The parents are not responsible for an adult. If the parents co-signed the loan, they can be held responsible.
well, actually parents are responsible financially till they graduate from collage, but if the drop out from school just till they turn 18.
The biological parent is legally responsible for paying child support. A step parent is not legally responsible for paying child support.The biological parent is legally responsible for paying child support. A step parent is not legally responsible for paying child support.The biological parent is legally responsible for paying child support. A step parent is not legally responsible for paying child support.The biological parent is legally responsible for paying child support. A step parent is not legally responsible for paying child support.
Yes a parent can be held responsible for a minor child's debt if the parent co-signs on a loan with the child. For credit cards, if the child is an authorized user on a parent's account the parent is also responsible for this debt.
Yes. They are still the child's parent and responsible for supporting their child.
NO ... if your parents are divorcing or not the responsibility is on the student ... your patents don't have to fund your education weather that be elementary or collage ... if you are collecting child support then the parent who is paying said said support MUST pay till the age of 23 if said child is still in school ...
Is a step parent responsible for a disabled child
As long as the child is not a cosigner on the debt, the child is not responsible for parent's debt. The parent's estate would be responsible for the debt. Technically this could reduce the inheritance the child receives, but it is not the responsibility of the child.
Legally, no.
In Connecticut, parents are legally responsible for their child until the age of 18, unless the child has been legally emancipated. This means parents are responsible for providing financial support, housing, education, and medical care until the child turns 18.
No, but it isn't being a responsible parent when a child has a problem.
The person who has legal custody of the child is responsible depending on the circumstances.
No. The child's parent is responsible for paying child support.