The original child support order should contain the specified time the child support should cease. In most cases it will be the state emancipation age. However, several states have laws which can allow child support to continue while the child is pursuing higher education or until 21 years of age. Intervention by the court to cease support payments is not needed unless there are mitigating circumstances not included in the original agreement. Such as the child getting married, moving from the custodial parents home, joining the military etc. Most of these actions are mandated under state laws but may need to be brought to the attention of the court.
That would be unlikely unless she is emancipated or moves in with the baby's father.
You best answer is always to contact a local attorney. They will know best what the practice is in your area.
My larger worry is that he may attempt to gain custody using this as an assault on your parental fitness.
You would have to check your state's law concerning emancipation. Every state is different. Or you could call you local child support enforcement agency and ask a general question.
You need to review your child support order and the laws in your state. You could inquire at the court that issued the order.
Unless you are paying back payments, I am not aware of anyplace that requires child support after the age of 21 or college graduation. I'd consult an attorney right away.
Until they and the interest penalties are paid.
What, boarding school is free? Yes, you have to pay your child support payments regardless of where the child is living. They are used to support the child regardless of where they are living.
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. Upon finding good cause, a court may order that child support payments continue beyond the age of 18 if the child is unmarried, residing with a parent and is enrolled as a full-time student in a secondary or vocational program and making substantial progress towards a diploma. In this case, payments will not extend past the date that the child reaches the age of 20. see link below
In the state of Florida, child support can end when the child reaches the age of emancipation, which is 18 years old in Florida, unless the child support order indicates otherwise. You should check your child support order if there is a statement indicating when support payments end. Check with the Clerk of Courts in the county where the child support order was entered to get a copy of your support order. You can have your child support payments terminated by applying with the Florida DOR or by court order through the modification process. Resources: Florida Clerks of Courts http://www.flclerks.com/directory.html Florida Department of Revenue http://dor.myflorida.com/dor/childsupport/ Modifying Child Support in Florida http://www.florida-court-forms.net/florida-child-support.html
Generally, no.
Generally, the obligation ends when the child reaches 18 years of age. If the child is already otherwise emancipated, payments will stop at the time of emancipation. If the child is still in primary or secondary school when he or she reaches the age of 18, support payments will continue until that child graduates, ceases to attend school on a regular basis, fails to make satisfactory academic progress towards graduation or reaches the age of 20 - whichever of these comes first. Based on its discretion, the court may order payments to cease at age 18, regardless of graduation date or any other factors.
Right after the child turns 21
If it's past due child support, yes, it's still owed.
No. The SSI is extra to help her with her problem, not to replace child support.
No. Child support payments cannot be garnished.No. Child support payments cannot be garnished.No. Child support payments cannot be garnished.No. Child support payments cannot be garnished.
Generally child support payments go to the time of state- maturity of the child, which is 18 in most jurisdictions.
Child support payments usually stop at age 18, unless some payments have been missed along the way ... Providing ALL your payments for child support are fully up to date and paid in full, you can file in court to have these stopped.
The terms of the support order dictate when child support is to end. If the court order does not stipulate a specific time the support can end when the minor child reaches the age of majority. In New Jersey the age of majority is 18.
I think that in most states child support stops when the child reaches 18 yrs. old UNLESS they are a full time student OR there is still a balance on past due child support.
Catch up on your child support payments.
Child support can be garnished from RSDI payments (but not SSI).