college.
Yes, unless the support order states otherwise.
Unless you have joint custody, the person paying the child support pays it every month regardless if the child is spending time with the other parent. Child support payments are figured for the year, not just month to month.
Look at your child support agreement. Or contact DHR to regain a copy.
You can call your local Department of Human Services office and they will take it out of his paycheck every month unless he quits working.
Child support is determined by the number of children you have in your care and the financial situation of the parent that is paying child support. Since every person's financial situation is different the amount people have to pay for child support varies from case to case. There is no set amount. The only way you can find out how much you should receive is to go to court to sue your children's' other parent for child support. The court will them determine how much should be paid every month.
As the judge has given you a fixed amount to pay as a child support, then the decree will tell , when it should be paid usually it is in the first ten days of the month.
YES. You have to pay child support for each of the five children every month.
There are no published averages for child support in California, and it would be difficult to obtain such information. Child support in California can vary greatly and is entirely dependent on income levels of both parents. The minimum is $100 per month, but can reach very high numbers. For example, a parent earning $20,000 per month could end up paying $5000 or more per month in child support.
Yes.