yes dead beat.
Depends on your state, but odds are that you cannot. Child support is normally for a custodial parent. If you no longer live with that custodial parent, and are 18, you are an adult, not a child. Thus, you are not technically entitled to child support.
The child lives with you and you are entitled to child support from the non-custodial parent.The child lives with you and you are entitled to child support from the non-custodial parent.The child lives with you and you are entitled to child support from the non-custodial parent.The child lives with you and you are entitled to child support from the non-custodial parent.
Generally, the parent with the greater amount of physical custody is entitled to child support.
No, child support is not paid to the child but to the parent raising the child.
No, the child can not. The other parent could before the child was an adult. The money goes to the parent to use for the child and not directly to the child.
Only if you adopted the child.
extremely unlikely
The child can not stop the child support because the support goes to his parent. The parent paying can get the agreement changed at the courts.
She is entitled to child support regardless of where either of you live. It is your child and you must help support him/ her, and no, she does not have to move back to Nevada.
Children are never entitled to child support and cannot sue their parents for child support money. Child support is a debt paid from one parent to the other.
No, the filing period ended at age 18 for the parent, and age 19 for the adult child.
There is, if you think about it, no such thing as an adult child. If you are 26 you are an adult and if for some reason you were not supported by your biological parent as a child, it is a bit late to do anything about it now.